Two up and four up copy modes shrink multiple original pages onto a single sheet. A 20 page handout becomes 10 sheets two up or 5 sheets four up. The paper saving is direct; the readability trade off depends on font size, document type and how many pages per sheet you push.
For multi page documents, the ADF is faster. The device sees all pages and arranges them into the chosen layout automatically.
The copy interface is the default screen on most office MFPs. Confirm the device is in copy mode rather than scan or print mode.
Different manufacturers label it differently. Canon uses "Combine". Ricoh uses "Combine 2/4". Xerox uses "N up". Konica uses "Combine Originals". Look in the layout or finishing section of the touchscreen.
2 up has two options: portrait pair (vertical) or landscape pair (horizontal). 4 up has horizontal first or vertical first reading order. The on screen preview shows the choice.
Combining 2 up with duplex produces 4 source pages per physical sheet. Combining 4 up with duplex produces 8 source pages per sheet. The driver shows the cumulative saving in the preview.
Print one test before the full job. Confirm the text remains readable at the reduced size. If not, drop to a less aggressive layout (4 up to 2 up, or 2 up to 1 up duplex).
The on screen preview shows numbered tiles indicating which source page lands where. Reading order varies by language convention. In Spanish and English, 2 up reads left to right then top to bottom. Some Asian language conventions reverse the order.
Confirm the preview matches expected reading order before running the full job. The preview is the single most reliable way to check the layout will produce a readable result.
| Source content | Best layout | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Standard 11pt body text on A4 | 2 up | Reduces to ~7pt; still readable |
| Detailed reports with small footnotes | 1 up (no combine) | 4 up would compress footnotes below comfortable reading size |
| Slide presentations exported as PDF | 4 up or 9 up | Slides are designed at low text density; readable even at 4 up |
| Code listings or technical diagrams | 1 up or 2 up max | Detail loss at higher combine destroys diagnostic value |
| Meeting notes for reference | 2 up duplex (effectively 4 source per sheet) | Notes printed for record rarely need full size |
| Photographs or images | 1 up | Quality loss at combine levels makes images useless |
For an office printing 1,500 internal meeting handouts a month, defaulting to 2 up reduces sheet consumption by 750 a month, around 9,000 a year. At 0.008 euros per sheet, the office saves 72 euros annually on paper alone, plus reduced toner consumption from the smaller printed area per page.
Two up and four up are available at both the print driver (when printing from a PC) and the device touchscreen (when copying from originals on the glass or ADF). The settings are equivalent in effect.
From any application's print dialog, open Properties. Find the Pages Per Sheet, Multiple Pages, or N up setting. Choose 2 or 4. Send to print.
Place originals on the glass or in the ADF. Open Copy mode. Find the Combine option. Choose 2 or 4. Press Start.
Three specific use cases recur. Conference handouts where attendees take the document home rarely need full size; 2 up reduces the take home stack to half. Meeting agendas circulated for reference can sit at 2 up without affecting usability. Reference documents printed for ad hoc lookup work well at 2 up because the user is scanning rather than reading start to finish.
Customer facing documents stay at 1 up. Legal contracts and signed documents stay at 1 up. Anything that will be filed in physical archives stays at 1 up because future readers may not have the source. The paper saving from combine modes targets internal, ephemeral or reference printing where future legibility at full size is not critical.