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HP Envy Inspire 7955e All-in-One Printer Review

Solid family printing—if you subscribe to its ink

3.5
Good
By William Harrel
January 31, 2022

The Bottom Line

If you sign up for HP Plus, the Envy Inspire 7955e gains six months of free ink, making it a reasonable value for a home or home-office multifunction printer.

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Pros

  • Low running costs if used with Instant Ink and HP Plus subscriptions
  • Solid overall print quality
  • Warranty doubles from one year to two with HP Plus offer

Cons

  • Steep initial purchase price
  • Cost per page exceptionally high without Instant Ink
  • Sluggish print speed
  • Wasteful two-cartridge ink design
  • No flash memory device port

HP Envy Inspire 7955e All-in-One Printer Specs

Type All-in-one
Color or Monochrome Color
Connection Type USB, Wi-Fi
Maximum Standard Paper Size Letter
Number of Ink Colors 4
Number of Ink Cartridges/Tanks 2
Direct Printing From Media Cards
Direct Printing From USB Thumb Drives
Rated Speed at Default Settings (Color) 10 ppm
Rated Speed at Default Settings (Mono) 15 ppm
Monthly Duty Cycle (Recommended) 300 to 400 pages per month
Monthly Duty Cycle (Maximum) 1,000 pages per month
LCD Preview Screen
Printer Input Capacity 125-sheet input tray, 15-sheet photo tray
Cost Per Page (Monochrome) Depends on HP Instant Ink subscription
Cost Per Page (Color) Depends on HP Instant Ink subscription
Print Duplexing
Automatic Document Feeder
Scanner Type Flatbed with ADF (Standard or Optional)
Duplexing Scans
Maximum Scan Area 8.5 by 14 inches
Scanner Optical Resolution 1,200 pixels per inch
Standalone Copier and Fax Copier

HP says that its Envy Inspire 7955e All-in-One Printer, a $269.99 multifunction inkjet designed for family rooms or home offices, comes endowed with "first-of-its-kind...advanced photo features." More to the point, it comes with six free months of HP's Instant Ink subscription or cartridge-delivery service if you sign up for the company's HP Plus plan. (See our explainer about HP Plus and Instant Ink.) The subscription makes the Inspire 7955e's operating cost low enough to make up for its purchase price, which is excessive when compared with several photo-centric competitors with higher capacities or longer feature lists. If you can make that tradeoff, there's a lot to like about this AIO, despite its antiquated two- instead of four-cartridge design.


From Envy Photo to Envy Inspire

While they don't look much alike, the Envy Inspire 7955e is a successor to the Envy Photo 7855 reviewed here back in 2017. The newer all-in-one is white and boxy-looking, while the older model was matte black, with curved and sloped chassis surfaces. It's similar in size and girth, at 9.2 by 18.1 by 15.1 inches (HWD), measured with its trays closed, and weighing 17 pounds.

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HP Envy Photo 7855 (left) and Envy Inspire 7955e (right)
What a difference five years makes: HP's Envy Inspire 7955e (right) looks very little like its Envy Photo 7855 predecessor.

The Inspire is somewhat larger than other consumer-grade, photo-optimized AIOs such as the Canon Pixma TS8320 Wireless Inkjet All-in-One and the bulk-ink Pixma G620 Wireless MegaTank Photo Printer and Epson EcoTank Photo ET-8500. However, several others, including the Epson Expression Premium XP-7100 Small-in-One and the Canon Pixma TR8620, are a few inches taller and heavier. (If you're thinking this is a crowded market, you're not wrong.)

One reason some AIOs are a little bulkier is the presence of an automatic document feeder (ADF) mechanism attached to the scanner, which lets you copy or scan multipage documents without having to place your pages on the glass one at a time. The Envy Inspire 7955e has a 35-sheet, manual-duplexing ADF, meaning it can't scan double-sided multipage documents without user intervention.

Similar Products

HP Envy Inspire 7955e ADF
A 35-page automatic document feeder handles long documents.

In contrast, the Canon TR8620 has a manual-duplexing ADF that holds 20 sheets, while the Epson XP-7100's auto-duplexing feeder holds 30 sheets. In addition to printing, copying, and scanning from a computer or handheld device via HP Smart App, you can also perform walk-up copy and scan jobs from a 2.7-inch touch-screen control panel.

HP Envy Inspire 7955e control panel
The control panel consists of a 2.7-inch touch screen.

From here, you can not only manage copy and scan tasks but also configure security and other options; manage consumables; and generate print usage and other types of reports. The same features are available through the Envy's built-in web portal, a common feature among today's printers. The web interface is accessible via most browsers, including those on your smartphone or tablet. You'll likely find that jobs such as setting up security options are easier and less cramped in the web portal than on the small control LCD.

