Epson Workforce WF-110 Review: Honest Hands-On Testing

Epson Workforce WF-110 Wireless Color Mobile Printer,White, Small,Black
Epson
- Epson printing system is designed to be used exclusively with Epson Genuine Cartridges. Use of non-genuine ink could cause damage not covered under the printer’s ltd. wnty.
- Flexible battery charging — Choose from a variety of charging options, including via USB and AC adapter, or print on AC power.
- Built-in battery — a rechargeable lithium-ion battery offers dependable performance in a small package.
- External accessory battery available — for even greater Print volume.
Quick Verdict
Pros
- Built-in rechargeable battery means true wireless printing anywhere, no power outlet required
- Compact form factor easily fits in a laptop bag or briefcase
- Wi-Fi Direct lets you print without a router or existing network
- Prints in full colour from tablets, smartphones, laptops and desktops
- USB-C and AC adapter charging options add real-world flexibility
Cons
- Print speed of 7 ppm colour is noticeably slower than desktop inkjets
- 30-sheet paper capacity fills quickly on longer print jobs
- No automatic document feeder — single-sided printing only
- Replacement ink cartridges are relatively expensive for high-volume users
Quick Verdict
The Epson Workforce WF-110 is the most practical battery-powered colour printer in its size class. It prints reliably over Wi-Fi Direct, handles standard paper sizes, and the built-in lithium-ion battery genuinely liberates you from a power socket. Print speed and running costs are the two trade-offs you'll live with — and they're forgivable given the portability. Score: 4.2 / 5.
What Is the Epson Workforce WF-110?
The Epson Workforce WF-110 is a compact wireless colour inkjet printer that runs entirely on its built-in rechargeable battery. It's designed for professionals who need to print invoices, contracts, or site photos on the road — real estate agents, field service technicians, travelling nurses, and anyone whose office happens to change location daily. The unit measures roughly 12.2 by 9.1 by 8.5 inches with the paper tray extended, and it weighs just under 4 pounds with battery and a full set of cartridges installed.

Connectivity is entirely wireless: Wi-Fi 5 with Wi-Fi Direct means you can pair it with an iPad, Android tablet, laptop, or phone without hunting for a hotspot. There's no ethernet port and no USB data cable by default — everything routes through the radio. Epson ships the unit with starter ink cartridges, a lithium-ion battery pre-installed, a USB-C cable, and an AC power adapter.
Key Features
- Built-in rechargeable lithium-ion battery rated for up to 50 pages per charge
- Wi-Fi 5 wireless with Wi-Fi Direct — print from any device without a router
- Full-colour inkjet printing up to 7 ppm colour and 14 ppm monochrome
- Dual charging options: USB-C and dedicated AC adapter, plus AC-power printing
- Supports letter, legal, and photo sizes (4×6, 5×7) on plain and photo paper
- 30-sheet input tray, replaceable accessory battery available for extended use
- Compatible with Epson iPrint app, AirPrint, and Mopria certified services
Hands-On Review
I unboxed the WF-110 on a Monday morning with moderate expectations — previous portable printers I'd tested felt like compromises. Right away, the build quality surprised me. The casing is dense and solid, not the plasticky shell you sometimes get on travel gear. The paper tray clicks into place with satisfying precision, and the rear feed slot swallowed a stack of 20 sheets without complaint. Setting up Wi-Fi Direct took about four minutes: power on, navigate to Wi-Fi Direct mode on the tiny two-line LCD, connect from my iPhone, and send a test page. Done.

The first thing I printed was a four-page colour quote document at a client site. The page came out clean, with solid text and colour graphics that were entirely readable. I noticed the cyan skewed slightly warm under fluorescent light, but that normalised under natural daylight — a nuance most people won't pick up. By day three I was using it to print 4×6 site photos from my iPad, and those looked genuinely good, with punchy saturation and no banding worth complaining about.
What nobody mentions in the listings: the battery indicator on the LCD is optimistic. After about 40 pages, the indicator still showed two bars, then dropped sharply to empty. I started keeping a habit of charging it between meetings rather than trusting the gauge. The other thing — the print head nozzles seem to dry faster than a desktop printer when left unused for 48+ hours. Running a quick nozzle check from the app after a weekend idle sorted it out immediately, but it's worth knowing if you only print once a week.

Speed is the honest limitation. At 7 ppm in colour, you're not going to run off a 30-page colour brochure before a meeting. For a handful of pages — a quote, a consent form, a shipping label — it's perfectly adequate. The trade-off is the size and weight you're saving compared to any printer with a faster motor. I called it even.
Who Should Buy It?
The Epson Workforce WF-110 earns its place in a specific workflow:
- Field sales and service professionals who need to hand a printed document to a client on-site, same day, without driving back to the office.
- Real estate agents printing property disclosures and contracts at a listing appointment — the 4×6 photo output is a bonus for quick turnaround.
- Healthcare and logistics workers who deal with paper forms in environments where a shared network printer isn't accessible.
- Occasional remote workers who travel light and need a printer that's genuinely portable — not a desktop unit that happens to have a handle.
Skip the WF-110 if you regularly print more than 30 pages at a time, need two-sided printing, or expect desktop-level speeds. It's also overkill — and too expensive — if you print fewer than five pages a month from home.
Alternatives Worth Considering
If the Epson Workforce WF-110 doesn't quite fit your workflow, these two options are worth a look:
- Canon Pixma TR150 — slightly faster print speeds, a more informative display panel, and an optional battery tray. It's bulkier and heavier, but the day-to-day experience feels less constrained if you're printing daily.
- HP OfficeJet 202 — comparable in footprint, with HP's Smart app ecosystem and generally lower ink costs through Instant Ink. The trade-off is a more basic monochrome LCD and slightly less vibrant colour output.
FAQ
Yes, it ships with starter cartridges. However, they contain less ink than standard-capacity replacements, so your first set will yield fewer pages before you need to buy replacements.
Final Verdict
After two weeks of real use, the Epson Workforce WF-110 proved itself as a genuinely portable printer that doesn't feel like a gadget — it behaves like a tool. The wireless setup is painless, the battery holds up through a full workday of moderate use, and print quality is more than adequate for the documents professionals actually need on the road. The slower print speed and modest paper capacity are honest trade-offs for the size, and they're trade-offs most mobile workers will accept without complaint.
If you regularly find yourself needing hard copies where no printer exists, this is the one to grab. Check the current price on Amazon before you decide.