










🚀 Scan smarter, work faster, anywhere you go!
The Epson Workforce ES-60W is a wireless ultra-portable A4 document scanner featuring a powerful Li-ion battery capable of scanning up to 300 pages per charge. It delivers fast scanning speeds of 4 seconds per page (8.5ppm) with resolutions from 200 to 1200 dpi. Connectivity options include USB 3.0 and wireless, supported by Epson’s ScanSmart software for easy, continuous scanning with auto-feed, auto-cropping, and image enhancement. Weighing only 610g and measuring 4.7 x 27.2 x 3.4 cm, it’s designed for professionals who demand mobility and efficiency in document management.







| ASIN | B0CZPPHB8Z |
| Best Sellers Rank | 2,841 in Computers & Accessories ( See Top 100 in Computers & Accessories ) 3 in Document Scanners |
| Brand | Epson |
| Colour | Black |
| Customer Reviews | 4.0 4.0 out of 5 stars (1,174) |
| Date First Available | 21 July 2024 |
| Delivery information | We cannot deliver certain products outside mainland UK ( Details ). We will only be able to confirm if this product can be delivered to your chosen address when you enter your delivery address at checkout. |
| Guaranteed software updates until | unknown |
| Item Weight | 610 g |
| Item model number | B11B253401BY |
| Manufacturer | Epson |
| Product Dimensions | 4.7 x 27.2 x 3.4 cm; 610 g |
| Series | Epson WorkForce ES-60W A4 Battery Powered Portable Document Scanner, Black |
| Wattage | 60 watts |
T**N
If you need to scan receipts, buy this immediately.
If you have to do ANY accounting with paper receipts, BUY THIS SCANNER. I was honestly contemplating shutting the company down would be less hassle than doing any more scanning of paper receipts, trying to get them to flatten on the table and hold the camera in the right way so the light makes them visible, whilst in that time they scrunch back up. This thing is GENIUS. The software is Epson so if you're over 30 you know exactly what I mean (it's like 00's software and not the most intuitive) but once you get going, it's very easy. Can be used with iPhone or on your Mac/Windows (just Google ES-60W drivers and download – this thing comes with a CD-ROM LOL). The auto-feed meant I could scan receipts in one sitting doing around 100 in 15-20 mins. The desktop software is the best and I just kept scanning and scanning, with it then outputting each receipt as an individual image and plop into Free Agent (or whatever accounting software you us with receipt matching). Tip: charge it fully before using. Even plugged in it doesn't seem to love not being fully charged. With the Epson software, it auto-crops, auto contrasts and rotates the images so they're more or less perfect. The time this has saved is just beyond anything and receipts are way easier to read now than low contrast photos. Only criticism other than slightly crunchy software is that in 2025/2026 it charges and connecting using a Micro USB cable; but this is fairly typical with a lot of Japanese tech.
E**Q
Good scanner, OK software
Picked this up for £85 on sale having decided a scanner with paper feed was much preferable to a 'wand' type which I think was the right decision. Software comes on CD but better to d/l more up-to-date from Epson, including the usual firmware update for the scanner. Scan time is just a few seconds and you can adjust resolution, set to B&W only etc. which is what I did for scanning letters. The OCR works well to create searchable PDFs, however the Epson s/w shows its age with an interface that is quite basic. Slightly annoying that the scanner uses micro-USB connection, I'd have preferred a USB-C but there's a lead in the box. I found that the scanner works OK connected to a USB hub to reduce plugging in/out to laptop. I think this would be ideal for a home user or very light office use to save having to file paperwork.
R**G
This is such a good scanner
I bought this after I saw that a colleague used one: I travel frequently and need to scan lots of documents. Previously I packed a lightweight flatbed scanner, but this one is so much better. It's well built, but compact and light. Installed really easily, scans fast and loads straight into an editing program. And the editing program is so simple to use - (here's your scan - do you want to add pages - where do you want to send them?) just the controls you need and seems to default immediately to the best options. Scans by default to pdf. Haven't looked for or tried other formats. Highly recommended.
E**.
Lasted six months only
Stopped working after six months.
S**S
Stunning piece of kit
Some have said it's scan time is slow, not the case, a few seconds per page. I had a little trouble installing the software, but once rebooted it worked a treat. There are options to save as a PDF with password protection and once setup, you can plug this in, press a button and then continue scanning by inserting new pages. Once you're done, you press the button again and then the software asks you where to save your document. Simple, great quality, totally portable and excellent. Worth getting a case for it but it's superb!
