← All comparisons
LaserJet EnterprisevsOfficeJet

HP LaserJet Enterprise vs OfficeJet for the Office

Picking an office printer comes down to volume, running cost, and security expectations. HP LaserJet Enterprise targets high-volume, fleet-managed environments; OfficeJet targets smaller teams that print in color but at lower volumes. Here is how the two compare for a workgroup decision.

Request a quote

Side by side

FeatureLaserJet EnterpriseOfficeJet
Print technologyMonochrome or color laserBusiness inkjet
Volume targetHigh monthly volume and heavy shared useLow-to-moderate volume for small teams
Cost per pageGenerally lower cost per page at scaleCompetitive on color for lower volumes
Fleet managementBuilt for centralized fleet and security managementManageable, with a lighter feature set
Security featuresEnterprise-class protections and self-healing firmware on supported modelsSolid business security suited to smaller deployments
Footprint & speedLarger, faster, built for shared workgroupsCompact, suited to a team or a desk-adjacent role
Best fitFloors, departments and managed print fleetsSmall offices and color-leaning workgroups

Our verdict

For shared, high-volume environments where uptime, low cost per page, and fleet security matter, LaserJet Enterprise is the durable choice and pairs well with managed print services. OfficeJet earns its place in smaller offices that want capable color at a lower entry cost and lighter volume. Match the printer to the page count and security bar rather than the sticker price — a mismatched printer shows up as supply spend and downtime later.

Get a tailored quote

Frequently asked

Is laser always cheaper to run than inkjet?
At higher volumes, LaserJet Enterprise generally wins on cost per page and durability. At lower volumes, especially color-heavy ones, a business OfficeJet can be very cost-effective. The crossover depends on your monthly pages and color mix, which we can help estimate.
Which is more secure?
LaserJet Enterprise models carry HP's enterprise-class print security, including hardware-enforced and self-healing firmware protections on supported models, which is why they fit managed fleets. OfficeJet includes solid business security appropriate to smaller deployments.
Can either be managed as part of a fleet?
Both can be managed, but LaserJet Enterprise is purpose-built for centralized fleet and security management and managed print services. OfficeJet is manageable with a lighter feature set, suited to smaller environments.