Why AirPrint Stops Working on iPhones and iPads
One day your iPhone prints just fine. The next day it says “No AirPrint Printers Found” and nothing works. Nothing changed. The printer is on. The Wi-Fi is on. And it still will not print.
This is one of the most common printer problems I see on in-home visits. The good news is that it is almost never a broken printer. It is almost always a network issue, and most of the time it can be fixed in a few minutes.
If you have been dealing with a printer that keeps going offline even when it seems connected, my guide on why printers keep disconnecting from Wi-Fi covers the bigger picture. This page focuses on AirPrint specifically.
What AirPrint Actually Needs to Work
AirPrint is Apple’s built-in way to print wirelessly from an iPhone or iPad. It does not require any special apps or cables. But it does have one firm requirement: your iPhone and your printer must be on the exact same Wi-Fi network.
Not just the same house. The same network. If your iPhone is on one network and the printer is on another, AirPrint will not find the printer at all.
The Most Common Reasons AirPrint Stops Working
The printer and iPhone are on different Wi-Fi bands
Most home routers broadcast two networks: a 2.4GHz band and a 5GHz band. They often share the same name, which makes it easy to end up on different ones without knowing it. iPhones tend to prefer the faster 5GHz band. Many printers connect more reliably on 2.4GHz. When they land on different bands, AirPrint cannot find the printer.
The printer went into deep sleep
Printers are designed to save energy when they are not in use. After sitting overnight, many printers drop off Wi-Fi entirely or get assigned a new network address. When you try to print the next morning, AirPrint looks for a printer that is no longer where it expects it to be. This is the same issue I explain in more detail in my post on why your printer worked yesterday but not today.
A recent iOS update changed something
Apple releases iPhone and iPad updates regularly. Some of those updates quietly change how AirPrint discovers printers on the network. After a major update, AirPrint sometimes stops finding a printer that worked fine the day before. Updating the printer’s firmware — the software inside the printer itself — often fixes this.
You are on a shared or building-wide Wi-Fi network
This one is very common in retirement and senior living communities. Building-wide Wi-Fi is designed for internet access, not for devices talking to each other inside an apartment. The network security settings often block the kind of direct communication AirPrint needs. Your iPhone can get online, the printer can get online, but they cannot see each other. If this sounds like your situation, a private router for your unit is often the cleanest solution. I explain this in detail in my post on whether a new router can fix printing problems.
The Restart Sequence That Fixes Most AirPrint Problems
Before changing any settings, try this full restart in order. Doing it out of order often does not work.
- Unplug the printer and leave it off for 30 seconds.
- Unplug the Wi-Fi router and leave it off for 30 seconds.
- Turn off the iPhone or iPad completely.
- Plug the router back in and wait one full minute for it to fully restart.
- Plug the printer back in and wait one full minute.
- Turn the iPhone or iPad back on.
- Try printing again.
If the Restart Does Not Fix It
Check that both devices are on the same network
On your iPhone, go to Settings, then tap Wi-Fi. Write down the exact name of the network you are connected to. Then check your printer’s display or settings menu to confirm it is on the same network name. Even one character difference means they are on different networks.
Forget and rejoin Wi-Fi on the iPhone
Go to Settings, tap Wi-Fi, tap the small circle with an “i” next to your network name, and tap Forget This Network. Then reconnect by tapping the network name and entering your Wi-Fi password. This clears old network information that can sometimes block AirPrint from working.
Check for an iOS update
Go to Settings, tap General, then tap Software Update. If an update is available, install it. Apple regularly releases fixes for known AirPrint issues in these updates.
When AirPrint Keeps Failing No Matter What
If none of the steps above work, the issue is usually deeper in the network setup. This is especially true in apartments and retirement communities. At that point, I usually look at two things: whether the router itself is causing device isolation, and whether a private network inside the unit would solve it for good.
For situations where AirPrint is just not reliable, the printer manufacturer’s app is a solid backup. HP has the HP Smart app, Canon has the Canon PRINT app, and Epson has the Epson Smart Panel app. All of them let you print from an iPhone without using AirPrint at all. I set these up for clients regularly when the network situation makes AirPrint unreliable.
Help With Printer Problems in Manatee County
If your iPhone or iPad stopped finding the printer and you have tried the steps above without luck, the network setup likely needs a closer look. I help seniors in Lakewood Ranch, Bradenton, Parrish, and surrounding areas sort out exactly these kinds of issues. You can see the full range of printer and device problems I work on through my printer troubleshooting and support page, or visit my Bradenton tech support page to get in touch.