Anycubic Photon Mono M5s vs Elegoo Jupiter SE

Head-to-head 3D printer comparison, 2026

Anycubic Photon Mono M5s

Anycubic Photon Mono M5s

7.8/10

Wins 0 of 5 categories

$339

Elegoo Jupiter SE

Elegoo Jupiter SE

7.8/10

Wins 0 of 5 categories

$340

The Anycubic Photon Mono M5s and Elegoo Jupiter SE are both RESIN 3D printers competing in the same price bracket, $339 vs $340. Both are scored across value, beginner-friendliness, quality, speed, and reliability. Here's the full breakdown.

Our Verdict

It's a dead heat, both score 7.8/10 overall. The Anycubic Photon Mono M5s wins in no specific category, while the Elegoo Jupiter SE takes none either. Pick based on which strengths matter more to you.

Score Breakdown

Anycubic Photon Mono M5sElegoo Jupiter SE
8
Value
8
6
Beginner Friendliness
6
10
Print Quality
10
7
Speed
7
8
Reliability
8

Specifications

SpecAnycubic Photon Mono M5sElegoo Jupiter SE
Price$339$340
TypeRESINRESIN
Build Volume218 x 123 x 220 mm277 x 156 x 300 mm
Print Speed150 mm/s70 mm/s
Min Resolution0.01 mm0.01 mm
Weight9.5 kg18 kg
Overall Score7.8/107.8/10

Pros & Cons

Anycubic Photon Mono M5s

+14K resolution on a Saturn-size plate is the highest resolution in this build volume class

+Anti-warping release mechanism measurably reduces failed prints on larger models

+218x123mm plate handles busts, terrain, and multi-model runs

+Anycubic's community has solid troubleshooting documentation

Pricier than the Elegoo Saturn 3 Ultra at comparable specs

Discontinued: Anycubic support and firmware updates are ending

App is functional but rougher than Elegoo's

Elegoo Jupiter SE

+277mm wide platform prints full-size miniature armies or large costume props in one run

+12.8-inch 6K mono screen gives better per-pixel resolution than smaller 8.9-inch screens

+COB light source delivers more even illumination across the full platform vs edge-to-edge LED arrays

+Tilt release reduces print-failure rate on large cross-sections

18kg machine: this is a semi-permanent desk fixture, not something you move around

Large FEP sheets cost more to replace and are harder to swap than smaller printer FEPs

Resin handling requires PPE and ventilation regardless of size; a large vat means more resin exposure risk

Steep beginner learning curve: hollow supports and drainage holes are mandatory at this scale

Who Should Buy Which?

Choose the Anycubic Photon Mono M5s if you want:

  • A great printer for resin
  • A great printer for miniatures
  • A great printer for detail
  • 14K mono LCD
  • Anti-warping release
  • Dual cooling

Choose the Elegoo Jupiter SE if you want:

  • A great printer for large-prints
  • A great printer for resin
  • A great printer for miniatures
  • A great printer for professional
  • 12.8-inch 6K mono LCD screen
  • 277x156x300mm build volume
  • COB mono light source (60,000-hour lifespan)

Frequently Asked Questions

Is the Anycubic Photon Mono M5s better than the Elegoo Jupiter SE?

They tie at 7.8/10. The Anycubic Photon Mono M5s suits resin and miniatures, while the Elegoo Jupiter SE is aimed at large-prints and resin.

Which is better for beginners, Anycubic Photon Mono M5s or Elegoo Jupiter SE?

Both score 6/10 for beginners. Go with the Anycubic Photon Mono M5s to save $1.

Is the Elegoo Jupiter SE worth $1 more than the Anycubic Photon Mono M5s?

The Anycubic Photon Mono M5s actually scores higher (7.8/10) despite costing $1 less. The Elegoo Jupiter SE only makes sense if you specifically need large-prints.

What's the main difference between Anycubic Photon Mono M5s and Elegoo Jupiter SE?

Build volume (218x123x220mm vs 277x156x300mm) and print speed (150 vs 70 mm/s). The Anycubic Photon Mono M5s is best for resin; the Elegoo Jupiter SE targets large-prints.

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