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HP PageWide Pro 452dw Printer Review

 & Tony Hoffman Senior Writer, Hardware

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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HP PageWide Pro 452dw Printer Review - Printers
4.0 Excellent

The Bottom Line

The HP PageWide Pro 452dw Printer is a speedy inkjet with good text quality and paper capacity, and competitive running costs.
Best Deal£163.08

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£163.08

Pros & Cons

    • Fast.
    • Good text quality.
    • PCL and PostScript drivers.
    • USB, Ethernet, Wi-Fi, and HP wireless direct connectivity.
    • Reasonably low running costs.
    • Slightly subpar graphics and photos

HP PageWide Pro 452dw Printer Specs

Color or Monochrome 1-pass color
Connection Type Ethernet
Connection Type USB
Connection Type Wireless
Maximum Standard Paper Size Legal
Monthly Duty Cycle (Maximum) 50000 pages per month
Number of Ink Colors 4
Print Duplexing
Rated Speed at Default Settings (Color) 40 ppm
Rated Speed at Default Settings (Mono) 40 ppm
Type Printer Only

Although the Pro 452dw ($499.99) is a lower-end model in HP's PageWide Pro line of printers, it still offers the sizzling speed of the company's PageWide inkjet printer technology. Thanks to a print-head assembly that runs the full width of the page and remains stationary while the paper moves across it, it produced speeds in our testing more typical of laser printers than inkjets. It is built for a similar print volume to the Editors' Choice HP Color LaserJet Pro M452dw ($589.90 at Amazon) , but with greater paper capacity and much lower running costs, and it takes that laser-based model's place as our Editors' Choice medium-duty color printer for a micro or small office.

Design and Features

The two-tone (off-white and matte black) 452dw ($399.89 at Amazon) measures 14.5 by 20.9 by 16.0 inches (HWD), and is best kept on a table or bench of its own. It weighs 36.1 pounds, so although one person could probably handle it, you may want two people to move it into place. Standard paper capacity is 550 sheets of up to legal-size paper, split between a 500-sheet main tray and a 50-sheet multipurpose feeder. A second 500-sheet paper tray (available for $199) can also be added. It includes an auto-duplexer for two-sided printing. It has substantially more paper capacity than the HP M452dw, which has a 250-sheet main tray plus 50-sheet multipurpose feeder.

HP PageWide Pro 452dw Printer

The 452dw has a maximum monthly duty cycle of 50,000 pages and a recommended monthly duty cycle of up to 4,500 sheets. This is lighter-duty than the HP PageWide Pro 552dw ($599.89 at Amazon) (80,000 sheets maximum, 6,000 sheets recommended), and the same as the HP M452dw.

The 577dw has a good selection of both wired and wireless printing choices. It includes USB for connecting to a computer and Ethernet for connecting to a wired LAN. (I tested it over an Ethernet connection, with its drivers installed on our standard testbed running Windows 10 Professional.) It has built-in Wi-Fi, and supports HP wireless direct—the company's proprietary equivalent of Wi-Fi Direct. It is Apple AirPrint compatible, and supports printing from Google Cloud Print. It offers a good set of drivers, including PCL6, PCL5, and HP's PostScript emulation. Most businesses don't need to print with PostScript, but for those that do, a PostScript driver is a must.

As we expected for a PageWide printer, speed is one of the 452dw's strengths. I timed it at 31.4 pages per minute (ppm) in printing the text-only (Word) portion of our new business applications suite. That's short of its 40ppm rated speed in its default Presentation mode, but still a dazzling speed for an inkjet. On our full business suite, which includes PDF, PowerPoint, and Excel files in addition to the aforementioned Word document, it averaged 16.4ppm, the highest speed we've clocked for an inkjet in this test. Although we can't measure it head-to-head with the HP 552dw, which we tested with our old suite, it's probably slower than that printer, which has a rated printing speed of 50ppm at default settings. We also can't compare it directly with the laser-based HP M452dw, which has a rated speed of 28ppm.

