48 Hour Print FAQ: Coupons, Turnaround, and What I Wish I'd Known Before My First Order
I've been handling print orders for our marketing team since 2019—roughly 150 orders through 48hourprint alone. I've also made (and documented) about a dozen significant mistakes, totaling around $1,200 in wasted budget. Now I maintain our team's pre-order checklist specifically to prevent others from repeating my errors.
Here's what people actually ask me about 48 Hour Print, answered directly.
Is 48 Hour Print actually legit?
Yes. They've been around since 2003 and they're a real commercial printing operation based in Las Vegas. I was skeptical too when I first found them—the name sounds almost too good to be true. But after 6 years of orders, I can confirm they're legitimate.
That said, "legit" doesn't mean "perfect." I've had maybe 8-10 orders out of 150 that needed some back-and-forth—color variations, a shipping delay, one time a box arrived damaged. Nothing catastrophic, but not flawless either. (Which, honestly, describes every print vendor I've used.)
Does the 48-hour turnaround actually work?
Here's where I made my first rookie mistake. In 2019, I assumed "48 Hour Print" meant everything ships in 48 hours. It doesn't.
The 48-hour turnaround is available on select products and you have to specifically choose that option at checkout—it's not the default. Standard turnaround is usually 3-5 business days for production, plus shipping time on top of that.
I once promised a client we'd have 500 flyers for their event "by Friday" based on the company name alone. Ordered Tuesday, picked standard production without reading carefully, and the flyers arrived the following Wednesday. That was a $180 lesson in actually reading the turnaround options. (The client was... understanding. Barely.)
What to actually expect:
- 48-hour production: Available on many products, but costs more and has earlier file submission deadlines
- Standard production: 3-5 business days
- Shipping: Adds 1-7 days depending on what you choose
So "48 hours" is possible, but budget for 7-10 days total if you're using standard options. At least, that's been my experience with orders shipping to the Midwest.
Where do I find working 48 Hour Print coupons?
This is probably the most common question I get. Everyone wants the promo codes.
Here's what actually works (as of January 2025—verify these, rates change):
Sign up for their email list. They send promo codes fairly regularly—I've seen 10-20% off codes show up maybe twice a month. Not exciting, but consistent.
Check during holidays. Black Friday, end of year, back-to-school season—these tend to have better promotions. I saved $340 on a large poster order during their 2023 Black Friday sale.
Coupon aggregator sites. RetailMeNot, Coupons.com, and similar sites sometimes have working codes. Maybe 40% of the codes I've tried from these sites actually work. The rest are expired or don't apply to what I'm ordering.
What I'd skip: Those sketchy "48 hour print coupon 50% off" sites that want you to complete surveys or sign up for stuff. Never found a working code that way, just wasted 20 minutes.
Honestly? The email signup codes have been the most reliable for me. Not the biggest discounts, but they actually work.
What products is 48hourprint actually good for?
Based on what I've ordered and what came out well:
Strong options: Business cards, flyers, brochures, postcards, posters. These are their bread and butter. Quality has been consistently good—or rather, consistently acceptable for marketing materials. Not luxury-grade, but solid for the price.
Decent options: Bookmarks, rack cards, door hangers. Ordered these less frequently but no complaints.
Haven't tried: Their tote bags, banners, or specialty packaging. Can't speak to quality there.
One thing I learned the hard way: their poster printing is good, but check your file resolution carefully. I submitted a poster at 150 DPI (thought it looked fine on screen), and the result was noticeably soft. Not terrible, but not crisp. Now I won't submit anything under 300 DPI for large format.
How does their pricing compare?
I don't have comprehensive data across all vendors, but here's what I can say from checking quotes on our standard orders:
For 500 business cards (standard options), 48hourprint typically quotes $25-45 depending on paper stock and finish. That's competitive with Vistaprint, PrintRunner, and similar online printers—within maybe 15% either direction depending on current promotions. (Based on quotes I pulled in December 2024; prices change.)
They're not the cheapest option out there. They're not the most expensive. They're solidly mid-range for online commercial printing.
What I've found matters more than base price: turnaround speed and whether you can actually get someone on the phone if something goes wrong. 48hourprint has been okay on both counts—not amazing, but okay.
What mistakes should I avoid?
Here's the checklist I created after my various failures:
Check your bleed settings. In my first year, I submitted a flyer without proper bleed. It looked fine in my design file. The printed result had thin white edges on two sides because the cut wasn't perfectly centered. 1,000 flyers, $180, technically usable but obviously amateur. That's when I learned to always extend backgrounds 0.125" past the trim line.
Proof the proof. They send a digital proof. Actually look at it. I once approved a proof without checking the phone number carefully—we'd updated our number and I'd missed one instance in the design. 500 brochures with the wrong contact info. $220 wasted. Now we have two people review every proof.
Understand "business days." Weekends don't count. Holidays don't count. I know this sounds obvious, but I've miscalculated delivery dates at least three times by forgetting this. (Ugh.)
Don't assume colors will match your screen. RGB on your monitor ≠ CMYK on paper. I've learned to expect slight variations and not promise clients "exact" color matching unless we're doing a physical proof first.
One thing most people don't think to ask
What's your actual deadline, and what's your fake deadline?
I used to order print materials with zero buffer. Event on Saturday, order designed to arrive Friday. Three times out of maybe 50 orders, something went wrong—shipping delay, file issue that needed fixing, once just a random FedEx problem.
Now I build in 3-4 extra days minimum. If something goes wrong, I have time to fix it or find a local print shop for emergency backup. If nothing goes wrong, the materials just sit in our office for a few days. Low cost, high peace of mind.
When I was starting out, the vendors who treated my $200 orders seriously are the ones I still use for $2,000 orders now. 48hourprint was one of those—never made me feel like a small order wasn't worth their time. That matters when you're building a business and can't commit to massive quantities yet.
Anything I didn't cover? The short answer is probably "check their website and read the fine print"—which is boring advice, but it would have saved me about $1,200 over the years.