How to fix multi feed and double feed issues in your office MFP

Multi feed and double feed describe the same underlying issue: the device picks up more than one sheet from the tray during a single pickup cycle. The result is either a multi feed jam, where the device detects the extra sheets and stops, or a double print scenario, where two sheets pass through together and one prints while the other goes through blank. The cause sits in the separation mechanism, in the paper itself, or in the way the tray is loaded. Working through the six causes below resolves the majority of cases without a service call.

The distinction between multi feed and double feed

The two terms describe slightly different symptoms with mostly overlapping causes. Knowing the difference helps when looking up error codes and recommended fixes.

Multi feed

Two or more sheets pulled together, detected by the multi feed sensor, results in a paper jam error and forces the user to clear the path.

Double feed

Two sheets pulled together but the multi feed sensor missed the detection. Job continues and one sheet prints, the other passes through blank.

The six common causes

Cause 1. Worn separation roller or pad

The separation surface has lost its grip

The separation roller holds back any second sheet from feeding alongside the first. When the rubber surface glazes or wears, it loses friction and lets two sheets through together. This is the single most common cause of multi feed and the first place to check.

Action. Replace the separation roller or pad from the maintenance kit. The part is owner replaceable on most office MFPs and typically costs €10 to €20.
Cause 2. Static buildup between sheets

Sheets sticking together in the stack

In dry environments, paper sheets accumulate static charge and stick together at the edges. The pickup roller lifts one sheet and the static charge brings the next sheet along. The issue is most pronounced in winter when office heating drops humidity below 30 percent.

Action. Flex the paper stack along its long edge before loading, which separates the sheets. Consider an office humidifier if dry conditions are sustained. The flex action takes five seconds and prevents most static related multi feeds.
Cause 3. Paper too light for the tray

Paper weight below the tray specification

Office trays expect paper within a defined weight range, typically 75 to 90 gsm. Paper at 60 to 70 gsm is too light and tends to feed in clumps because the separation roller cannot reliably distinguish between the top sheet and the one below it.

Action. Switch to paper within the tray's weight specification, typically 80 gsm for standard office trays. The bypass tray usually accepts lighter paper if needed for specific jobs.
Cause 4. Overloaded tray

Stack height above the maximum fill line

Every tray has a fill line marking the maximum stack height. Loading paper above this line compresses the bottom sheets, distorts the pickup geometry, and forces the pickup roller to push down too hard on the top of the stack. The result is multi feeds within the first 50 pages of the overloaded job.

Action. Remove sheets from the tray until the stack sits clearly below the fill line. Most trays accommodate 250 to 500 sheets depending on weight; the fill line accounts for both.
Cause 5. Paper edges that are not square

Stack with uneven or curled edges

Paper that has been stored loose, exposed to humidity, or handled roughly often has slightly curled or uneven edges. The curled edges catch on adjacent sheets and produce multi feeds. The issue is most common with the bottom of a partially used ream that has been left exposed for several weeks.

Action. Square the stack by tapping each side firmly against a flat surface before loading. Discard the bottom 20 to 30 sheets of any ream that has been open for a month or more, since these sheets often hold the most distortion.
Cause 6. Mixed paper types in the same tray

Different paper batches loaded together

Loading paper from two different reams or two different brands into the same tray produces a stack with inconsistent friction between layers. The separation roller calibrated for one type of paper struggles when it encounters a layer of different paper, producing intermittent multi feeds.

Action. Use one ream at a time per tray, completing each ream before opening the next. Avoid topping up a partial tray with sheets from a different brand or batch.

The diagnostic sequence

Working through the causes in ten minutes

  1. Inspect the separation surface. Pull the tray and look at the separation roller or pad. Replace if visibly worn.
  2. Test with fresh sealed paper. Load one ream of premium fresh paper and run 50 pages. If multi feeds cease, the previous paper was the cause.
  3. Check paper weight against tray spec. Confirm the loaded paper sits within the tray's published weight range.
  4. Verify stack height. Confirm the stack sits below the fill line.
  5. Flex and square the stack. Remove the stack, flex along the long edge, square the edges against a flat surface, reload.
  6. Run 100 monitoring pages. Print a 100 page test job and count multi feeds. A meaningful drop confirms the fix; persistent multi feeds point to a deeper issue.

When multi feeds persist after all fixes

If the six fixes above all leave the multi feed pattern in place, the cause has moved into territory that benefits from service inspection. The most likely remaining causes are a fault in the multi feed sensor itself, a worn pickup roller spring that no longer applies correct pressure, or paper path geometry that has drifted from spec across years of use. None of these are owner serviceable, and each requires engineer intervention.

Reporting which fixes have been attempted shortens the service visit significantly. A device with fresh rollers, verified paper, correct stack height, and confirmed environment usually traces to a sensor or spring issue that the engineer can resolve in 30 to 45 minutes.

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