The nozzle is a tiny part with an outsized effect on print quality. Getting the right nozzle for your material and print style - and knowing when to replace it - makes a noticeable difference.
The 0.4mm nozzle is the default on almost every printer for good reason. It balances:
Start here and stay here until you have a specific reason to change.
0.2mm nozzles produce very fine details but are slow, clog more easily, and require very dry, consistent filament.
Use when: Printing miniatures, intricate models, or anything where fine detail matters more than speed.
Drawback: Print times 3-4x longer than 0.4mm for the same model.
0.6mm nozzles flow significantly more plastic per second, reducing print times considerably.
Use when: Printing large functional parts, prototypes, or anything where surface finish matters less than speed.
Sweet spot: 0.6mm at 0.3mm layer height is a popular combination for fast, strong prints.
0.8mm nozzles are for large, fast prints where detail is irrelevant. Popular for printing large structural parts quickly.
Use when: Speed is the priority and the part won't be visible.
Brass nozzles come with almost every printer and work well for:
Lifespan: 200-500 hours depending on material.
Do not use for: Carbon fibre, glow-in-the-dark, metal-filled, or ceramic-filled filaments - the abrasive particles destroy brass quickly (sometimes within a single spool).
Replacement brass nozzles are cheap - keep a pack on hand.
Hardened steel nozzles are the solution for any abrasive filament. They're rougher than brass (slightly worse surface finish) but last many times longer under abrasive wear.
Use for: Carbon fibre-filled, glow-in-the-dark, metal-filled, wood-filled, and ceramic filaments.
Lifespan: 1000+ hours on abrasive materials.
Hardened steel nozzles cost more than brass but are essential if you print abrasive filaments regularly.
Stainless steel is food-safe and has decent abrasion resistance - a middle ground between brass and hardened steel. Good choice if you're printing food-contact items.
Ruby-tipped nozzles have a brass body with a synthetic ruby tip that resists abrasion almost indefinitely. They're expensive (~£50-100) but effectively last forever.
Worth it if: You print abrasive filaments constantly and the cost of replacing hardened steel nozzles adds up.
Copper conducts heat better than brass, reducing heat creep and enabling slightly higher print speeds. Plated versions add wear resistance.
Best for: High-speed printing, particularly on printers like Bambu Lab that push speeds hard.
Most budget printers (Ender 3 series and clones) use MK8 nozzles. Prusa printers use E3D V6 nozzles. Bambu Lab printers use proprietary nozzles.
Before buying replacement nozzles, confirm which type your printer uses. The printer manual or a quick search for "[printer model] nozzle type" will confirm.
Common nozzle types:
| Type | Common Printers |
|---|---|
| MK8 | Creality Ender 3, CR-10, Artillery, most Chinese printers |
| E3D V6 | Prusa MK3/MK4, many DIY builds |
| Bambu proprietary | All Bambu Lab printers |
| Volcano | High-flow hotends (longer version of MK8/V6) |
Signs a nozzle needs replacing:
How often? For standard PLA with a brass nozzle, every 300-500 hours is a rough guide. For abrasive materials with a brass nozzle, you might need to replace after just one or two spools.
Important: The nozzle seals against the heat break when hot. If you tighten cold, it won't seal properly when it expands, causing leaks.
Before replacing, try cleaning:
Nozzle cleaning needles can clear partial clogs by pushing debris through while at temperature.
Cleaning filament is designed to flush out old material and residue when changing filament types.
Nozzles are cheap. Keeping a pack of replacement brass nozzles and a hardened steel nozzle on hand means you're never stuck waiting for a delivery when a nozzle gives up.