HP ships two parallel ways to send print jobs to its office printers. The HP Smart app is the consumer-facing companion: friendly, mobile-first, scan-and-print from anywhere. The HP Universal Print Driver (UPD) is the corporate workhorse: one driver across the entire fleet, deep IT controls, full PCL and PostScript. The two share almost no code and target almost no overlap in deployment scenarios. This guide unpacks the differences, walks every common IT scenario through the right pick, lays out the deployment routine for each, and ends with a six-question decision tree that resolves the choice for nearly every Spanish office.
The two options solve different problems. HP Smart wraps a single printer for a single user; the UPD wraps the entire fleet for the entire office. They overlap on Windows desktop printing alone, where both can submit print jobs from the same PC. Everywhere else, the two stay in their own swim lanes.
| Capability | HP Smart | UPD |
|---|---|---|
| Print from Windows desktop | YES | YES |
| Print from macOS desktop | YES | YES |
| Print from iOS / Android phone | YES | NO |
| Scan-from-phone camera to PDF | YES | NO |
| Toner level and Instant Ink management | YES | NO |
| Central IT deployment via SCCM / Intune | NO | YES |
| Group Policy print queue configuration | NO | YES |
| Single driver for entire HP fleet | NO | YES |
| Job accounting hooks (PaperCut / MyQ) | NO | YES |
| Full PostScript and PCL 6 fidelity | PARTIAL | YES |
| Finishing options (staple, hole punch) | PARTIAL | YES |
| Mobile cloud printing (Print Anywhere) | YES | NO |
| Used by HP Connect Plus subscription | YES | NO |
| Multi-printer load balancing | NO | YES |
HP Smart handles the entire workflow on day one. Pairing takes five minutes through the app, the phone can print and scan, the PC picks up the printer automatically. The UPD adds complexity nobody needs at this scale.
UPD through Group Policy is the right path. One driver gets pushed to every PC, queues self-configure based on the user's office location, and IT keeps a single driver to maintain across the fleet.
HP Smart Print Anywhere connects the phone to the home-office printer over the cloud. The same app lets the salesperson scan business cards into the CRM from the phone camera while travelling. UPD does not help here.
UPD is the only option that hooks into PaperCut, MyQ, or Equitrac. The accounting prompt for matter code appears on every print job. HP Smart does not expose the prompt API.
UPD covers both Windows and macOS with one driver SKU. The accurate PostScript handling matters for InDesign and Illustrator output. HP Smart sits on top for mobile access if needed.
Run UPD on faculty laptops through Microsoft Intune for the fleet printers; let individuals enable HP Smart for their personal office printer if they have one. The hybrid setup is standard in Spanish universities.
HP ships the Universal Print Driver in two variants: PCL 6 and PostScript. PCL 6 is the faster path for daily office printing; the PostScript variant is the more accurate path for creative work and complex PDFs. Most Spanish offices land on PCL 6 for the bulk of users and PostScript only on the creative team's PCs. Both variants can be deployed side by side under different queue names on the same PC; the user picks the queue at print time. A small minority of Spanish dealers including fotocopiastrebol still configure the older Discrete Print Drivers per model for legacy software that demands a specific driver; that path is sunsetting in 2026 and should be avoided for new rollouts.
From the Spanish dealer support tickets through 2025, five rollout mistakes show up repeatedly and each one is easy to avoid. Mistake 01 is installing both HP Smart and a per-model HP driver on the same PC, causing two queues to fight for the same printer; pick one or run UPD alone. Mistake 02 is pushing the UPD without setting default duplex, which costs offices thousands of euros in paper across the first year. Mistake 03 is skipping the PostScript variant for the creative team, then troubleshooting font-rendering issues for weeks. Mistake 04 is leaving the print server queue settings on dynamic mode, which surprises users when defaults change without notice; use static mode and force a sync. Mistake 05 is ignoring the FutureSmart firmware version on the printer when choosing the UPD release; older firmware on the device needs the matching older UPD release to avoid 79.01 codes.
HP Smart and UPD are the two doorways into the HP print stack; the rest of the platform sits beneath. For Spanish offices building an HP fleet from the ground up, the right reading order is the brand and lineup overview first, the Workpath apps guide second to understand the panel-side workflows, and this driver guide third to make the driver decision. For offices running into firmware-level codes during print jobs, the LaserJet 49 and 79 error code guide covers the most common ones a UPD job can trigger.
For Spanish HP buyers placing this decision into context, the HP MFP and copier lineup overview sets the hardware backdrop. For coverage of the panel-side platform that pairs with the UPD on Enterprise units, the HP Workpath apps guide covers the workflow layer. For the firmware codes that affect both Smart and UPD jobs, the 49 and 79 error code guide covers the panel-side messages.