199comments

Fujitsu ScanSnap S1500 Document Scanner Review

by Sam Glover on March 29, 2009 in Practice Management, Starting a Law Firm

See our Law Technology Buyer's Guide for our top technology recommendations.

s1500

Fujitsu just sent me the brand-new ScanSnap S1500, a major revision its popular line of document scanners. I bought my old Fujitsu ScanSnap S510 in early 2006, when I made the switch to a paperless law office. Since then, I have been recommending it to everyone.

The new S1500 is better-looking, faster, comes with updated software, and sticks to the ScanSnap formula: efficient and easy to use. For solo practitioners or small offices, a ScanSnap (or a few of them) is still the best option.

Here is what I think of the Fujitsu ScanSnap S1500 after spending an afternoon playing with it.

The S1500 has been replaced by the iX500, which is faster and better in every way, but also includes wi-fi scanning to your portable devices. Read our ScanSnap iX500 review.

S1500 Form Factor

The S1500 (and S1500M for Mac) is a major update to the form factor. As you can see from the picture, this iteration of the ScanSnap is sleeker and more modern-looking. I like the new look.

As I note in the video, below, the S1500 does seem slightly taller, but the new “catch tray” is my only complaint (well, besides the fact that Fujitsu does not support Linux). It seems decidedly flimsier than the tray on my old scanner. I think it will probably hold up pretty well, but as you can see in the video, it does have quite a lot of give to it.

Fujitsu ScanSnap Bundled Software

Like all Fujitsu ScanSnap scanners, the new model comes bundled with Adobe Acrobat Standard 9 (PC) and Adobe Acrobat Professional 8 (Mac). For a paperless office, Acrobat is not strictly necessary, but it is very useful. Plus, Acrobat Standard is a $300 piece of software, while Acrobat Professional for Mac is normally $500, making the $459 (ScanSnap on Amazon) a pretty good deal.

The ScanSnap Manager is a useful scanning utility. I have it set to automatically detect color and double-sided pages, recognize text on the first page (for speed), and simply ask me where to save the file. It makes scanning quick and easy.

For, for scanning a stack of photos I had lying around, I just set the ScanSnap Manager to automatically name and save each photo to my pictures directory. I plowed through a few shoeboxes in about a half hour.

The scanner also comes with a few other bits of software, including a PDF organizer and a business card utility. I don’t use any of those, though, so I cannot comment on them.

S1500 Scanning

What really matters, of course, is how well the thing scans.

The S1500 is significantly faster than my old ScanSnap. As you can see in the video that follows, scanning five pages took 20 seconds on the old scanner, or about 15 ppm. The new scanner did the same pages with the same settings in only 15 seconds, making it about 20 ppm, a significant improvement.

Fujitsu ScanSnap scanners are meant to simplify scanning. They scan both sides of the page at the same time, and automatically detect double-sided pages and different sizes of paper, and the bundled software can automatically recognize the text in the documents.

All it takes to scan a stack of paper is a press of the big, blue button. This is especially useful for big stacks of discovery production. I just hit the button and let the scanner do the work.

In several years with my S510, the scanner would occasionally pick up two sheets at a time, so it pays to keep an eye on the scanner. It looks like the pick assembly is similar on the S1500, so I will keep an eye on it, just in case.

Fujitsu ScanSnap S1500 in action

Here is a short video showing the relative speed of the S510 and the new S1500, along with a side-by-side look at the two scanners:

Conclusion

Like I said in the video clip, the Fujitsu ScanSnap S1500 is a great upgrade. It feels like the same scanner as my old S510, just better. And since I had no complaints, and lots of good things to say about my old scanner, that is a very good thing.

Update: Since the comments have gotten so long, I summed up your ScanSnap questions in a FAQ. Please read it first if you have any questions.

Summary

Fujitsu ScanSnap S1500
Reviewed by Sam Glover on .

Summary: The Fujitsu ScanSnap S1500 is simple to set up and use, and makes scanning documents as simple as pushing a button.

The new ScanSnap S1500 is better-looking, faster, comes with updated software, and sticks to the ScanSnap formula: efficient and easy to use. For solo practitioners or small offices, a ScanSnap (or a few of them) is still the best option.

Rating: 5 (out of 5)

Fujitsu ScanSnap S1500 | Amazon
Fujitsu ScanSnap S1500M (for Mac) | Amazon

Read the comments below or add one of your own.

GeeBird June 28, 2012 at 1:50 pm

+1 for the ScanSnap S1500. It is fast, portable, reliable and folds up into a nice little box. I have mine sitting in the top of a Staples Black Wire Mesh Letter Tray Sorter (product #828567 – about $25). It has a letter slot beneath it, two slots beside it, and it raises the Scansnap up so that you don’t even have to open the lower paper tray. I recommend the Scanner and the Sorter.

Reply

Sam Glover June 28, 2012 at 2:15 pm

I wouldn’t really call the S1500 portable. It’s portable if you like to carry around a duffel bag, I guess, but it’s not going to slide into a briefcase like the S1100 or Doxie Go.

Reply

Will Lam July 30, 2012 at 10:25 am

Very cool Sam!

Where do you save your documents? In a Dropbox account? I’m guessing you have multiple layers of redundancy so nothing is ever lost? Something like having Time Machine paired with Dropbox?