It's important to note that, like many of HP's consumer-grade AIOs, the 7955e uses only two ink cartridges—one black and one tricolor—instead of deploying a separate cartridge for each of the four process colors (cyan, magenta, yellow, and black, commonly abbreviated CMYK). We have for many years objected to this configuration as wasteful, since it makes you throw away the tricolor cartridge as soon as one color runs out, no matter how much of the other two ink colors are left.

HP Envy Inspire 7955e ink cartridges
The old-school black-plus-tricolor cartridge design is rare among photo printers.

We'll look further at ink issues, including cost per page and output quality, in a minute. To finish with the printer's physical features, the Inspire's paper handling consists of a 125-sheet input tray with a 15-sheet photo paper insert inside. HP rates the Inspire's maximum monthly duty cycle at 1,000 prints, with a suggested monthly volume of 300 to 400. That marks the 7955e as a low-volume solution, but it's more data than Canon and Epson give you—those manufacturers haven't published volume ratings for their consumer photo printers for several years. For the record, both the Pixma TS8320 and TR8620 have two 100-sheet paper trays, while the Canon G620 holds 100 sheets of plain paper or 20 sheets of photo paper. Epson's XP-7100 and ET-8500 each hold 100 sheets of plain paper and 20 sheets of photo paper.


Connecting to and Using the Envy Inspire 7955e

The older HP Envy Photo 7855 had more-robust connectivity options than the Envy Inspire 7955e, with support for Ethernet as well as Wi-Fi and a USB cable. The 7955e has only the latter two plus mobile printing via HP Smart App, Apple AirPrint, Mopria, and Chrome OS. It can also use a Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) connection for printer setup from your phone or tablet. The 7855 could also print from a USB flash drive or SD memory card, which the Inspire can't.

HP Envy Inspire 7955e rear view
USB 2.0 and dual-band Wi-Fi are your only connectivity options.

HP Smart App is more than just a printer driver and interface for Windows, macOS, Android, and iOS devices. It allows you to create and modify workflow profiles or scripts for various tasks, such as scanning to or printing from your favorite cloud sites, or scanning to email, PDF, or an optical character recognition (OCR) program. You can even use your smartphone's camera as a scanner, sending snapshots of pages to Smart App for treatment as scanned documents.

HP Smart App screens
Smart App (shown here in three phone screens across) links the printer and scanner to your phone or other mobile device.

Testing the Envy Inspire 7955e: Entry-Level Print Speeds

HP rates the Envy Inspire 7955e at up to 15 pages per minute (ppm) for monochrome and 10ppm for color pages. Like most of HP's AIOs, the unit comes out of the box ready to print two-sided automatically. When a printer's default setting is auto-duplexing, we report both single- and double-sided test results. I tested the Envy over a USB connection to our Intel Core i5-based Windows 10 Pro testbed.

First, I clocked the 7955e as it churned out our 12-page Microsoft Word text document. It printed the single-sided pages at 15.1ppm and the double-sided document at an average of 6.7 images per minute (or ipm, where each page side is an image). The other printers discussed here were within 2ppm or 3ppm of that, except for the Canon Pixma G620 at a slow 6ppm.

Next, I timed the HP as it printed our collection of complex business documents, which include Adobe Acrobat PDFs packed with colored typefaces at varying weights and sizes, as well as charts and graphs with intricate gradients and dark fills; Microsoft Excel spreadsheets and charts; and Microsoft PowerPoint handouts with full-page, colorful business graphics. Merging those results with that of the text file, I came up with an average overall score of 7.2ppm. That's the second fastest among the AIOs mentioned in this review; the Epson EcoTank ET-8500 was quickest, at a bit over 10ppm, and the Canon G620 the slowest, at 3.4ppm.

Finally, I timed the Envy Inspire 7955e as it printed a couple of brightly colored and highly detailed 4-by-6-inch snapshots. It took about 45 seconds per print, which is right on the money for an entry-level consumer photo printer.


Excellent Print Quality, Nearly Excellent Photos

HP positions the Envy Inspire 7955e as sort of a Swiss Army knife all-in-one, with an emphasis on photos, for homes and home-based offices. Before talking about its photographic output, though, let's look at how well it prints letters, flyers, handouts, and other business documents. 

Text quality proved excellent, with well-shaped and highly legible characters. Our full-page graphs, PDFs, and PowerPoints include gradients and deep black and other dark fills that some inkjets have trouble reproducing. But that wasn't the case here—the 7955e performed well, though its relatively low-yield ink cartridges weren't made for turning out lots of high-ink-coverage pages. The graphics printed nicely, but I found myself swapping out ink cartridges often.

