Photocopier Leasing vs Buying: Which Is Cheaper for UK Businesses?

Photocopier Leasing vs Buying:Which Is Cheaper for UK Businesses?A Plain-English 2026 Cost ComparisonDigital Office — West Midlands & UKDigital Office

When it’s time to upgrade your office photocopier, one of the first decisions you’ll face is whether to buy outright or take out a lease. Both options have genuine advantages — but for most UK businesses, the answer comes down to your print volume, available capital, and appetite for maintenance responsibility.

Digital Office has been helping businesses across the West Midlands and beyond make this decision for years. Here’s our plain-English breakdown of the real costs and trade-offs.

The True Cost of Buying a Photocopier

Buying a photocopier means paying the full purchase price upfront (or through a finance agreement) and owning the machine outright. For a mid-range A3 colour multifunction printer, expect to pay anywhere from £800 to £3,500 depending on specification.

However, the purchase price is only part of the story. You’ll also need to budget for:

  • Toner and consumables — colour toner for a busy office machine can cost £100–£400 per year
  • Servicing and repairs — annual service contracts typically run from £150 to £500 per year; out-of-warranty repairs can be significantly more
  • Downtime risk — if the machine breaks without a service contract, replacement parts and engineer call-outs can be expensive and slow
  • Technology obsolescence — a machine bought today may lack the security features or cloud connectivity your business needs in five years’ time

Over a five-year period, a mid-range photocopier typically costs around £2,760 all-in when you factor in consumables and servicing — even without any major repairs.

The True Cost of Leasing a Photocopier

Leasing means paying a fixed monthly fee — typically for three or five years — in exchange for use of the equipment. Most quality leasing agreements also include a managed print service (MPS) contract, which bundles in toner delivery, proactive maintenance, and engineer call-outs for a single pence-per-page rate.

Typical lease costs in the UK in 2026:

  • Entry-level A4 mono machine: from £15–£25 per month
  • Mid-range A3 colour multifunction: from £35–£75 per month
  • High-volume production machine: from £100–£200+ per month

With a managed print service included, the equivalent five-year cost for a mid-range machine comes to approximately £1,980 — around £780 less than buying — because toner and maintenance are included in the monthly rate. Industry data consistently shows that leasing with a managed service contract is cheaper than outright purchase for most businesses printing more than 1,000 pages per month.

Leasing vs Buying: Key Differences at a Glance

  • Upfront cost: Buying requires capital outlay; leasing requires little or none
  • Maintenance: Leasing usually includes it; buying means you’re responsible
  • Tax treatment: Lease payments are typically 100% tax-deductible as a business expense; purchased equipment goes through capital allowances
  • Flexibility: Leasing lets you upgrade to newer technology at the end of the term; ownership ties you to a depreciating asset
  • Total 5-year cost: Buying can be cheaper for very low-volume users; leasing is usually better value for regular users
  • Risk: Leasing transfers maintenance and obsolescence risk to the supplier

Who Should Buy, and Who Should Lease?

Buying is likely the better option if you print infrequently (fewer than 500 pages per month), have available capital and prefer not to have ongoing commitments, or have in-house IT or maintenance capability.

Leasing is likely the better option if you print regularly and want predictable monthly costs, want maintenance, toner, and support included without managing it yourself, would like the option to upgrade equipment every three to five years, or if your business is growing and you need flexibility.

For most UK SMBs, leasing with a managed print service represents the best combination of cost control, reliability, and flexibility.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is it better to lease or buy a photocopier for a small business?

For most small businesses, leasing with a managed print service is the smarter choice. It eliminates the upfront cost, spreads expenditure evenly, and removes the burden of managing toner and servicing. The exception is very low-volume users who only print occasionally and have capital available.

Can I claim back a leased photocopier on tax?

Yes. Lease payments on business equipment are generally fully deductible as a business expense in the UK, which can make leasing more tax-efficient than buying through capital allowances. Always confirm your specific situation with your accountant.

What happens at the end of a photocopier lease?

At the end of the lease term, you typically have three options: return the equipment, upgrade to a newer model on a new lease, or in some cases purchase the machine at a reduced price. Most businesses use this as an opportunity to upgrade to the latest technology.

What is a managed print service and is it included in a lease?

A managed print service (MPS) is a contract in which your supplier takes full responsibility for keeping your printer running — including toner replenishment, preventative maintenance, and engineer call-outs — all for a fixed cost per page printed. Many lease agreements include MPS, making total print costs highly predictable.

Why Choose Digital Office?

Digital Office offers flexible photocopier leasing options across the West Midlands and UK-wide, supplying Ricoh, Canon, and Sharp equipment backed by comprehensive managed print service contracts. We’ll help you model the true cost of each option for your specific print volumes — so you make the right decision for your business.

Find Out Which Option Is Right for You

Contact us today for a free, no-obligation consultation at digitaloffice.co.uk — we’ll compare the true costs of leasing versus buying for your specific situation and recommend the most cost-effective path forward.

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