
To provide this answer, I will instead substitute an HP Office Pro 8600. A newer driver version may be obtained by selecting the driver while manually adding the printer. When a HP printer is added to the list shown in Printers & Scanners pain of the System Preferences application, the driver chosen by default may not be the newest of the available versions. However, the procedures and results were slightly different. This answer was also tested using macOS Monterey 12.1 with success. The version of macOS used in the answer is 11.6.1. This answer demonstrates how to install the driver for your printer using the Mac operating Big Sur. When even the sales-staff are warning you off the product, that should tell you something. (Currently not listed in UK HP on-line store.) In fact, it looks like the printer itself is discontinued. While there might be some merit in extending the life of an existing purchase, buying a printer that does not communicate with your computer natively is no bargain. It's likely that Windows too will introduce some red lines on older device drivers, due to security problems. However, the reason for drivers not working in Monterey is that HP uses kernel extensions in its drivers, which are no longer allowed. Printer drivers in their existing form are an old technology that is being phased out. In short, IPP Printing (of which Airprint is a type) is the future of printer connectivity. Support IPP can be supported using applications such asĪ more detailed explanation can be found here: Supported in a future feature release of CUPS.


The current man page for CUPS commands like lpadmin have the following warning:ĬUPS printer drivers and backends are deprecated and will no longer be MacOS uses CUPS, the Common Unix Printing System.

The very best answer I can give you is: don't buy a printer that doesn't support Airprint.
