Digital Printing Machines India: Complete Brand & Model Catalogue
Every major digital press brand in India — from Ricoh's production toner presses to Xerox's iGen, Konica Minolta's AccurioPress, Canon's Océ continuous feed, HP's Indigo and PageWide, and Fujifilm's Jetpress inkjet. Brand histories, models, speeds, and India contacts.
Digital printing covers a wide range of technologies — cut-sheet electrophotography (toner), production inkjet, continuous feed, wide-format, and label-specific presses. This catalogue focuses on production and commercial digital presses (not desktop office printers). Wide-format inkjet presses are covered in the Wide-Format Machinery catalogue. Label digital presses (HP Indigo, Durst, Domino) are covered in the Label Machinery catalogue. HP Indigo full history → | Screen Truepress →
Founded 1936 in Tokyo, Japan by Kiyoshi Ichimura. Ricoh began as a manufacturer of sensitised paper for photography, pivoted to office copying machines in the 1950s, and built one of the world's largest office equipment businesses through the 1980s and 1990s. In the 2000s, Ricoh acquired Ikon Office Solutions (2008) and InfoPrint Solutions (2010), and acquired Heidelberg's digital printing operations — building out into commercial production printing with the Pro series. Ricoh's Pro range of production digital presses covers cut-sheet toner (Pro C series, Pro VC series continuous feed inkjet), and their InfoPrint continuous feed legacy platforms. In India, Ricoh is one of the most widely distributed production digital press brands — their network of authorised dealers and service engineers covers virtually every major city. The Pro C7200X and Pro C9200 are among the most-installed production digital presses in India's commercial printing sector.
Sales: 1800-3000-1000 (toll-free) · Website: ricoh.com/in
Production print division: Separate production print sales team handles Pro series presses. Demo facilities available in Gurugram, Mumbai, Bengaluru, Chennai.
Finance: Ricoh India offers lease and hire-purchase through Ricoh Finance and approved NBFCs.
→ Full Ricoh Pro history & all models
Founded 1906 (as Haloid Company) in Rochester, New York. Xerox literally invented the photocopier — Chester Carlson's xerography process was commercialised by Haloid (renamed Xerox in 1961) and transformed the world's document management. Xerox's iGen series of digital production presses (iGen 3, iGen 4, iGen 150, iGen 5) set the industry standard for cut-sheet production digital quality through the 2000s and 2010s. Their Versant series covers mid-range production, and their Nuvera and CiPress continuous feed platforms serve transactional and direct mail markets. In India, Xerox was long a dominant force in the digital print market through their Indian operations and dealer network. Following Fujifilm's acquisition of a stake (creating Fuji Xerox in Asia-Pacific) and subsequent divestiture changes, the India market is served through Xerox India and authorised partners. Xerox's iGen presses are found in high-quality Indian commercial printers and photo book producers.
Website: xerox.com/en-in · Toll-free: 1800-180-1225
Production print: Dedicated production print sales team in major metros. Demo centres in Gurugram and Mumbai. Xerox India also has a Certified Reseller programme — ask for a Production Printing specialist.
→ Full Xerox history & all models (DocuTech to Versant)
Konica founded 1873 in Tokyo (as Konishi-ya Rokubei photography supply); Minolta founded 1928 in Osaka; merged 2003 as Konica Minolta. Konica was one of Japan's oldest photography and optics companies, known for their professional cameras and colour film. Minolta was a camera and optics specialist famous for their Maxxum/Dynax SLR cameras and professional photography equipment. The merger brought together two complementary technology companies whose core competencies — optics, imaging, and precision mechanics — translated naturally into the digital printing era. Konica Minolta's AccurioPress series has become one of the most respected production digital press ranges globally, known for print quality (particularly skin tones and fine gradients), reliability, and the widest substrate range of any cut-sheet toner press (media up to 400 g/m² on the AccurioPress C14000). In India, Konica Minolta has a very strong market position — they are often considered the quality benchmark in the production toner press segment, and their AccurioPress presses are widely specified by commercial printers serving advertising, FMCG, and premium retail clients.
Website: konicaminolta.in
Production Print division: Konica Minolta India has a dedicated production printing division with demo facilities in Gurugram and Mumbai. They provide print-on-demand and commercial print workflow consulting alongside press sales.
