I replaced a Canon Colour printer with a Brother Laser because the Canon used more ink cleaning nozzles than printing on paper, and because most of my printing is text, not photographs!
Domestic Inkjets work best printing several colour photographs at a time, and the way I used mine to print occasional one-offs is highly wasteful, even if it didn't gum up entirely. Although they print black text, the way it's done isn't ideal. Whilst too high-tech precision to be made in a home-workshop the printing mechanism is designed down to a price, isn't repairable, and the profit is all in the ink. Much of the printer functionality may be in the software driver, not the hardware, making installing the right driver essential. Ink cartridges are often brainy too, making them difficult to refill, and capable of ignoring the owner! Inkjets are fussy about paper weight and porosity. I suspect all this makes them a poor match to most ordinary user requirements, apart from the purchase price!
Office and print-shop printers are robustly designed the other way round. Their goal is reliable low-cost high-volume printing. Purchase price is high, but the price per page is low. Again, these are a poor match to ordinary user requirements because few of us print enough to justify the initial purchase price. Approach second-hand printers of this type with caution because they have a hard-life and may be beyond economic repair or in need of unobtainable spare-parts.
Apart from not doing colour, black and white laser printers are excellent for home use. They don't waste ink, don't mind occasional low-volume use, usually work with a standard interface rather than needing proprietary drivers, they're not fussy about paper, and consumables (per page) are cheap. They also print much faster than Inkjets.
My Brother Laser is a HL1212-W. No problems whatever with it, and, once authenticated by the router (press two buttons), Wifi printing worked out of the box with Windows 7, Windows 10, 3 different Linux distributions, Apple and Android. It's for moderate domestic or Small Office use; I wouldn't recommend it for anything more strenuous because it's too lightly built. (At work, equivalent A4 laser printers supporting 10 to 20 users each, were at least twice the size…)
Can I remind chaps it's best not to leap to conclusions based on brand-names? Brand-names don't guarantee good or bad. Here, Canon, Brother, Epsom, HP, and the others are pretty much in the same game, each making a range of printers from cheap and cheerful to professional grade. That Brother makes disappointing Inkjets doesn't mean their entire range is rubbish, and be aware the Hewlett Packard of 20 years ago was a different firm. In the 1990s HP only made high-end kit (really good stuff). Today, under new ownership, HP sell everything from low-end domestic to high-grade industrial printers, and major in services, not manufacturing. The model and technology used by a printer, coupled with its software support and price-point, are more important than the brand.
Dave