That brings us to the Envy's photo output. Over the years, HP's two-cartridge Envy inkjets have become capable photo printers that churn out brilliantly colored images with little to no graininess and respectable detail; the 7955e will indeed do your family's snapshots justice. That said, its black-plus-tricolor configuration cannot and does not match the wide color gamut or vivid range you'd get from a photo printer with five or six ink colors, such as the Pixma TS8320 or Expression Premium XP-7100.

HP Envy Inspire 7955e photos in different sizes
The printer supports multiple photo formats, including square and panoramic.

As for the advanced photo features HP brags about, they include a couple of output options other than the usual borderless photos in sizes such as 3 by 5 inches, 4 by 6 inches, and 8.5 by 11 inches. The Envy can produce print panoramas and, for Instagram addicts, 5-by-5-inch square prints. It can also print captions or custom messages on the back of 4-by-6-inch photos.

Photo with message on back
The Inspire can print captions or messages on the backs of photos.

Instant Ink and HP Plus to the Rescue

The ink math for this printer varies quite a bit depending on from where you source your ink. If you buy replacement ink cartridges at retail, the Envy Inspire's operating costs would be roughly 7 cents per black-and-white page and 18.1 cents per color page, in both cases based on letter-size sheets with 5% to 25% content coverage.

If you're willing, however, to sign up for HP Plus (creating an account with HP during setup), you get the first six months of an HP Instant Ink subscription gratis, with no obligation to continue beyond the initial free period. How much you pay for ink after that depends on the monthly subscription plan you choose—HP offers five options, ranging from 15 pages per month for 99 cents to 700 pages per month for $24.99.

The most appealing aspect of Instant Ink is that you pay a flat rate per page—a nickel if you subscribe to the 100-page plan for $4.99 a month, or just under 3.6 cents for the 700-page plan. It doesn't matter how much ink an individual page contains—both a double-spaced page of black text and an 8.5-by-11-inch borderless color photo will cost you 3.6 cents under the thriftiest plan. If you print a lot of photos and other content-heavy pages, HP Instant Ink can be a first-class value.

As for the other printers discussed here, only the two bulk-ink machines—the Canon Pixma G620 MegaTank and the Epson EcoTank Photo ET-8500, which hold their ink in reservoirs you refill from bottles—cost less to use than the Inspire with Instant Ink. Both are six-ink designs, which makes calculating exact per-page costs difficult, but Epson says that the ET-8500 churns out 4-by-6-inch snapshots for 4 cents each, while Canon claims the G620 produces the same prints for 2.5 cents apiece. Both have higher initial purchase prices than the HP (though the Canon not by much). Whether they're worth the expense for you depends mostly on how much you plan to print.


All Good Except the Price

Like its predecessor, the HP Envy Inspire 7955e is a good fit for families and home offices with a wide range of print and copy needs. It supports many types and sizes of media, including square and panoramic photos, and signing up for HP Plus will get you not only six free months of Instant Ink but a second year of warranty coverage. As said above, $269.99 isn't cheap for an entry-level inkjet, especially a two-cartridge model, but the subscription service improves the overall value considerably. If you are willing to commit to that recurring cost, the 7955e should make short work of your family's homework, snapshots, church flyers, and coloring pages.

HP Envy Inspire 7955e All-in-One Printer
3.5
Pros
  • Low running costs if used with Instant Ink and HP Plus subscriptions
  • Solid overall print quality
  • Warranty doubles from one year to two with HP Plus offer
Cons
  • Steep initial purchase price
  • Cost per page exceptionally high without Instant Ink
  • Sluggish print speed
  • Wasteful two-cartridge ink design
  • No flash memory device port
View More
The Bottom Line

If you sign up for HP Plus, the Envy Inspire 7955e gains six months of free ink, making it a reasonable value for a home or home-office multifunction printer.

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About William Harrel

Former Contributing Editor

William Harrel

For nearly a decade, Bill focused on printer and scanner technology and reviews for PCMag, and wrote about computer technology since well before the advent of the internet. He authored or co-authored 20 books—including titles in the popular Bible, Secrets, and For Dummies series—on digital design and desktop publishing software applications. His published expertise in those areas included Adobe Acrobat, Adobe Photoshop, and QuarkXPress, as well as prepress imaging technology. (Over his long career, though, he covered many aspects of IT.)

In addition to writing hundreds of articles for PCMag, over the years he also wrote for many other computer and business publications, among them Computer Shopper, Digital Trends, MacUser, PC World, The Wirecutter, and Windows Magazine. He also served as the Printers and Scanners Expert at About.com.

Read William's full bio

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HP Envy Inspire 7955e All-in-One Printer $149.99 at HP
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