Q**R
A significant upgrade from my feed-failure old Canon DR-C225W
After ample confusion of choice and research, I finally decide to buy this rather than buy a Canon DR-C225W II, or any another Canon and Brother scanner, because: * The Canon DR-C225W II looks to still use the same flawed sheet-feeding mechanics and sensors as the Canon DR-C225W, including the same overpriced rollers! Possibly hiding designed-in obsolesce too. * This document scanner has USB 3, which later proved it's worth, and WiFi, also allowing use over network, a decent sized touch screen and far more powerful functionality, including a contacts directory and direct send to file shares, email, cloud, etc. * Epson seems to provide Linux support for most/ALL of their scanners, unlike the pathetically limited Linux support of Canon and Brother, contrary to some web articles about document scanners for Linux! * Other makes and models were far too expensive for equivalent functionality, with Ethernet support being shockingly more expensive, than the price of a decent USB 3 Gigabit Ethernet adaptor, maybe only 100Mbit too! * This only cost me £279.99 via the recent Prime day sale, bargain. Pros: * It is small enough that it does take up much desk space and maybe portable in a large laptop backpack. * The paper exit bends the paper far less that the U travel to the Canon DR-C225W exit sheet slot, is simpler, and has a higher capacity optional pull-out tray. * Hopefully the, initially confusing, pull off-the-back (queue-type) sheet feeding, will ensure more reliable feeding, and top-first (upside-down sheet) scanning, will ensure faster throughput, with less need for feeder maintenance, than the pull-off the front (stack-type) sheet feeding and bottom-first scanning, with spurious feed failures, of the Canon DR-C225W and probably C225W II too. * Epson provide a downloadable "Epson Scan 2" desktop GUI with a "epsonsane2" SANE backend for Linux, with useful options, which works for USB 3, and source code separately; the latter probably to support other Linux distributions and CPUs. They even support Linux for ARM 32-bit and 64-bit, so it's probably usable by a Raspberry Pi with enough RAM. * The "epsonsane2" backend was faster and more functional than the SANE provided driver, for both USB and network devices. * The USB 3 connection really shows its value for 1200DPI A4 scans. * Network seems good enough up to 600DPI A4 scans, which should be good enough for more uses. * For Linus, the github.com/cyanfish/naps2 deb SANE frontend worked great with it for both USB and network, (epsonsane2) devices, generating a searchable (OCR'd) PDF from a multi-page duplex document, and is probably a better SANE frontend than the "Epson Scan 2" GUI for most uses. Cons: * "Epson Scan 2" for Linux failed to scan anything via network device, despite triggering the scanner to show the "Load originals." screen, whereas other SANE frontends worked fine, hmm! It also lacks a lot of the other functionality of the Windows bundle, and does not appear to support auto-generation unique filenames for saved files, which may cause accidental overwrite of prior saved files, and does not allow page view/edit before pages saving. * I can't say I was impressed by the Windows utils for it either; so maybe NAPS2 would also be better for it on Windows too. * This document scanner doesn't appear to support 5G WiFi, because my router listed it as a 2.4G connected Wi-Fi device; and when I test scanned A4 pages at 1200DPI using NAP2, it was a noticeably slower transferring the page images than over USB 3! 1 star dropped for not supporting 5G WIFI. Notes: * WPS WiFi setup didn't want to work for me (maybe an ISP router issue), but WiFi was easy to manually setup using the touchscreen. I'm wary of WPS, anyway, because it's a security risk, even for only 2 minutes. * Beware of brscan4 (official Brother SANE backend) for Linux, I had it installed, and mine had a broken libsane-brother4.so.1 causing a seg. fault, causing puzzling exits of multiple SANE frontends; so I had to uninstall it! This is one reason why decent and maintained Linux support is so important, also why the SANE maintainers need to cut the lame "proprietary" excuses, and trap and log device-backend load failures, to prevent puzzling (seg fault crashed) disappearance of SANE frontends! Update 2025-11-03: I discovered that the "Epson Scan 2" desktop GUI for Linux provided the option to scan extended length pages, with no specified length limit, at 300 DPI (max allowed for this mode). Speculatively, I tried to scan some very-wide old landscape school photographs sideways, each approximately 2 to 3 times A4 height, and it worked. I later rotated the images back to landscape and re-saved them, to view them and zoom in. Before that I could only to use a flat scanner and scan multiple sections which was obviously disjointed to view; it would probably have been hard to trim the overlays and splice all of the sections into one image for each photograph. I may later try to specify a custom page-size of the photograph dimensions, to see if the scanner can support scanning them at higher DPI, to allow seeing more detail.
S**T
Un appareil esthétique et peu encombrant. Son utilisation est d’une facilité élémentaire et je l’ai trouvé bien plus rapide qu’un scanner intégré à une imprimante. Il a aussi l’avantage de proposer des paramètres de « scanning » selon l’image que l’on veut obtenir. Attention lors du nettoyage de l’appareil : n’utiliser que le kit de nettoyage en « mousse » fournie avec le produit ou un kit de nettoyage prévu à cet effet et aucun autre type de carte !
