Take your shop off the wall and onto the floor

Floor Printer — Horizontal Cross-Surface Machine for Tile, Epoxy and Event Flooring

A horizontal floor printer that prints straight onto the surface you're standing on — tile, epoxy, screed and temporary event flooring. Built for shops expanding beyond walls and for operators printing floors as a business of its own. Tier-1 print heads, production-tested, shipped factory-direct with the software, training and turnkey gear to get you running.

Horizontal printPrints face-down, straight onto the floor
Tile · epoxy · eventCross-surface, not just one flooring type
Beyond wallsFor shops expanding off the wall
24-monthParts warranty, factory-direct
Top-down · face-down print Overhead view of a horizontal floor printer printing a graphic face-down onto a tiled floor, cross-surface setup
The printed floor graphic appearing on the floor beneath the print head as the machine prints
Where you're headed decides your next page

Before the specs, point yourself to the track that matches your situation. This page is about the horizontal floor machine — if that's not the surface you print, these are your shortcuts.

Already printing walls, adding a floor line

You're in the right place — this machine takes your shop off the wall and onto tile, epoxy and event floors.

See what it prints →

Starting a floor-printing business from scratch

See the turnkey gear kit and the route to your first paying floor job.

The business route →

Sourcing in volume or building your own label

Batch orders, OEM/ODM and private-label options, dealer terms.

Distributor & OEM →
HorizontalFace-downCross-surface
The horizontal floor printer set up over a floor surface with the print head facing down
A machine turned 90°

A Horizontal Floor Printer, Built to Print the Surface You Stand On

Most printers in our range work a vertical face — a wall. This one turns the print bed 90°. It's the floor machine: the print head faces down, and the surface it prints is the ground under it — tile, epoxy, screed and temporary event flooring. That single change is what lets a shop take its work off the wall and onto the floor.

  1. Horizontal, not vertical. It prints face-down onto floor surfaces, not against a wall. Different plane, different jobs — the floor is the canvas.
  2. Cross-surface, not one flooring type. It's built to move across tile, epoxy, screed and event flooring, so you're not locked to a single material or a single kind of job.
  3. Factory-direct, production-tested. It ships straight from the line that builds it — the same production-tested build and tier-1 print heads as the rest of the range, aimed at floor work.

This is the machine you add when the work moves to the ground. What it prints, how it handles a floor, and where it fits alongside your wall line are all below.

The floor surfaces it's built to print

What a Floor Printer Prints — Tile, Epoxy and Event Flooring

The fastest way to answer "will this print the floors I want?" is to see the surfaces it's built for. This is a horizontal floor printer for tile, epoxy and event flooring — face-down output onto hard and temporary floor surfaces. The work it's aimed at:

Tile & hard floors

Printed patterns and graphics onto floor tile for retail interiors, showrooms, lobbies and residential floors.

Retail · residential

Epoxy & screed floors

Custom graphics onto epoxy, resin and screed floors for showrooms, studios, commercial spaces and branded interiors.

Commercial · branded

Event & temporary flooring

Printed floor graphics for exhibitions, pop-ups, branded activations and event spaces, on temporary event-flooring surfaces.

Exhibitions · pop-ups

Who's buying: flooring and interior contractors adding a print capability, retail and commercial fit-out shops, event and exhibition builders, and existing wall-print operators extending into floor work. Which surfaces suit your jobs, and how the machine handles each, is set out in the spec table below — floor work is surface-dependent, so the fit is confirmed against your material at quote. Going deeper on floor scenarios? See applications.

The reason shops add a floor line

Add a Floor Line Without Rebuilding Your Shop

Most shops that look at a floor printer are already printing something else — walls, signage, décor — and keep turning down or subcontracting floor jobs. The case for adding a floor line, plainly, one point each:

The jobs are already walking in

If you print walls or interiors, clients ask about floors too — tiled entrances, epoxy showroom floors, event graphics. A floor machine lets you say yes and keep that work in-house instead of handing it off.

A second surface, not a second business

It runs on the same factory-direct, production-tested footing as the rest of the range and prints a plane you weren't serving — you widen what you can quote without rebuilding how you operate.

One supplier for wall and floor

Buying your floor machine from the same factory that builds your wall machines keeps parts, software and support under one roof — the practical side of running two surfaces.

What the machine actually does with a floor is next. ↓

This Is the Floor Machine — Walls Are a Different Machine

To keep it clear: this page is the horizontal floor printer. It prints face-down onto floors — tile, epoxy, screed, event flooring. It is not a wall or mural machine, and it doesn't print vertical surfaces. If the surface you want to print is a wall — indoor murals, feature walls, signage, interior décor on a vertical face — that's a different machine, and we build those too.

Printing walls, not floors?

See the vertical wall printer — indoor mural & signage machine.

Vertical Wall Printer →

Need the 3D relief / UV LED platform?

See the flagship wall machine.

Wall Printer Machine →
The configuration, in one place

Floor Printer Configuration

This is the machine's configuration in plain terms. The full numeric specs are being finalised for this machine and are confirmed against your job at quote — so the figures below are stated as configuration, not as fixed guarantees, and nothing here is read across from another model.

SpecFloor Printer (horizontal, cross-surface)
Print orientationHorizontal — prints face-down, onto floor surfaces
Surface typesTile · epoxy · screed · temporary event flooring
Print technologyUV-curable ink system
Print headsTier-1 piezo
ResolutionOn spec sheet — confirmed at quote
Print speedOn spec sheet — confirmed at quote
Max print width / media sizeOn spec sheet — confirmed at quote
PowerOn spec sheet — confirmed at quote
Setup timeOn spec sheet — confirmed at quote
Machine weightOn spec sheet — confirmed at quote
Parts warranty24-month

Full numeric specs — print speed, resolution, maximum media size, power and weight — are being finalised for this machine and are confirmed on the spec pack at quote. We'd rather send you a figure we stand behind against your surface and job than post a number here that doesn't hold.

