Bambu Lab's 'most impressive 3D printer' gets a big price cut in the sales — and it smashed all expectations in our workshop tests
A 3D printer, laser engraver, cutter, and pen plotter in one enclosure; the H2D redefines what a desktop maker machine can do
If you’re serious about craft, whether that’s functional engineering parts, detailed miniatures, laser-cut signage, or all three, the Bambu Lab H2D starts at $2,119.99 (from $2,429.99) direct from Bambu Lab.
After extensive testing, this is our top-rated, top-performing 3D printer across the board. It's also on sale in the UK, the H2D AMS Combo is down to £1649 (was £1849) as part of Bambu Lab's 4th anniversary sale.
The H2D is Bambu Lab’s flagship dual-nozzle 3D printer, and it earns that title in every meaningful way. At its core, it’s a true IDEX machine — Independent Dual Extruder — meaning both nozzles run on completely separate carriages. This isn’t just a spec sheet distinction: true IDEX eliminates the wasteful purge towers that standard AMS multi-material printers use when switching materials, significantly reducing filament consumption on dual-material prints.
Today's top Bambu Lab deal
A true IDEX dual-nozzle 3D printer with a 350 × 320 × 325mm build volume, 1,000mm/s toolhead speed, 65°C heated chamber, 350°C hotend, 50μm motion accuracy, and a 5-inch touchscreen. Optional 10W and 40W laser modules add laser engraving, cutting, and pen-drawing capability. Available as a standalone unit, AMS Combo ($2,199), 10W Laser Full Combo ($2,549), or 40W Laser Full Combo ($3,199).
In the UK: now £1649 (was £1849)
In his comprehensive review, our 3D printer expert Alastair praised the H2D as "one of the most impressive 3D printers (Multi Tool machines) on the market - and that's before you even consider its laser engraver or digital cutter and plotter." And after extensive testing, found it "brings compact multifunctional manufacturing hub to your office, workshop or home."
The build volume of 350 × 320 × 325mm is Bambu Lab’s largest ever, and it opens up project categories that simply aren’t possible on smaller machines: full cosplay props, large drone frames, sizable architectural models, and production-run functional parts that previously required splitting and gluing. The 65°C heated chamber and 350°C hotend mean ABS, ASA, nylon, and carbon-fiber-reinforced filaments are all within reach without the warping and adhesion failures that plague open-frame printers with these materials.
The optional laser modules are where the H2D becomes something genuinely different. Swapping the print head for the 10W laser module turns the machine into a laser engraver and cutter capable of cutting through 5mm basswood and acrylic, engraving at 400mm/s. The 40W module steps up to 15mm basswood at 1,000mm/s — suited to thicker stock, faster production runs, and more ambitious cutting work. A drag-knife blade module adds physical cutting for vinyl, paper, and thin materials. One machine footprint replaces four.
Bambu Lab’s AI Spatial Alignment system is worth calling out specifically. It uses the onboard camera to precisely align the laser or cutting head with a previously placed 3D-printed object, so you can print a part and then laser-engrave it directly in the same session without manually repositioning. For small product makers and crafters, this is a genuinely transformative workflow feature.
The toolhead moves at up to 1,000 mm/s with 20,000 mm/s² acceleration, and the 50 μm motion accuracy (achieved via a Vision Encoder) ensures that speed doesn’t come at the cost of dimensional precision. The 5-inch touchscreen is an upgrade over the one found on the X1 Carbon, and Bambu’s software ecosystem — the Bambu Studio slicer and companion app — remains among the more polished in the FDM space.
Two new AMS systems ship alongside the H2D. The AMS 2 Pro integrates active filament drying with electromagnetic vents that toggle automatically between drying mode and sealed storage, keeping moisture-sensitive materials like nylon and TPU in optimal condition right up until print time. The AMS HT handles engineering-grade materials, drying at up to 85°C with a Filament Bypass Path to reduce resistance for rigid and fiber-reinforced filaments.
The enclosure uses an aluminum and steel chassis with plastic side panels and glass windows, and the Class 1 laser safety rating means the H2D is certified for safe indoor use without additional enclosure modifications — an important practical consideration for anyone running it in a home studio or shared workspace.
For makers, small business owners, and serious hobbyists who want a single machine that can genuinely handle print, engrave, cut, and draw, the Bambu Lab H2D is the most complete answer available right now. You can also check out more options in our guide to the best 3D printers - and yes, after re-assessing every machine in the round-up, the Bambu Lab still tops the list.
Also consider: More deals
While we haven't gone hands-on with the P1S, the price is just too good that I had to include it here. This fully enclosed 3D printer delivers fast prints on a build area measuring 256 × 256 × 256 mm³. A combo deal with the AMS 2 Pro for multi-filament printing is also discounted on the same page.
In the UK: now £339 (was £429)
For anyone looking for a fast, acccurate, beginner and budget-friendly machine, the Bambu Lab A1 Combo is one of the best in its class. It scored the full 5 stars in our review, featuring exceptional build quality, a raft of advanced tools, striking "a perfect balance, catering to a wide range of users from beginners to professionals."
In the UK: now £319 (was £379)
See the full Bambu Lab A1 review for more test results.
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Bryan M. Wolfe is a staff writer at TechRadar, iMore, and wherever Future can use him. Though his passion is Apple-based products, he doesn't have a problem using Windows and Android. Bryan's a single father of a 15-year-old daughter and a puppy, Isabelle. Thanks for reading!
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