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Epson WorkForce Pro WF-5620

 & M. David Stone Contributing Editor

Our team tests, rates, and reviews more than 1,500 products each year to help you make better buying decisions and get more from technology.

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The Epson WorkForce Pro WF-5620 inkjet multifunction printer delivers fast speed and excellent paper handling, making it an excellent fit for a micro or small office. - All-in-One Printers
4.0 Excellent

The Bottom Line

The Epson WorkForce Pro WF-5620 inkjet multifunction printer delivers fast speed and excellent paper handling, making it an excellent fit for a micro or small office.
Best Deal£699.99

Buy It Now

£699.99

Pros & Cons

    • Fast.
    • Prints, faxes, scans, and copies.
    • Ethernet, Wi-Fi, and Wi-Fi Direct.
    • Low running cost.
    • Graphics quality is a touch below par.

Epson WorkForce Pro WF-5620 Specs

Color or Monochrome 1-pass color
Connection Type Ethernet
Connection Type USB
Connection Type Wireless
Cost Per Page (Color) 7.2 cents
Duplexing Scans
LCD Preview Screen
Maximum Scan Area Legal
Maximum Standard Paper Size Legal
Monthly Duty Cycle (Maximum) 45,000 pages per month
Number of Ink Colors 4
Print Duplexing
Scanner Optical Resolution 1200 pixels per inch
Scanner Type Flatbed with ADF (Standard or Optional)
Standalone Copier and Fax Copier
Standalone Copier and Fax Fax
Type All-in-one

If you need an inkjet multifunction printer (MFP) suitable for moderate-duty print needs by small-office standards or heavy-duty use by micro-office standards, the Epson WorkForce Pro WF-5620 ($269.99) is a prime candidate. Faster than color laser MFPs that cost two and three times as much, and with a lower running cost than most lasers as well, the WF-5620 is one of a growing number of inkjets that are challenging the supremacy of lasers in the office. It's also our Editors' Choice color MFP for heavy-duty printing in a micro office or moderate-duty use in a small office.

The WF-5620 shares most of its features with the Editors' Choice Epson WorkForce Pro WF-5690. According to Epson, the only difference between the two is that the Epson WF-5690 adds support for HP's Printer Command Language (PCL) and for PostScript—two widely used printer languages—which some applications require. That makes it our preferred pick for moderate-duty use in a small office that needs PCL or PostScript support. However, the WF-5620 is our new pick for offices that don't need PCL or PostScript. It's also a big step up from the Epson WorkForce WF-3640, which it replaces as Editors' Choice.

Basics

Like other recent WorkForce models, including the Epson WF-5690,the WF-5620 is built around Epson's PrecisionCore technology. PrecisionCore printers aren't necessarily fast, but they can be. The technology allows multiple print chips in a single print head. The more chips there are, the more ink the printer can put on paper at once. The four chips in the WF-5620s print head deliver impressively fast speed.

Even better, the printer offers sufficient paper handling to take advantage of the speed. It comes with a 250-sheet front drawer, an 80-sheet rear tray, and a built-in duplexer (for two-sided printing). If you need more, you can boost the capacity to 580 sheets with a second 250-sheet tray ($99.99).

MFP features include the ability to fax from and scan to a computer over a USB connection or network, work as a standalone copier and fax machine, and both print from and scan to a USB memory key. A 3.5-inch color touch screen on the front panel, paired with a well-designed menu, makes it easy to give commands.

Paper handling for scanning is another plus. In addition to a letter-size flatbed, the WF-5620 offers a 35-sheet automatic document feeder (ADF) that can handle legal-size paper and can also duplex, turning each page over to scan the second side. For copying, the duplex scanning works along with duplex printing to let you copy both single and double-sided originals to your choice of single or double-sided copies.

Related Story See How We Test Printers

Like more and more recent MFPs, the WF-5620 supports mobile printing, including both printing from and scanning to the cloud. Connect it to a network, using either Ethernet or Wi-Fi, and you can connect to it and print through a Wi-Fi access point from iOS, Android, Windows, and Kindle Fire devices. If the network is connected to the Internet, you can also print through the cloud and you can scan directly from the WF-5620 to several cloud services (SugarSync, Evernote, and Google Drive), as well as to specific folders on your drive, which lets various other cloud-service apps monitor and upload the files.

If you connect the printer to a single PC by USB cable instead of connecting it to a network, you won't be able to use the cloud-based features. However, you can still take advantage of the printer's Wi-Fi Direct to connect directly to it from a mobile device and print.

Setup, Speed, and Output Quality

For my tests, I connected the WF-5620 to a wired network and installed the drivers and software on a Windows Vista system. Setup was standard fare.

Epson WorkForce Pro WF-5620

On our business applications suite, I timed the printer (using QualityLogic's hardware and software for timing), at 10.3 pages per minute (ppm). That makes it essentially tied with the Epson WF-5690 and significantly faster than the Epson WF-3640, at 5.4ppm. It's also faster than the 5.9ppm for the HP Officejet Pro 276dw MFP.

