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Prusa MINI+

Prusa MINI+

WAIT

Past the brand's typical replacement window. A new model is more likely than not. Firmware and support remain active.

Signals last verified: 17 July 2026

Signals: Lifecycle · Firmware · Support · Spare parts. What we track

Specifications

Build volume
180x180x180 mm
Build size class
Extra-small - Hand-held Parts
Price
Base: €509
Enclosure
Full enclosure
Chamber control
None
Materials
PLA · PETG · PHA · PVB · ABS · ASA · HIPS · TPU · TPE · TPC · PEBA
Support materials
Bowden extruder
Max hotend temp
280°C
Max bed temp
100°C
Max chamber temp
Nozzle material
Brass
Hardened nozzle
Nozzle count
1
Max filament inputs
5
True multi-material
Tool change
Single Nozzle Purge Based

Ownership

Experience level
Intermediate
Assembly
Light Build
Auto bed leveling
Assisted
Auto Z offset
Auto first layer
Filament runout sensor
Yes
Spaghetti detection
Error guidance
QR Direct
Warranty
12 months (24 EU)
Warranty extension
Yes optionally · extends warranty length
Spare parts
Comprehensive
Firmware version
V6.4.2

Unlockable capabilities

With hardened nozzle upgrade:
Abrasive materials. PA-CF/GF needs ADVANCED tier even with nozzle upgrade.

Real-world performance

Who this is for

The machine itself is an easy recommendation: reliable, quiet, excellent print quality, well supported, and good value at around €510. The one thing that stands between you and buying is timing, not quality. For a first-timer, setup is clear and reviewers rate early ownership as genuinely accessible, so you will most likely succeed, and the pre-assembled unit is the safer starting point. For a home hobbyist, the enclosure and material range meaningfully expand what you can make beyond PLA, with the ceiling sitting at abrasives (hardened nozzle required) and carbon or glass-filled nylon (advanced-tier, and still demanding). An upgrader gains enclosed-material capability and optional multi-color, but should know the multi-color is single-nozzle and purge-based, so swaps are slow, waste is real, and it is not true multi-material. For a prosumer weighing this as a business tool, reliability and parts support are there, but the successor-overdue lifecycle is the risk to price in before committing mid-project. The call: a strong machine at a fair price, but if you can wait, watch for a successor announcement, another price drop, or stock clearing before you buy.

PrintSignals Review

Prusa MINI+ Review

Written by AI from manufacturer specifications and the aggregated consensus of

PrintSignals does not test printers hands-on. How we do this

Assessment

The Prusa MINI+ is a small enclosed printer that reviewers consistently rate as reliable, quiet, and capable of excellent output quality, and at around €510 for the printer alone it earns its keep. The reason to slow down is timing. This model is past Prusa's average replacement cycle, which runs to roughly 2.9 years, so a successor is more likely than not, and buying today means accepting that risk. That does not make it a bad machine. Firmware is still active, with an update inside the last 90 days, and Prusa's long-term support is one of the stronger ones we track. But if you can wait, watch for a successor announcement, a further price drop, or stock clearing out, because any of the three could hand you a better deal or a newer platform. If you need the machine now and value a proven, dependable printer over having the latest model, it holds up.

Build and print volume

The build volume is 180x180x180 mm, which keeps you in the territory of hand-held parts, desk items, and models you can split and reassemble. It is not a machine for large single-piece prints. What sets it apart at this size is the full enclosure, which contains heat, cuts warping risk, and widens the reliable material range past what an open frame can manage. Note that the chamber is not actively heated. The enclosed space holds passive warmth from the bed and motors, but there is no dedicated heater or temperature control, so the largest, most warp-prone parts still take care. The hotend reaches 280°C and the bed 100°C. The multi-spool system is an optional add-on rather than standard equipment, and it does more than color: with up to 5 filament inputs it also enables automatic handoff when a spool runs dry, which matters on long prints.

Material capability

The reliable range covers PLA, PETG, PHA, PVB, ABS, ASA, and HIPS, and the enclosure is what makes the engineering materials realistic here rather than aspirational. ABS and ASA are genuinely within reach, a real advantage over open-frame machines, but supported is not the same as effortless: without an actively heated chamber, larger parts in those materials still depend on tuning and a stable ambient temperature. The direct drive extruder handles flexibles, with TPU the most accessible; TPE, TPC, and PEBA are also supported, and each asks for more tuning than the last. Two hard limits to know. The stock nozzle is brass, not hardened, so abrasive materials require a hardened nozzle upgrade first, and PA-CF or PA-GF needs an advanced-tier setup even with that upgrade. Reviewers rate material performance as acceptable and functional with some tuning expected, and moderate stringing means you should plan on dialing in retraction.

Setup and ownership

Day-to-day, this is an easy machine to live with. Reviewers consistently describe it as accessible to set up and use, output quality as excellent, and reliability as strong, with clog frequency reported as effectively zero and noise below typical FDM levels. The pre-assembled unit needs only minor mechanical setup, usually 15 to 45 minutes, and assisted bed leveling, filament runout detection, and on-screen QR codes that link straight to the fix for each error smooth the early going. Buy carefully on version: the MINI+ also comes as a self-assembly kit, which reviewers rate as manageable and beginner-friendly but is a different experience from the pre-assembled unit these ownership notes describe, so confirm which one you are ordering. The intermediate rating is not about first print. It surfaces later, when you push past standard PLA and PETG into the full material range or run multi-color work. On slicers you are not locked in. PrusaSlicer is well-integrated and rated good, and Orca and Cura work too. One caveat: local-mode operation is available but limited, and some features still require cloud connectivity.

Support and longevity

This is where Prusa's platform shows its value. Spare parts have comprehensive official availability, warranty support is strong with an extended option, documentation is thorough, and the hardware design files are publicly released for repair and community modification. The firmware is semi-open, Buddy under AGPL on GitHub, and third-party slicers are accepted. Klipper has no native support, though community ports exist. Reviewers rate the printer as durable over extended use with no notable component degradation, and maintenance as manageable with clear procedures. One honest mark on the record: the manufacturer has generally acknowledged hardware issues publicly, but resolution outcomes have been inconsistent, so support quality is uneven across warranty handling, parts, and how well a given issue actually gets resolved. Even so, an open, well-stocked ecosystem is exactly what keeps a machine viable as it ages, which softens the lifecycle risk if you do buy in.

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