Output Quality and Running Costs

Output quality was mixed in testing, with above-average text, and slightly below-par graphics and photos. Text should be good enough for any business use except those requiring tiny fonts, which isn't always the case with inkjets.

Related Story See How We Test Printers

With graphics, I noticed some banding, a regular pattern of faint striations, in about half of the backgrounds, and in some cases it was a little distracting. Still, graphics should be good enough for printing PowerPoint handouts to be distributed to a casual audience. Some, but not all, of the photos were up to the quality we'd expect from drugstore prints. There was some loss of detail in bright areas.

The 452dw has running costs of 1.4 cents per monochrome page and 7.3 cents per color page based on HP's figures. These costs are slightly higher than those of the HP 572dw (1.3 cents per black and 6.8 cents per color page), but substantially lower than those of the HP M452dw (2.2 cents per black and 13.2 cents per color page).

Conclusion

No longer do laser printers rule the roost in speed, text quality, and running costs. Laser-class inkjets such as the HP PageWide Pro 452dw Printer give them a run for their money. It has greater paper capacity and much lower running costs than the HP Color LaserJet Pro M452dw, with slightly better text quality (though not as good graphics) in our testing. The 452dw replaces that model as our medium-duty color laser printer of choice for a small or micro office.

Best Printer Picks

Further Reading

Final Thoughts

HP PageWide Pro 452dw Printer Review - Printers

HP PageWide Pro 452dw Printer Review

4.0 Excellent

The HP PageWide Pro 452dw Printer is a speedy inkjet with good text quality and paper capacity, and competitive running costs.

Get It Now
Best Deal£163.08

Buy It Now

£163.08

About Our Expert

Tony Hoffman

Tony Hoffman

Senior Writer, Hardware

Since 2004, I have worked on PCMag’s hardware team, covering at various times printers, scanners, projectors, storage, and monitors. I currently focus my efforts on 3D printers, pro and productivity displays, and drives and SSDs of all sorts.

Over the years, I have reviewed smart telescopes, iPad and iPhone science apps, plus the occasional camera, laptop, keyboard, and mouse. I've also written a host of articles about astronomy, space science, travel photography, and astrophotography for PCMag and its past and present sibling publications (among them, Mashable and ExtremeTech), as well as for the former PCMag Digital Edition.

The Technology I Use

I have a Lenovo ThinkPad T14 laptop that's my work daily driver, an HP Pavilion Aero 13 as my primary personal laptop, and an Asus ProArt P16 for detailed photo work. (I also have an older Dell XPS 13, which now stays at home full-time.) For storage testing, I rely on our three custom-built Windows testbeds in PC Labs, as well as a 2024 MacBook Pro.

My primary home monitor is a BenQ EX2780Q, a gaming monitor with a great sound system and excellent image quality. I use that panel for writing, watching videos, and working with photos. I also have an HP 27 Curved Display—one of the first general-purpose curved monitors—which I have paired with an Acer Aspire desktop computer. My multifunction printer is an Epson Expression Premium XP-7100 Small-in-One. I also own an Epson Perfection V39 flatbed scanner, which I use for photos and short documents, and a Canon Selphy CP1300 small-format photo printer for turning out snapshots.

My first cell phone, in 2006, was a Motorola Razr; since then, it’s been all iPhones—I currently have an iPhone 15 Pro. I use my iPhone a lot for casual photography, though I also use a Sony DSC-RX100 VII and a Canon G5 X Mark II for everyday shooting. For much of my travel photography and astrophotography, I use either a Sony A7r II or A7 III, paired with a variety of lenses ranging from a Sony 14mm f/1.8 prime to a Sony FE 70-300mm f/4.5-5.6 G OSS zoom lens. I also pair the A7r with a RedCat 51 for deep-sky star shooting. For astrophotography, I also use the Seestar S30 and S50 and the Unistellar Odyssey smart telescopes, which are essentially astronomical cameras controlled through one’s mobile device.

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