Quick Picks: Our Top Recommendations
After evaluating laser type, work area, software ecosystem, and real-world cutting performance, here are our top picks across every category:
Best Overall
Glowforge Pro
Enclosed CO2 Laser
$6,000
Check Price
Best CO2
xTool P2 55W CO2
Desktop CO2 Laser
$4,500
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Best Budget
Ortur Laser Master 3
Diode Laser Engraver
$400
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Best Production
Thunder Laser Nova 35
Production CO2 Laser
$8,500
Check Price
Best for Metal
JPT 30W Fiber Laser
Fiber Laser Marker
$3,500
Check Price
Product Comparison Table
Compare key specifications across all 7 laser engravers at a glance:
| Model |
Laser Type |
Power (W) |
Work Area |
Max Speed |
Materials |
Price |
Detailed Reviews
Photo via Unsplash
Laser Engraver Buying Guide
Selecting the right laser engraver depends on your materials, volume, budget, and workspace. Here is what matters most:
Laser Type: CO2 vs Diode vs Fiber
CO2 Lasers (40-150W)
Use a sealed gas tube to produce a 10,600nm beam. Excellent for cutting and engraving wood, acrylic, leather, fabric, and most non-metals. Edge quality is superb. Tubes require replacement every 2,000-8,000 hours. Best for production work and wide material compatibility.
Diode Lasers (5-20W)
Semiconductor-based lasers in the 400-500nm visible range. More affordable, compact, and require no warm-up. Cut and engrave wood, leather, and anodized metals well. Struggle with clear acrylic and glossy materials. Long diode life (10,000+ hours). Best for budget buyers and hobbyists.
Fiber Lasers (20-50W)
Use rare-earth-doped fiber to produce a 1,064nm beam ideal for marking bare metals, stainless steel, aluminum, brass, and hard plastics. Extremely long life (100,000+ hours). Cannot cut most non-metals. Best for metal marking, part numbering, and jewelry applications.
Work Area
Matching work area to your typical projects is critical. Consider what you will actually cut most often:
- Small (200x200mm or under): Portrait items, jewelry, small gifts. Limits sheet material work significantly.
- Medium (300x400mm): The sweet spot for most hobbyists. Handles tiles, cutting boards, and small signage.
- Large (600x900mm+): Near full-sheet capability. Needed for sign shops, production furniture inlays, and batch work.
- Passthrough slots: Allow engraving on materials longer than the machine. Critical for long items like paddles, boards, and banners.
Enclosed vs Open Frame
Enclosure design impacts safety, ventilation, and ease of use:
- Enclosed machines: Built-in safety interlocks, filtered exhaust options, and cleaner workspace. Required for CO2 lasers above 5W without external enclosures. Better for home or office environments.
- Open-frame machines: Easier to load large or awkward stock. Require an external enclosure or at minimum a laser-safe enclosure kit and proper eye protection. Lower upfront cost.
Eye Safety
Never operate any laser engraver without appropriate OD-rated laser safety glasses for your specific laser wavelength. CO2 lasers require different glasses than diode or fiber lasers.
Software & Connectivity
The software ecosystem matters as much as the hardware:
- LightBurn ($60): The gold standard for CO2 and diode lasers. Supports most machines, handles vector and raster operations, and has an active development team. One-time purchase.
- xTool Creative Space: Free, beginner-friendly software for xTool machines. Limited compared to LightBurn but improving rapidly.
- EzCad2: Standard software for fiber laser galvo systems. Functional but dated interface.
- Glowforge App: Cloud-based, extremely simple, but requires internet connection and limits advanced users.
Electrical & Ventilation Requirements
Laser engravers have specific infrastructure needs beyond a standard outlet:
- Power: Most diode and desktop CO2 lasers run on standard 120V/15A circuits. Production CO2 machines may require 240V dedicated circuits.
- Chiller/cooling: CO2 lasers require water cooling or air cooling for the laser tube. Budget $200-500 for a quality chiller on machines above 60W.
- Ventilation: All laser engravers need fume extraction. A 4-inch inline blower ducted outside is the minimum. HEPA/activated carbon filter units ($300-800) allow indoor use without ducting.
Calculate Your Shop Electrical Load
Make sure your workshop circuits can handle a laser engraver and your other tools.
Frequently Asked Questions
Use these tools to plan your laser engraver workspace and power setup:
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