Creality Hi Combo Review 2026: Multi-Color 3D Printing Worth It?

Creality Hi Combo Multi-Color 3D Printer

Overview

The Creality Hi Combo launched in early 2026 as Creality’s answer to the multi-color printing revolution started by Bambu Lab. Priced at $469-$599 depending on the configuration, it promises up to 16-color printing through the Creality Filament System (CFS), speeds up to 500mm/s, and an all-metal construction that feels genuinely premium.

After extensive testing, the Hi Combo sits in an interesting position: it is not the Bambu Lab killer some predicted, but it is a legitimate option for makers who want multi-color capability without the Bambu price tag.

Specifications at a Glance

Feature Creality Hi Combo
Build Volume 260 x 260 x 300mm
Max Print Speed 500mm/s
Typical Print Speed 300mm/s
Max Nozzle Temp 300°C
Max Bed Temp 100°C
Filament Colors Up to 16 (with additional CFS units)
Auto Leveling Yes
Camera Built-in with Creality Cloud support
Assembly 95% pre-assembled
Display 3.2-inch touchscreen
Price $469-$599

Build Quality and Design

Creality went back to the drawing board with the Hi series, and it shows. The all-metal frame is one of the most rigid structures on any bed-slinger in this price range. Gone are the wobbly extrusions and questionable tolerances from earlier Creality models — the Hi Combo feels like a $700+ machine.

The 95% pre-assembly means setup takes about 15-20 minutes. Connect the gantry to the base, plug in the CFS module, load filament, and you are printing. The 3.2-inch touchscreen is responsive and the menu system is straightforward, though it lacks the polish of Bambu Lab’s interface.

Creality Filament System (CFS)

The headline feature is the CFS — Creality’s automated filament switching system. Each CFS module holds four spools, and you can daisy-chain up to four modules for 16-color prints.

What Works Well

Single CFS module performance with standard PLA is reliable. Color changes complete in about 20-30 seconds, and the filament cutting mechanism works cleanly in most cases. For basic multi-color prints (2-4 colors), the system delivers consistent results after initial calibration.

Where It Struggles

The CFS reveals its first-generation nature in a few areas:

  • Color transitions with certain material combinations (especially mixing PLA brands) can leave residual color bleeding for 1-2 layers
  • Feed reliability drops when using filament below 1.70mm diameter tolerance — stick to 1.75mm +/- 0.02mm
  • Purge waste is significant on complex multi-color prints, averaging 5-8 grams per color change
  • TPU is not supported through the CFS, which limits material flexibility

Print Quality

Single Color Performance

In single-color mode, the Hi Combo punches above its price class. At 300mm/s with input shaping active, surface quality is clean with minimal ringing. Dimensional accuracy measured within +/- 0.1mm on calibration cubes, which is competitive with printers costing twice as much.

The 300°C nozzle temperature opens up engineering filaments — PETG, ASA, PA (Nylon), and even some PC blends print without issues. The heated bed reaches 100°C quickly and maintains temperature stability within +/- 1°C.

Multi-Color Performance

Multi-color results range from impressive to frustrating depending on the complexity:

  • 2-4 color prints: Excellent. Consistent color separation, minimal bleeding
  • 5-8 color prints: Good with occasional minor issues
  • 9-16 color prints: Functional but expect longer print times and increased waste

The purge tower size grows substantially with more colors. A 4-color benchy that takes 2 hours in single color can stretch to 3.5-4 hours with color changes and purging factored in.

Software: Creality Print

Creality Print has improved significantly in 2026 but still trails Bambu Studio and OrcaSlicer in several areas:

Strengths:

  • Improved multi-color slicing with automatic purge optimization
  • Built-in profiles for Hi Combo that work well out of the box
  • Cloud printing and camera monitoring through Creality Cloud

Weaknesses:

  • Profile library is smaller than OrcaSlicer or PrusaSlicer
  • Advanced tuning options are buried in menus
  • Occasional slicing artifacts on complex geometries

The Hi Combo is also compatible with OrcaSlicer via community profiles, which many experienced users prefer.

Noise and Power Consumption

At full speed (500mm/s), the Hi Combo produces around 55-60dB — noticeable but not disruptive. At typical printing speeds (200-300mm/s), it drops to a comfortable 48-52dB. Power consumption averages 180-220W during printing, which is standard for this build volume.

Who Should Buy the Creality Hi Combo?

It is a good fit if you:

  • Want multi-color printing at the lowest possible entry price
  • Print primarily with PLA and PETG
  • Value a solid metal frame and large build volume
  • Already own other Creality printers and are comfortable with the ecosystem

Look elsewhere if you:

  • Need rock-solid multi-color reliability for production work
  • Print frequently with TPU or other flexible filaments
  • Want the most polished software experience
  • Prioritize minimal waste over initial cost savings

Creality Hi Combo vs Bambu Lab A1 Combo

The inevitable comparison. The A1 Combo costs about $100-150 more than the Hi Combo and offers:

  • More mature AMS system with better reliability
  • Superior Bambu Studio software
  • Slightly smaller build volume (256 x 256 x 256mm vs 260 x 260 x 300mm)
  • Better out-of-the-box profiles and easier calibration

The Hi Combo wins on build volume, maximum nozzle temperature, and price. If budget is your primary constraint, the Hi Combo delivers 85-90% of the A1 Combo experience for meaningfully less money.

Verdict

The Creality Hi Combo earns a solid recommendation for budget-conscious makers entering the multi-color printing space. The hardware is genuinely good — the all-metal construction, 300°C hotend, and large build volume punch above the price point. The CFS system works reliably enough for casual multi-color work, though it cannot match Bambu Lab’s AMS in consistency.

Think of it as a capable first-generation product: functional, occasionally rough around the edges, and likely to improve with firmware updates. At its current price, the value proposition is compelling for anyone who does not need production-level multi-color reliability.

Rating: 7.5/10

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