Tom's Hardware Benchmarks Inkjet Printer Paper!
Table of contents
- 1. Everyday Printing
- 2. Ink, Colour Gamut, And Test Method
- 3. Standard Print Quality: Colour Gamut
Do you own an inkjet printer? If you are concerned with the quality of your prints, you will want to read this article. We go over the technical differences between paper from Brother, Dynex, Epson, HP, and Kodak, and why one gets our recommendation.
Many of us print off pages of email, school projects, packing slips, and invoices every single day. It's one of those almost-ironic relics of a world before everything started going digital.
But we're not here to debate the ramifications of burning through trees. No, we're wondering how the quality of the paper you do use affects what comes out the business end of your printer. You probably sunk a lot of time into researching the right printer to buy, but did you consider that your paper of choice matters as well?
The texture and composition of paper play a big role in output quality. When copy machines print on standard office paper, the paper doesn’t get wet. However, the composition of cheap office paper is too weak to work well with inkjet printers because ink tends to pool around the point of contact (printer head) and wick through the paper's fibres. The result is a piece of paper in which ink seeps along the fibres, creating miniature spider web-like patterns.

Inkjet paper is specifically different because it's made using a high-quality chemical-based manufacturing process. The goal of this process is to produce a paper with the right degree of absorbency to accept ink, while preventing it from wicking sideways. That's why inkjet paper tends to be heavier, brighter, and smoother than copy paper.
Ultimately, you need to understand that there are three major factors in paper quality: absorbency, brightness, and weight. Photographers often have their personal favourites when it comes to photo paper, which benefits from chemical coats that change how ink behaves once it hits the paper, but this isn't what we use on a day-to-day basis. We do know that matte paper is cheaper, but what makes the paper of one brand different from another?
In order to find out how paper affects the quality of your everyday printing tasks, we're testing six different reams of paper, with 500 pages per ream.
| Price | $6.99 | $4.99 | $8.99 | $6.99 | $10.99 | $8.99 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brand | Brother | Dynex | Epson | HP | HP | Kodak |
| Type | Multipurpose | Multipurpose | Bright White | Bright White | Multipurpose | Everyday |
| Brightness (ISO) | 96 | 92 | 96 | 97 | 96 | 96 |
| Weight (lb.) | 20 | 20 | 24 | 24 | 20 | 20 |
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- Tom's Hardware Benchmarks Inkjet Printer Paper!
Paper benchmarks?
Er... What? There are more important things to benchmark when measuring print quality. I know it's a long shot, but maybe benchmarking the actual printer rather than some pieces of dead tree might be a tad more intresting?