Which ANYCUBIC Grey Resin Is the Better Buy for Your Resin Printer?

If you’re choosing between these two ANYCUBIC grey resins, you’re really deciding between a bigger bottle and a lower upfront price. Both are standard 405nm LCD resins with the same 4.7/5 rating, so the real question is value per print, not whether one is dramatically better quality. This comparison focuses on what matters to resin makers: consistency, cost, compatibility, and how much resin you get for your money.

Our PickANYCUBIC 3D Printer Resin 2KG, Standard 405nm UV Fast Curing Photopolymer Resin with High Precision and Low Shrinkage for 8K/14K LCD Resin 3D Printer, Grey

ANYCUBIC 3D Printer Resin 2KG, Standard 405nm UV Fast Curing Photopolymer Resin with High Precision and Low Shrinkage for 8K/14K LCD Resin 3D Printer, Grey

£23.984.7 (1,461)
ANYCUBIC Standard 3D Printer Resin, LCD UV 405nm Rapid Photopolymer 3D Resin for 6K/8K/12K/14K LCD 3D Printers(1000g, Grey)

ANYCUBIC Standard 3D Printer Resin, LCD UV 405nm Rapid Photopolymer 3D Resin for 6K/8K/12K/14K LCD 3D Printers(1000g, Grey)

£18.994.7 (3,222)

Our Recommendation

Product A is the better overall buy because it delivers 2kg for £23.98, which is vastly better value than Product B’s 1kg for £18.99. Both have the same strong 4.7/5 rating, so you are not sacrificing trust or quality by going bigger. Product A also has the more performance-focused positioning, with high precision and low shrinkage called out explicitly. Unless you specifically want the smaller bottle, Product A is the smarter purchase.

Detailed Comparison

Display

For resin, the “display” equivalent is how well the resin resolves fine details under LCD exposure. On paper, Product A is positioned as the more premium option: it’s marketed for 8K/14K LCD printers and specifically calls out high precision and low shrinkage. Product B is also compatible with 6K/8K/12K/14K LCD printers, so both are clearly aimed at modern high-resolution machines. In practice, that means both should be capable of crisp miniatures, models, and functional parts, but Product A gets the edge because its listing emphasises precision and low shrinkage more strongly. Winner: Product A, but only by a small margin.

Performance

Both resins are 405nm rapid photopolymer resins, so they should cure reliably on standard MSLA/LCD printers with similar exposure profiles. The shared 4.7/5 rating is a strong sign that neither product is a dud, and Product B’s much larger review count (3222 vs 1461) suggests more real-world validation from users. Product A’s 2kg format is the standout here: if you print a lot, it reduces the chance of batch-to-batch variation and saves you from constantly reordering. Product B may be slightly more convenient for occasional users because a 1kg bottle is easier to store, shake, and manage. Still, for raw printing throughput and fewer interruptions, Product A wins. Winner: Product A.

Build quality and design

Resin doesn’t have “build quality” in the same way a printer does, but packaging, formulation consistency, and usability matter. Product A’s 2kg bottle suggests a bulk format that is better suited to regular hobbyists, tabletop production, or anyone running a printer most weeks. Product B’s 1kg bottle is more compact and arguably better for small workspaces, first-time users, or people who don’t want a large open bottle sitting around. Neither product has a meaningful design advantage in the resin itself based on the provided data, because both are standard grey ANYCUBIC resins. If you judge by practicality and fewer top-ups, Product A wins; if you judge by convenience and storage, Product B is easier to live with. Overall winner: Product A.

Battery life

Not applicable here in the literal sense, because these are resin consumables, not powered devices. If we translate this to “how long the product lasts before you need more,” Product A is the clear winner because you get 2kg for £23.98, while Product B gives you 1kg for £18.99. That means Product A lasts longer and reduces the number of purchases, which matters if you print regularly. Winner: Product A.

Price and value for money

This is where the decision gets very clear. Product A costs £23.98 for 2kg, which works out to about £11.99 per kg. Product B costs £18.99 for 1kg, which is £18.99 per kg. So Product A is around 37% cheaper per kilogram, and that is a big deal in a consumable you’ll burn through fast. Product B is cheaper at checkout by £4.99, but it is the weaker value by a wide margin when you look at cost per litre/kg of resin. If you want the best bang for your buck, Product A wins decisively. Winner: Product A.

Game library/features

For resin, the equivalent of features is printer compatibility, curing behaviour, and the kind of jobs it suits. Product B has the broader compatibility claim on the listing, covering 6K/8K/12K/14K LCD printers, while Product A specifically highlights 8K/14K LCD resin printers. That makes Product B look slightly more flexible on paper, especially if you own an older 6K machine or want a resin that is explicitly marketed across more printer tiers. Product A counters with the larger 2kg size and a more performance-oriented pitch around precision and low shrinkage. If you value compatibility wording and a more general-purpose listing, Product B wins this category. Winner: Product B.

Overall user experience

For most buyers, the user experience of resin comes down to how often it fails you, how much cleanup hassle it creates, and whether you feel like you’re constantly running out. Both products have the same 4.7/5 rating, so both are well-regarded by users. Product B has more reviews, which gives it a slight trust edge in terms of sample size, but Product A’s larger bottle and much better cost per kg make it the more satisfying choice for anyone printing regularly. If you’re a casual user who wants a smaller bottle and slightly broader compatibility wording, Product B is perfectly sensible. If you’re a serious hobbyist, tabletop painter, or someone running a lot of prints, Product A is the more rewarding experience because it stretches your budget and your printing sessions further. Overall winner: Product A.

Overall summary: both ANYCUBIC grey resins are solid, well-rated choices, but Product A is the better buy for most people because it gives you twice the resin for only £4.99 more. Product B’s main advantage is convenience and a slightly broader compatibility claim, but Product A wins on value, volume, and likely long-term usefulness. If you print often, Product A is the obvious pick. If you only print occasionally and want the lower upfront spend, Product B is still a safe choice.

Buy the ANYCUBIC 3D Printer if...

Buy Product A if you print regularly and want the lowest cost per kg. It’s also the better choice if you hate running out of resin mid-project and want a bulk bottle that supports bigger batches or more frequent printing.

Buy the ANYCUBIC Standard 3D if...

Buy Product B if you only print occasionally and prefer spending less upfront today. It also makes sense if you want a smaller 1kg bottle for easier storage, handling, or testing the resin before committing to a larger supply.

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