Choosing the wrong print method can cost you time, money, or quality. This guide explains when to use digital printing, when to use offset, and how to decide when your job sits somewhere in between.
Toner or inkjet is applied directly from a digital file — no plates required. Each copy can differ, setup is instant, and short runs are economical.
Ink is transferred from metal plates onto a rubber blanket, then onto paper. Plates are made once per job, making setup costly — but per-unit cost drops sharply at volume.
Digital is better for small quantities, fast turnarounds, and variable data. Offset is better for large runs, Pantone colours, and the highest possible print quality.
| Factor | Digital | Offset |
|---|---|---|
| Minimum quantity | 1 copy | Typically 500+ |
| Setup cost | None | Plate-making cost |
| Cost per unit (high qty) | Higher | Lower |
| Colour accuracy | CMYK, good | CMYK + Pantone, excellent |
| Pantone / spot colour | Not available | Yes |
| Variable data | Yes (each copy unique) | No |
| Turnaround | Same day – 2 days | 5 – 10 business days |
| Paper compatibility | Most standard stocks | Wide range incl. specialty |
| Consistency across run | Very good | Excellent |
| Best for | Short runs, proofs, personalised | Large runs, brand materials |
Cost is where the two methods differ most dramatically. Digital has virtually no setup cost, making it economical for small quantities. Offset carries a fixed plate-making charge — but once that's paid, the cost per copy falls steeply as volume increases.
The crossover point — where offset becomes cheaper than digital — typically falls between 300 and 1,000 copies, depending on the printer, paper stock, and format. Always get a quote for both methods when your quantity sits in this range.
Both methods produce professional results for most applications. The differences matter most for brand-critical or high-end work.
Modern digital presses — such as the HP Indigo or Xerox iGen series — produce excellent results for everyday commercial work. Colour is consistent, resolution is typically 1200 dpi or higher, and output is indistinguishable from offset for most viewers. The limitation is that digital cannot reproduce Pantone spot colours, and very dense ink coverage may show a slight sheen on uncoated stocks.
Offset is the gold standard for commercial print quality. Ink sits more naturally on paper, producing richer blacks and more nuanced colour gradients. Offset supports Pantone, metallic, and fluorescent inks — essential for precise brand colour matching. Consistency across a long run is also superior, as plates do not degrade the way toner cartridges can.
If your design includes a specific brand colour that must match exactly — such as a Pantone-specified logo — offset is the only method that can guarantee it. Digital will produce a CMYK approximation, which may look different on screen versus in print.
Digital printing has a significant advantage in speed. Because there is no plate-making stage, files can go straight to print.
For event materials, last-minute reprints, or proof runs before a large offset job, digital is almost always the practical choice.
There is no universal winner — the right method depends on your specific job. Use this as a guide:
Business cards under 250 copies, proofs and prototypes, personalised mailers, event programmes, short-run flyers, urgent reprints.
Brochures over 1,000 copies, brand catalogues, packaging, magazines, anything with a Pantone colour or specialty ink.
Variable data printing — each piece needs a unique name, address, QR code, or number. Loyalty cards, direct mail, certificates.
Premium packaging or luxury goods — where colour accuracy, paper choice, and finishing (foil, emboss) are critical to brand perception.
Digital and offset printing are complementary tools, not competing ones. Most professional print buyers use both — digital for short, flexible, or time-sensitive work, and offset for high-volume or brand-critical jobs.
When in doubt, ask your printer for a quote on both methods at your target quantity. The numbers will usually make the decision for you.
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