Output quality is also good enough overall to count as a plus. Text in my tests was top tier for an inkjet. Characters aren't quite as crisp as with a laser, and the ink can smudge just a bit if it gets wet, but the text is highly readable even at small font sizes, making it easily good enough for most business needs.

Graphics output was a touch below par on our tests, with some banding showing in large areas of dark colors. It's certainly good enough for internal use, but depending on how critical an eye you have, you may or may not consider the quality good enough for PowerPoint handouts or the like. You can eliminate the banding by setting the driver to print at higher quality, but that will also slow down print speed.

For photos, using the matte paper that Epson recommends, the printer delivered better photo quality than typical drugstore prints. The one potential issue is that if you prefer glossy photos, you may not like the matte look.

Also very much a plus is the WF-5620's low running cost. Based on Epson's claimed yields and ink prices, the cost per page works out to just 1.6 cents for a black and white page and 7.2 cents for a color page.

If you need PCL or PostScript, the Epson WF-5690 is still the obvious choice. In every other way, however, the Epson WorkForce Pro WF-5620 gives you the same capability for a much lower price. For micro and small offices with no need for PCL or PostScript, that's more than enough to make the WF-5620 our Editors' Choice inkjet MFP for moderate to heavy-duty use.

Final Thoughts

The Epson WorkForce Pro WF-5620 inkjet multifunction printer delivers fast speed and excellent paper handling, making it an excellent fit for a micro or small office. - All-in-One Printers

Epson WorkForce Pro WF-5620

4.0 Excellent

The Epson WorkForce Pro WF-5620 inkjet multifunction printer delivers fast speed and excellent paper handling, making it an excellent fit for a micro or small office.

Get It Now
Best Deal£699.99

Buy It Now

£699.99

About Our Expert

M. David Stone

M. David Stone

Contributing Editor

My Experience

Most of my current work for PCMag is about printers and projectors, but I've covered a wide variety of other subjects—in more than 4,000 pieces, over more than 40 years—including both computer-related areas and others ranging from ape language experiments, to politics, to cosmology, to space colonies. I've written for PCMag.com from its start, and for PC Magazine before that, as a Contributor, then a Contributing Editor, then as the Lead Analyst for Printers, Scanners, and Projectors, and now, after a short hiatus, back to Contributing Editor.

I'm pretty sure I'm the only person who worked on every "Project Printer" blockbuster PCMag ever produced, often writing 15 or more reviews for the year's big printer blowout. (I snuck in a single review one year when I was writing a book, strictly so I could keep that claim alive.)

I've always worked for PCMag as a freelancer, which has freed me to take time away to write nine books, be a major contributor to four others, and write for other publications, including Wired, Computer Shopper, Projector Central, and Science Digest, where I was Computers Editor. I also wrote a computer column at one point for The Newark Star-Ledger.

Although I started my career primarily as a science (mostly physics and astronomy) and science-fiction writer (published in Analog), my non-computer-related work runs the gamut from the Project Data Book for NASA's Upper Atmosphere Research Satellite (written for GE's Astro-Space Division) to the script for a video overview of a top company in the gaming industry (that would be gambling, not video games). My books include The Underground Guide to Color Printers (Addison-Wesley), Troubleshooting Your PC (Microsoft Press), and Faster, Smarter Digital Photography (Microsoft Press).

Having covered a wide range of subjects, I've developed a serial expertise in many of them. The ones most relevant to my current work at PCMag.com are all imaging technologies.

The Technology I Use

I buy new PCs for my writing desk infrequently, because it takes a week or more to customize the settings the way I want them. At the moment, I have an HP Envy tower running Windows 10, but it's old enough to have a Windows 7 sticker on it. Its latest lease on a longer life is courtesy of a newly installed 500GB Samsung SSD 870 EVO.

Elsewhere in my house is an assortment of older and newer PCs. The older ones are dedicated to specific tasks, like the one I've been using to slowly digitize all the paper stored in my filing cabinets, while the newer ones are testbeds for printer and projector reviews.

For writing, I use Microsoft Word 2003, because I find it too annoying to take my hands off the keyboard to give mouse commands using the Ribbon. My workhorse printers are a Xerox Phaser 6280 color laser and a Dymo LabelWriter 450 Twin Turbo for labels and stamps. I also have a Canon Pixma iP8720 for printing photos, and a Canon ImageFormula DR-C225 for scanning.

My first computer was bought to replace my IBM Selectric for writing. After rejecting both the IBM PC (which had just been introduced) and the Apple II because of the keyboards, I chose a Vector Graphics Vector 3 CP/M machine with dual floppies. The first MS-DOS machine I was willing to use for writing was the IBM AT, with its much-improved keyboard compared with the original PC and its gargantuan 20MB hard drive.

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