xTool has opened pre-orders for the O1 Omni Printer, a desktop machine the company says is the first of its kind to merge rigid-surface and fabric printing into a single system.
The Mountain View, Calif.-based digital fabrication company began its global pre-order phase for the new O1 Omni on June 29, introducing what it calls a new hardware category built around the slogan “From Rigid to Fabric. Print It All.” Rather than forcing creators to buy separate machines for hard goods and textiles, the O1 combines UV, DTG, DTF and UV DTF printing in a single desktop ecosystem, letting users switch between wood, acrylic, glass, metal and apparel without swapping equipment.

The O1 Omni runs on a configurable dual-printhead design. Users can set it up for dual-UV printing to layer effects and speed up production, or run a hybrid UV-and-fabric setup to handle different materials side by side. Backing that hardware is what xTool calls its Pixel-Scan Vision System, which pairs laser altimetry with close-range scanning to set print height automatically and avoid printhead collisions, enabling a “drop and print” workflow without manual jigs.
On the fabric side, the UV and Fabric Edition uses an OEKO-TEX-certified system that supports direct-to-garment and direct-to-film printing, with results rated to withstand more than 50 washes without fading. The Dual-Head UV Edition leans into rigid materials, supporting flexible and white inks alongside fluorescent options for blacklight-reactive effects, while an accessory lineup, including a DTG platen and laminator integration, rounds out the ecosystem.
It sounds like a complex system, but xTool says its software, xTool Studio, links laser cutting and UV printing within the O1 Omni Printer so designs realign automatically between machines, and uses AI-driven contour recognition to fit artwork to irregular shapes while avoiding cutouts such as camera holes. The platform also ships with a 2,000-plus texture library for 3D relief printing and a generator for lenticular, naked-eye 3D effects. The company says its inks are GREENGUARD-certified, the unit includes built-in air filtration, and its SmartCycle 2.0 system automates maintenance, keeping the printer ready even after two weeks of inactivity.

xTool is pitching the O1 Omni to small businesses looking to expand product lines from a single design, designers looking to translate digital artwork into physical goods, and hobbyist makers seeking greater material versatility from their existing setups. The O1 Omni is, without question, an impressive machine based on the specs, but no matter what configuration you buy, it will set you back quite a bit. Three configurations are available during the pre-order window: a UV Edition starting at US$1,699, a Dual-Head UV Edition at US$2,699 and a UV and Fabric hybrid edition at US$2,799, each discounted from eventual retail prices. A US$50 deposit secures the early pricing and a bonus package xTool values at US$459.
The pre-order deposit phase runs through July 15, when final payment and global shipping begin. You can find all the details over on xTool’s official website.