P**L
Très bon petit scanner portable, Très facile à installer et à configurer, Très bonne qualité et légère. Je recommande vivement se scanner pour les déplacements en voiture.
M**T
Tenía una impresora escáner que no me quejo pero no te go suficiente espacio para tenerla y esto ha sido un éxito, la uso y guardo en un cajón, no ocupa espacio, escanea perfectamente y conexión facilísima.
T**N
Ich habe einen Scanner gesucht, welcher einzelne Blätter bis DIN A4 selbstständig einziehen kann und dabei platzsparend ist. Grund ist die Digitalisierung meiner Briefpost, welche mich leider immer noch erreicht. Die Briefe werden von mir mit einem fortlaufenden Nummer versehen und dann in einem Onlinespeicher abgelegt, damit die passenden Personen aus der Familie Zugriff auf die Briefe haben. Anschließend geht das Papier in die Box, also einen Karton, in welchem man im Notfall die Originale finden kann. Das Scan-Volumen ist bei mir eher gering: 200 Dokumente (mit teilweise 20 Seiten, doppelseitig bedruckt,) initial und dann 10-15 Dokumente pro Monat, die gescannt werden müssen. Eingesetzt wird der Scanner an einem MacBook Air M1, durch die MikroUSB Schnittstelle, über die sowohl die Daten als auch der Strom übertragen wird, hängt der Scanner am USB Hub, welcher auch den externen Monitor mit HDMI versorgt. Um das Fazit vorweg zu nehmen: Der Epson ES-50 macht hier einen guten bis sehr guten Job! 1. Hardware Das Ding ist klein. Klar, kaum breiter als ein DIN A4 Blatt, aber so klein hätte ich jetzt nicht gedacht. Finde ich richtig gut, das war das Ziel: Ein kleiner Scanner, für die paar Fälle, in denen ich was scannen muss. Die Verarbeitung ist astrein: Es wackelt nichts, es klappert nichts, es wirkt stabil und arbeitet zuverlässig. Der Scanner wird über den MikroUSB Anschluss seine Daten los, mit Strom wird er über dieses Kabel ebenfalls versorgt. Das funktioniert wunderbar und zuverlässig. Der Einzugsmechanismus ist recht zuverlässig, greift aber nicht immer. Ab und an wird ein Blatt schräg eingezogen, das ist durchaus zu verschmerzen. 2. Software Die Software, zumindest unter MacOS, ist ein wenig friemelig und mit wenig Liebe gestalltet, aber dennoch recht mächtig: Ich nutze den Scanner unter MacOS Monterey, auf einem M1 Mac. Die Software ist bisher aber nicht für den modernen Prozessor angepasst (nach knapp 2 Jahren Existenz). Macht nichts, läuft dennoch, zeigt jedoch wie wenig Liebe in die Software fließt. Grundsätzlich ist es aber einfach: Blatt rein, Knopf drücken, Scanner scannt. Ein Blatt benötigt ca. 5 Sekunden, was ausreichend schnell ist. Nachdem ein Blatt gescannt wurde, kann ein weiteres eingelegt werden oder das bereits gescannte kann umgedereht werden. Am Ende sucht man sich aus, was mit dem Gescannten geschehen soll, bei mir in der Regel das Speichern. Dabei versucht die Software schlauf zu sein: Wird ein Datum im Text gefunden, landet es mit einer gewissen Wahrscheinlichkeit im Dateinamen. Auch wird augenscheinlich versucht zu ermitteln, ob es sich um eine Rechnung handelt, dass steht auch das im Dateinamen. Das klappt jedoch kaum und ist eher nervig. Im Anschluss wählt man noch aus, wie das Dokument gespeichert werden soll (bei mir durchsuchbares PDF), es wird also ein OCR Verfahten angewendet; welches genau ist nicht bekannt. Die Sprache kann ausgwählt werden, ich habe mich für Deutsch entschieden. Mehrfach. Jedes Mal, um genau zu sein. Die Software merkt sich das leider nicht und springt immer auf Englisch zurück, obwohl ich die Sprache grundsätzlich abgwählt habe. Liebe würde im Detail stecken, hier gibt's wenig Liebe. Fazit: Das Ding macht einen tollen Job. Ich habe es für knapp 90€ bekommen und kann für diesen Preis in keiner Weise meckern. In den letzten Tagen habe ich knapp 575 Seiten gescannt (Das merkt sich die Software). Es funktioniert wunderbar, nimmt kaum Platz weg, braucht kein riesen Kabelgedöns und macht einfach, für was es da ist. Ich kann den Kauf sehr empfehlen!
S**E
Mooi apparaat, werkt erg snel, zeer tevreden mee en handig voor onderweg!
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