When budgeting for color printing services at Kinko’s (FedEx Office), buyers typically see costs driven by page count, color vs. black-and-white, media type, and turnaround. This guide presents practical price ranges in USD to help compare options and estimate total project costs. It focuses on the cost landscape and what drives pricing for typical in-store color prints.
| Item | Low | Average | High | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Color 8.5×11 per page | $0.39 | $0.59 | $0.89 | Single-sided standard paper |
| Color 11×17 per page | $0.89 | $1.29 | $1.99 | Plus edge finishing if needed |
| Black-and-white per page | $0.05 | $0.08 | $0.12 | Economy option |
| Media upgrades (card stock) | $0.15 | $0.30 | $0.60 | Varies by weight |
| Scan-to-PDF per page | $0.10 | $0.25 | $0.50 | Digital copy option |
| Setup/immidiate turnaround | $5 | $15 | $40 | Per job |
Overview Of Costs
Color printing costs at Kinko’s typically range from a few cents per page for black-and-white to under a couple dollars per page for color, depending on size and media. The main cost drivers are print volume, paper stock, color coverage, finishing, and delivery or pickup options. This section provides total project ranges and per-unit ranges with brief assumptions to frame planning: a small flat-hour job on standard paper vs. a large, full-color presentation on heavy stock with finishing.
Cost Breakdown
For a typical in-store color job, the price is a function of page counts, color pages, and media choices. The breakdown below uses a table to show common components, with assumptions aligned to in-store printing counters. The following columns come from a standard mix of materials, labor, and ancillary costs.
| Component | Low | Average | High | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Materials | $0.39 | $0.70 | $1.99 | Color ink, standard 20-24 lb paper |
| Labor | $5 | $15 | $40 | Time to set up, print, trim |
| Equipment | $0.05 | $0.20 | $0.50 | Depreciation and usage |
| Finishing | $0 | $0.50 | $3 | Binding, lamination, cuts |
| Delivery/Pickup | $0 | $3 | $10 | Nearby store option |
| Taxes | $0 | $1 | $5 | Varies by location |
| Contingency | $0 | $2 | $10 | Unexpected tweaks |
Pricing Variables
Pricing for Kinko’s color printing varies with media weight, color coverage, and finishing choices. Key variables include page size (8.5×11 vs. 11×17), page count, color vs. monochrome, stock type (bond, card, glossy), and required turnaround. Also factors such as volume discounts, in-store promotions, and regional price differences can shift the final tally. Understanding these drivers helps build a realistic budget and avoid sticker shock.
Typical per-unit benchmarks include: color 8.5×11 at $0.39-$0.89 per page (low to high), color 11×17 at $0.89-$1.99 per page, and B&W at $0.05-$0.12 per page. Finishing items like binding or lamination add to the total, often in the $0.50-$3 range per document depending on method and material.
Assumptions: region, specs, labor hours.
data-formula=”labor_hours × hourly_rate”>
Regional Price Differences
Prices at FedEx Office/Kinko’s locations vary by region and market. A comparison across three U.S. regions shows modest but meaningful deltas due to labor costs and store-level promotions. In urban centers, color pages often trend toward the higher end, while rural locations may offer slightly lower base rates. Suburban stores typically sit in between, with occasional regional promos. The ranges below illustrate typical deltas.
- Northeast Urban: color 8.5×11 $0.59-$0.89 per page; 11×17 $1.29-$1.99
- Midwest Suburban: color 8.5×11 $0.49-$0.79 per page; 11×17 $1.09-$1.69
- Southern Rural: color 8.5×11 $0.45-$0.75 per page; 11×17 $0.99-$1.59
Labor, Hours & Rates
Labor is a meaningful portion of the total for complex jobs or large volumes. In-store staff handle setup, color calibration, trimming, and finishing. For simple color copies, labor may be minimal, but large quantities or high-precision finishing increase hours and costs. Typical on-site labor rates range from $15 to $40 per hour, with project time scaling roughly by total page count and finishing complexity.
Common timing cues: 10-20 minutes for a small color set of 20-50 pages, 1-2 hours for 200-500 pages with basic finishing, and several hours for large-run jobs requiring binding, folding, or specialty media. A per-hour approach helps compare estimates when volume varies widely.
Extra & Hidden Costs
Hidden costs can appear as minimums, setup fees, or finish-related surcharges. Some locations apply a small setup or “job charge” for color work, especially for multi-page or nonstandard sizes. Finishing options like binding, lamination, perforation, or specialty folds add to the bottom line. In some markets, delivery fees or pickup charges apply if a private courier is used or the order is exceptionally large.
Watch for: minimum order charges, surcharges on premium stocks, and fees for duplex or mixed-media projects. Understanding these can prevent surprise bills and help align expectations with the final receipt.
Real-World Pricing Examples
Three scenario cards illustrate typical costs for common Kinko’s color printing tasks. Each scenario includes specs, labor hours, per-unit prices, and totals to reflect how real orders translate into budgets. Assumptions: standard ink, 20 lb white bond, no heavy finishing.
Basic — Simple Flyer’s Set
Specs: 4 pages, color on 8.5×11, 200 copies, no finishing. Labor: 0.5–1 hour. Per-page: color $0.59. Total: $236-$324. Assumptions: regional price, standard stock.
Mid-Range — Presentation Handouts
Specs: 8 pages, color on 11×17, 150 copies, basic folding. Labor: 1–2 hours. Per-page: color $1.29 on 11×17. Total: $410-$690. Assumptions: bulk discount applied, regional rate.
Premium — Marketing Deck
Specs: 12 pages, color on premium stock, 250 copies, bound and laminated. Labor: 3–5 hours. Per-page: color $1.89 (weighted). Total: $2,300-$3,700. Assumptions: high-end media, professional finish.
These examples show how per-page costs combine with finishing and labor to yield final totals. They also highlight the value of planning by quantity and finish to optimize price per unit. Assumptions: region, specs, labor hours.