Finance: Available through Konica Minolta Financial Services and partner NBFCs.
→ Full Konica Minolta AccurioPress history & all models
Canon founded 1937 in Tokyo; Océ founded 1877 in Venlo, Netherlands; Canon acquired Océ in 2010. Canon is globally known for cameras, printers, and imaging equipment. Their production digital press division operates under two brands: Canon imageRUNNER ADVANCE and imagePRESS for cut-sheet toner, and Océ VarioPrint for continuous feed production systems. Océ was founded in 1877 as a chemistry company and became the world leader in wide-format and continuous-feed production printing — their VarioPrint series of continuous feed inkjet presses (VarioPrint i-series) are among the world's fastest production inkjet platforms. Canon has very strong India distribution through their existing office equipment and imaging network, which extends to production print with their own salesforce and dealer channel. The imageRUNNER Advance and imagePRESS ranges are widely used in India's corporate in-plant print centres, university printing departments, and commercial digital printers.
Website: canon.co.in · Production Print: canon.co.in/bfis/production-print
Océ in India: Canon India handles Océ VarioPrint and ProStream continuous feed systems through their production print division. Demo and evaluation facilities available in Gurugram.
→ Full Canon imagePRESS & Océ history & all models
Founded 1959 in Kyoto, Japan by Kazuo Inamori. Kyocera (Kyoto Ceramics) began as a manufacturer of fine ceramics for industrial and electronic applications — their ceramic technology eventually found application in printer drums and components that outlast conventional organic photoconductors. Kyocera's TASKalfa series covers mid-volume production printing with their amorphous silicon drum technology, which gives longer drum life than conventional OPC drums — an advantage in high-volume environments. Kyocera's position in India is primarily in the mid-volume commercial and in-plant print market, not in the high-end production press segment (which Ricoh, Konica Minolta, and Xerox dominate). Their TASKalfa 8001i through Pro series are used in corporate print centres, educational institutions, and commercial digital shops. Kyocera acquired UTAX/TA (Europe) and has integrated some of their production technology. In India, Kyocera has a very wide dealer network due to their broader document solutions portfolio.
Website: kyoceradocumentsolutions.co.in
Founded 1912 in Osaka, Japan by Tokuji Hayakawa. Sharp is best known in India for consumer electronics (televisions, air conditioners, home appliances), but their document solutions division produces a range of office and light production multifunction devices (MFPs). Sharp's MX series MFPs and the BP series serve the in-plant and corporate print market. Sharp is not a significant player in the production commercial print segment (that market belongs to Ricoh, Konica Minolta, Xerox, and Canon), but their devices are widely installed in corporate and government in-plant print environments in India through their electronics distribution network. Their primary value proposition is integration with Sharp's broader IT and AV infrastructure.
For dedicated production print applications (high volume commercial, packaging sample printing, photo books), Sharp is not the recommended choice — the Ricoh Pro, Konica Minolta AccurioPress, Xerox Versant, or Canon imagePRESS ranges offer superior production capabilities at comparable cost.
Website: sharpindiaonline.com
Founded 1934 in Tokyo, Japan. Fujifilm is one of the world's great technology transformation stories. Founded as a photographic film manufacturer — competing directly with Kodak — Fujifilm foresaw the digital disruption of photography in the 1990s and systematically diversified, applying their core expertise in chemistry, optics, and precision coating to pharmaceuticals, medical imaging, flat panel display materials, and commercial printing. Their Jetpress series of sheet-fed inkjet presses represents the most ambitious attempt to replace offset lithography with inkjet in commercial print. The Jetpress 750S (B2 format, 2,700 B2 sheets/hr at 1,200×1,200 dpi) delivers offset-quality print on offset paper without plate costs. In India, Fujifilm has a growing presence in pre-press (their Luxel CTP is widely used) and is actively building the Jetpress installed base among premium commercial and packaging printers. Fujifilm also distributes their wide-format inkjet printers (Acuity and Onset series) in India.
Website: fujifilm.com/in · Graphic Systems India: fujifilm.com/in/en/products/graphic-systems
CTP: Fujifilm Luxel CTP systems (offset plate-making) are widely distributed in India — see Pre-Press & CTP Catalogue for details.
→ Full Fujifilm Jetpress & Revoria history & all models