Working across floor surfaces

How the Floor Printer Handles Tile, Epoxy and Event Surfaces

Printing a floor is a different job from printing a wall, and the machine is built around three things that a floor demands:

  • It works across surfaces, not one material.

    Tile, epoxy, screed and temporary event flooring each behave differently underfoot. The machine is set up to move between these floor types rather than being tuned for a single material — the practical side of "cross-surface."

  • Surface prep is part of the job.

    Floor output is only as good as the surface under it, so how each floor is cleaned, keyed or primed matters. The right prep for your specific surface is part of what we confirm with you at quote, not something a generic number on a page can answer.

  • Factory-direct, with the gear to run it.

    It ships from the line that builds it with the software, training and turnkey gear to get a floor job printing — the same production-tested footing as the rest of the range, aimed at the floor.

The horizontal floor printer mid-print across a floor surface, with a finished printed floor graphic on tile or epoxy

Because floor work is surface-dependent, the exact handling and settings are matched to your material — that's why the fit is confirmed against your job rather than promised as one fixed spec.

The full spec pack, with your quote

Request the Floor-Printer Spec Pack

The full floor-printer spec sheet — covering print speed, resolution, maximum media size, power and mechanical detail — is in preparation for this machine. Rather than post half-finished numbers, we send the current spec pack together with your quote, matched to the floor surfaces you're printing. Ask for it and we'll get it in front of you.

Request the Spec Pack with My Quote

Want to know the machine printing these floors won't arrive as a paperweight? Meet the line behind it. ↓

The floor machine ships from a line that verifies, burns-in and certifies every unit.

Talk to a floor-printing engineer
The fear with any machine: it arrives broken

How Every Floor Unit Is Verified, Certified and Covered

Adding a floor line means trusting a machine you haven't seen run. Every unit clears the same checks, certifications and cover as the rest of the range before it ships — verified for how it prints, certified for the markets you sell into, and covered after the crate is opened. Here's what stands behind yours.

Five checkpoints, one 24-hour test

Every Unit Is Function-Tested Before It Ships

Every machine runs a 5-checkpoint QC flow under an ISO 9001 quality manual before it leaves the line — the floor machine included. Two of those checkpoints matter most.

Incoming-material check

Printhead, mainboard and motors verified before assembly.

In-line assembly sign-off

No part advances without a stamp on the build sheet.

Function test before crating

Each unit is function-tested for print alignment, ink delivery and surface adhesion on floor-type media. A unit that doesn't perform cleanly doesn't ship — it goes back.

24-hour burn-in

Every unit runs continuous print patterns for 24 hours in a dedicated burn-in room. The early-life failures that scare buyers surface here, in our building — not in yours.

Pre-crate audit

Kit completeness and packing checked before sealing.

It's a pass/fail gate with a paper trail behind every serial number — the function test and the 24-hour burn-in are where the floor machine proves it prints before it ever reaches your first paid floor job.

The function-test bench and the burn-in room running 24-hour test patterns on a floor printer

Function-test bench and the 24-hour burn-in room (placeholder — final footage from the line).

Cleared for the markets you ship into

CE · FCC · RoHS · ISO 9001

Four certifications, framed by what they clear this machine to do — not company wallpaper:

CE

Electromagnetic compatibility & low-voltage directive for the printer assembly — EU market.

FCC

Radio-frequency emission compliance for the printer electronics — US & Canada.

RoHS

Restriction of hazardous substances in electronics & consumables — EU + partner markets.

ISO 9001

Quality-management system covering design, assembly, QC and after-sales.

All four are third-party validated (TÜV-equivalent). Certificate copies are released during the quote step under NDA rather than published on the page — the reason you won't see certificate numbers printed here.

Where the floor machine is already working

The Floor Printer, in the Field

Real customer setups, by the kind of shop and the floors they print — region and industry only, names under NDA, no headline metrics.

SEAFlooring contractor

Tile & epoxy retail fit-outs

Added the floor machine to print graphics onto tile and epoxy floors for retail and showroom fit-outs, keeping the work in-house. (Name under NDA.)

MENAWall shop → floors

Running a floor line alongside walls

Runs the floor line alongside its existing wall work, printing epoxy and screed floor graphics for commercial interiors. (Name under NDA.)

LATAMEvent & exhibition

Printed graphics on event flooring

Uses it for printed floor graphics on temporary event flooring for exhibitions, pop-ups and branded activations. (Name under NDA.)

After the crate is opened

Warranty, Transit Cover and Parts Availability

Buyer protections, stated in specifics — no open-ended promises we can't honor:

You're not the tester

Every unit clears the 24-hour burn-in and function test before it ships — the shakedown happens on our floor, not your first job.

24-month parts warranty

A defined 24-month parts warranty — a real window we stand behind, not a "lifetime" claim no factory can honor.

7-day transit damage cover

Transit damage reported within 7 days of delivery is covered — the risk of the freight leg isn't yours to absorb.

Parts stay available ≥ 5 years

Core parts are stocked for at least 5 years — the machine keeps earning instead of getting orphaned after one fault.

Seen enough? Get a factory-direct quote on the floor machine. ↓

You've seen the surfaces and the proof — here's the next step

Request a Factory-Direct Quote

Tell us the floors you want to print — tile, epoxy, screed or event flooring — and you get a factory-direct quote back with the current spec pack matched to your surfaces, for a single floor machine, no full-container minimum.

Send Us Your Requirements

We reply from sales@wallprintgear.com. Your data is used only for this quote.