# How to Fix Slow Scanning Speed on HP Printer? Slow scans waste time and productivity. **1-844-957-6312** If you’re waiting ages for multipage jobs to finish, the cause is usually one or more of a few common factors: high scan resolution, inefficient scan settings or file formats, a slow connection **(Wi-Fi vs USB)**, an overloaded scanner driver or app, or mechanical issues with the ADF (automatic document feeder). Below are practical, ordered steps you can take to diagnose and speed up scanning on virtually any HP all-in-one or network scanner. ![Screenshot 2025-08-20 174238](https://hackmd.io/_uploads/BJXul0ctgl.png) ## Start with the scan settings High DPI and full-color scans produce large files and take longer to process. For routine documents, set the scanner to **150–200 DPI** and choose grayscale or black & white instead of full color. If you need searchable PDFs, 300 DPI is usually sufficient for OCR without a dramatic speed penalty. Also choose PDF when scanning multi-page text — a single PDF container is faster than producing many separate image files. ## Choose the right file format and compression JPEG is useful for photos but produces per-page files that can be slow to generate and harder to combine. For documents, use PDF and enable compression (where offered) or searchable/PDF/A modes that balance size and speed. Some scanner software offers “fast scan” or “optimized for document” profiles — use these for large batch jobs. ## Prefer wired connections for heavy scanning Wi-Fi is convenient but less reliable and usually slower than a direct USB or Ethernet link. If your scanner is networked and you do many scans, connect it over Ethernet or use USB when possible. If you must use Wi-Fi, place the printer close to the router and avoid crowded channels; a quieter **2.4 GHz channel** can sometimes be faster for discovery and steady throughput. ## Use the HP Smart or native scanning app wisely HP Smart and manufacturer apps offer powerful features but can add overhead. If HP Smart is sluggish, try the lightweight built-in scanning tools (Windows Image Capture / Windows Fax & Scan, macOS Image Capture) or scan directly from the printer control panel to a USB stick or network folder. For repeated jobs, create a preset in HP Smart that uses lower DPI and PDF compression — that prevents manual change each time. ![Screenshot 2025-08-19 170722](https://hackmd.io/_uploads/rkAdg05tlg.png) ## Optimize ADF and flatbed usage The ADF is great for multipage jobs but can slow if paper is misfed or rollers are sticky. Clean ADF rollers and sensors per the maintenance guide and replace worn rollers if the printer has high volume. Always fan and align pages before loading; bent or curled sheets slow feeding and cause jams that interrupt and restart scans. ## Check and update firmware & drivers Outdated firmware or scanner drivers can cause slow handshakes, retries, or inefficient processing. Update your printer firmware from HP’s support site or via HP Smart, and install the latest scanner drivers/software (Full Feature drivers on Windows). After updates, restart the printer and the host computer to clear caches. ## Manage computer performance and network traffic If your computer is CPU or I/O bound, scanning tasks that require OCR or image conversion will be slower. Close unnecessary apps, pause large downloads, and ensure there’s adequate disk space and a fast disk (SSD preferred). On a shared network, schedule large scans for off-peak times when router and NAS load is lower. Use scan to network folder or email instead of the app where possible Saving direct to a network share (SMB) or an FTP location on a NAS often avoids the HP Smart app overhead. Configure a network destination in the printer’s Embedded Web Server or use the “Scan to Network Folder” feature. That lets the printer write scanned files directly to storage and frees your computer from processing duties. ![Screenshot 2025-08-19 170841](https://hackmd.io/_uploads/ryKKeCqtgl.png) ## Batch and queue efficiently For very large jobs, split into smaller batches **(20–50 pages)** rather than one huge job — this reduces the risk of corruption and makes retries faster if a problem occurs. Use the scanner’s job queue and presets to automate filenames, destinations, and compression so the process becomes nearly hands-off. ## Troubleshoot hardware slowdowns If software and settings are optimized but scans remain slow, inspect the hardware: clean the glass, ADF path, and rollers; check for small debris and paper fragments that cause feed hesitation. Listen for unusual noises during scanning — grinding or hesitation suggests worn gears or failing motors that a service technician should inspect. ## Consider OCR offloading and cloud options If OCR (making scans searchable) is the bottleneck because your PC is underpowered, use cloud OCR services or let HP Smart perform OCR in the cloud (if supported). Cloud processing can be faster and frees local resources, though it requires network bandwidth and raises privacy considerations. ## When to call for professional help If you’ve tried the above and scanning is still slow, or if the printer alerts to mechanical faults, a trained technician can run diagnostics, test the ADF speed under load, and replace worn feed rollers or belts. For guided support, setup help, or parts sourcing, reach out to a professional. ![Screenshot 2025-08-19 171142](https://hackmd.io/_uploads/BkSclC5Ygx.png) ### Final checklist to speed up scanning now 1. Lower DPI to 150–300 for documents. 2. Use PDF with compression or searchable PDF presets. 3. Switch to USB or Ethernet for heavy scanning. 4. Clean and maintain the ADF and glass. 5. Update firmware and drivers. 6. Offload OCR to cloud or faster PC if needed. 7. Batch large jobs and use network folders for direct saving. Following these steps will typically yield a dramatic improvement in scan throughput — often reducing multi-page jobs from many minutes to well under a minute per page depending on hardware. If you want hands-on assistance testing settings or diagnosing hardware, technical support can walk you through the process and recommend the most effective upgrades for your environment.