Reply

Sam Glover July 30, 2012 at 10:31 am

I keep everything in Dropbox. My desktop at the office is backed up daily to a local hard drive. All my computers are also backed up to CrashPlan. Here’s my security and backup plan: http://lawyerist.com/storing-client-files-cloud/

Reply

Bo Brennan August 9, 2012 at 11:22 am

Just wondering. I also have been using the S510 for a long time now but everytime I the thing picks up 2 pages or turns a page sideways and destorys it I start screaming “Thats it time for a new scanner” but I never see any real great reviews. I like the ease of the snapscan but what I really want to know is now that you’ve had 2 years with the S1500 does the paper feeder work correctly??

Reply

Sam Glover August 9, 2012 at 11:25 am

I still have my S500, and I experienced occasional multi-feeds. All I had to do was replace the picker (I think it was less than $20). But the S1500 has multi-feed detection, so if it does happen (which is extremely rare), you have a chance to fix it right then and there.

Reply

Dale Smith August 14, 2012 at 1:49 pm

thanks for the reading I am now looking a little more before i buy, can you tell me how the soft-ware works. I,m a small contractor and the paper is all over I need help and not sure what to buy .a backhoe is a lot easer than the office work and the paper that comes each day.

Reply

Nathan November 29, 2012 at 7:45 pm

We would love to go paperless – we have ‘ROOMS’ of paper. Our issue is almost every 8×11 paper has a 3×5 card stapled to it. I don’t need both scanned separately, just as 1 sheet. But the snapscan 1500 won’t accept the scan with a staple. (That is super annoying)

So I carefully remove the staple, tape the card to the full sheet of paper, then scan the file. The Snapscan program always complains there is ‘overlap detected’.

I thought I loved these scanners, but right now I am very frustrated.

Any help or thoughts? I would appreciate.

Thank you.

Reply

Sam Glover November 29, 2012 at 8:25 pm

You could just turn off the dual-feed detection.

Reply

Nick December 12, 2012 at 9:33 am

I am curious if this ScanSnap can put entries into an expense report or into financial programs. Being a traveling sales person I am not only looking to capture the image but be able to have a product that does some of this for me as well.

Also does it store and recognize templates because I frequent the same places on a regular basis.

Reply

Sam Glover December 12, 2012 at 9:50 am

Nope. It’s a scanner. It creates an image from the page. It can recognize text and convert pages to Word or Xcel documents, but nothing quite so fancy as inserting data into customized expense reports.

Reply

Bill Borkenstein January 2, 2013 at 10:15 am

I’m looking for a scanner that will handle a quantity of old family photographs and documents of various sizes for a digital family history that I am trying to assemble. Would the ScanSnap S1500 be suitable for this type of project? Would the scan quality be acceptable for old photographs? Thanks.

Reply

Sam Glover January 2, 2013 at 10:44 am

It’s not a photo scanner, but if you aren’t trying for high-quality reproductions, it’s fine.

Reply

Jeff C. Keane January 11, 2013 at 1:38 am

Sam,

Thank you so much for the succinct reviews of the Fujitsu S1500 AND the Neat scanner, advertised on TV. I almost made the mistake of getting sucked in by the apparent undisclosed truths, cloaked by the “neat” marketing campaign.
The $449 +- price of the S1500 is actually affordable, the reviewed functions should suffice my home use with my new Dell Inspiron laptop.
I primarily need to get a scanner to “digitize” my life out of paper storage boxes into perhaps a few dozen USB drives, lightening my future moving burden.
And, maybe even help a bit with a long overdue inventory via the reduced paper loads built up over the years.
Thanks again,
Sincerely, JCK

Reply

deborah February 3, 2013 at 10:41 am

I am a teacher… my question is this… Does this scanner automatically send the documents to the appropriate designated file on your computer like the Neatdesk says it does?
I’m not in a position to spend my money something that does not work as it should –my money , not theirs — I am fascinated about what Neatdesk advertises…but leery as well. and it is expensive…

Thank you

Reply

Sam Glover February 3, 2013 at 12:14 pm

Not sure what you are asking. You can choose the file type and location of every file you scan, if you like.

Reply

Greg February 18, 2013 at 12:00 pm

If you had to select between the ScanSnap or the Neat scanner for HOME use which one would you suggest? The cost is about the same give or take a few dollars but I m not sure which is the better of the two. I have never used either nor have I used a Document scanner, but Im getting buried in paper work with two kids in college, my work and a part time business on the side.

Reply

Earl Hall February 20, 2013 at 1:06 pm

I am not imprerssed with the ScanSnap. Every page is crooked. I have tried everything, but I can count on a 3 to 5 degree left tilt. This is just not acceptable.

Reply

Sam Glover February 20, 2013 at 1:10 pm

I have not experienced that with any of the ScanSnaps I have owned or reviewed (S500, S1100, S1300, S1500, S1500M, iX500), so I’m guessing you probably have a defective unit.

Reply

david March 25, 2013 at 1:11 pm

I was wondering how well this will work for scanning invoices and emailing them to customers.
thanks david

Reply

Sam Glover March 25, 2013 at 1:40 pm

Very well. But you should probably get the new iX500, instead: http://lawyerist.com/fujitsu-scansnap-ix500-desktop-document-scanner-review/

Reply

Keep the conversation going; leave a comment below!

If you want us to post your comment, make it coherent, relevant, and non-spammy. (Links in comments are no-followed, which means you won't get SEO juice for linking "California DUI Lawyer" to your website.)

When you post a comment on this blog, you grant us the right to modify or delete your comment, but we have no duty to do so.

Previous post:

Next post: