What does your printed page look like?
This is where FixMyPrinter is different. Don't just print and guess — use this diagnostic guide to understand exactly what your result means and what to do next.
Page came out completely blank
Hardware / Ink
Clogged nozzles, empty cartridge, or seated cartridge issue
If the page is blank even though ink is installed, the most likely cause is clogged or dried nozzles (inkjet) or a cartridge not fully seated after a recent change. Run the printer's built-in nozzle check from its control panel, then run one cleaning cycle.
→ See full fix guide for blank pages
Text is faded or light grey
Low Ink
Low ink or toner — cartridge is nearly empty
Faded text across the whole page is the clearest sign of a low cartridge. Check ink or toner levels from the printer's control panel or its software utility. If levels are okay, run one cleaning cycle — dried ink can restrict flow even with ink remaining.
→ How to check ink levels on HP, Canon, Epson, Brother
Horizontal streaks or banding lines
Nozzle Issue
Partially clogged printhead nozzles
Regular horizontal lines or bands running across the page mean some nozzle rows are blocked but others are working. Run the printer's printhead cleaning cycle 1–2 times. Print the nozzle check pattern after each cycle to see if it's improving. If three cycles don't clear it, the printhead may need replacement.
→ How to run a nozzle check and cleaning cycle
Vertical streaks or smears
Drum / Roller
Dirty drum (laser) or dirty rollers (inkjet)
For laser printers, vertical black streaks often mean a scratched or dirty drum unit — this usually requires drum replacement. For inkjet printers, vertical smears are often caused by dirty paper feed rollers. Clean the rollers using a lint-free cloth lightly dampened with distilled water.
→ Laser vs inkjet streak diagnosis
Grayscale gradient looks wrong
Calibration
Printhead calibration or color management issue
The grayscale bar on the B&W test page should transition smoothly from white to black. If the dark end looks uneven, or if you see color tints in what should be grey, run the printer's calibration or alignment utility. Also check that "Print in Grayscale" is selected if you're using an inkjet that tends to mix color inks into black.
→ Printer calibration guide
Text looks sharp — page looks correct
All Good
Printer hardware is working correctly
If the test page looks clean — sharp text, smooth grayscale gradient, no streaks or banding — your printer's black ink or toner system is working correctly. If you're still having trouble printing documents, the issue is on the software side: the queue, driver, app settings, or the document itself.
→ Test page works but documents don't — fix guide
Page came out completely black
Hardware
Drum overexposure (laser) or driver rendering error
An entirely black page from a laser printer usually indicates a drum unit or laser assembly problem — the drum isn't receiving the laser signal to discharge. For inkjet printers, a fully black page is usually a driver rendering error. Reinstall the driver from the brand's official support page and try printing again.
→ Driver reinstall guide
Garbled text or random symbols
Driver Issue
Print language mismatch or corrupted driver
If the test page prints as gibberish, symbols, or random characters, the printer is receiving data it can't interpret — usually because the installed driver uses the wrong print language (PCL vs PostScript). Uninstall the driver from Device Manager, download the exact model driver from the brand's support page, and reinstall.
→ Garbled text fix guide