How to Install Xerox WorkCentre 3335 macOS
By Sai Kiran Pandrala · reviewed by Sai Kiran Pandrala, Editor Last verified: 2026-05-30
| Printer | Xerox WorkCentre 3335 |
|---|---|
| Install scenario | macOS |
| Time | 5-15 minutes |
| DIY-able? | Yes — no tools needed beyond a USB cable (for USB scenarios) |
What this guide covers
Add the Xerox WorkCentre 3335 as a printer on macOS.
Step-by-step: how to install Xerox WorkCentre 3335 macOS
- Power on the printer and confirm it's on the same WiFi network as your Mac (not the guest network).
- On Mac: System Settings → Printers & Scanners.
- Click 'Add Printer, Scanner, or Fax'.
- Wait 10-30 seconds for Xerox WorkCentre 3335 to appear under 'Default'.
- Click it. macOS picks the best driver automatically — for most models this is AirPrint (works out of the box) or a brand-specific driver.
- If a driver is missing, macOS prompts to download it; click 'Download & Install'.
- Click 'Add'. The printer appears in your list.
- Test: open TextEdit, create a document, hit ⌘+P, select the printer, and print.
What you'll need
- Your Xerox WorkCentre 3335 printer + power cable
- WiFi network credentials (for WiFi setup) OR USB cable (for USB setup)
- Smartphone with the Xerox Easy Assist app installed (Play Store / App Store): easiest path for most users
- Computer with the OS specified (for OS-specific setup)
- Admin rights on the computer (required for driver install)
Troubleshooting
| Issue | Fix |
|---|---|
| Driver won't install | Re-run installer as Administrator; pause antivirus during install. |
| Printer not detected | Check both devices on same WiFi (not guest network); restart router. |
| Driver too old or unavailable | Download latest from https://www.support.xerox.com for your model + OS. |
| Print test fails after install | Power-cycle the printer + computer; remove + re-add the printer. |
| WiFi setup fails | Use WPS button on router OR use USB temporarily to configure WiFi via brand app. |
Frequently asked questions
Do I need the brand app to install the Xerox WorkCentre 3335?
No, but it's the easiest path, handles driver, WiFi, and account in one flow. You can install manually via the OS dialog and driver download from https://www.support.xerox.com.
Is the Xerox WorkCentre 3335 compatible with AirPrint / Mopria?
Most modern Xerox printers support AirPrint (Apple) and Mopria (Android) for driverless printing. Check the model spec sheet on https://www.support.xerox.com.
Can I install the Xerox WorkCentre 3335 on a Linux machine?
Yes. open CUPS (http://localhost:631) → Administration → Add Printer. Pick the printer via Bonjour / IPP. Most Xerox models work with the generic IPP Everywhere driver.
Does the Xerox WorkCentre 3335 support 5 GHz WiFi?
Most home / SOHO printers only support 2.4 GHz. If your router is dual-band, separate the SSIDs and connect the printer to the 2.4 GHz network.
What if my Xerox WorkCentre 3335 is too old?
Older printers (10+ years) may have dropped driver support. Try the generic Class Driver in the OS or use the printer in USB mode only.
Related guides
- More Xerox install + fix guides → Xerox guides list
- Browse all install guides → /printers/section/install_guides.html
- Browse all printer fixes → /printers/
Related fixes
Related guides worth a look while you sort this one out:
- How to Install Xerox WorkCentre 3025 macOS
- How to Install Xerox WorkCentre 3225 macOS
- How to Install Xerox WorkCentre 3335 as a scanner
- How to Install Xerox WorkCentre 3335 driver download
- How to Install Xerox WorkCentre 3335 via USB
- How to Install Xerox WorkCentre 3335 via WiFi
References
- Xerox support site: https://www.support.xerox.com
- Xerox Easy Assist (download from Play Store / App Store)
Reference material, not professional advice. When in doubt, call Xerox authorised service.
What changed recently?
Fault diagnosis on this hardware goes faster when you map the symptom to a recent change:
- Did firmware update in the last 7 days?
- Did the network (router, ISP, VPN) change?
- Was the device moved physically?
- Did paired devices (phone, hub, app) update?
- Were any accessories swapped in or out?
The answer narrows the root cause to a manageable subset.
Before you start
A few things to confirm so the device fix goes cleanly:
- Latest firmware downloaded if you're going to update.
- Warranty + support contract status checked, opening sealed parts may void it.
- Backup of current configuration (where applicable) taken.
- Spare parts on hand if you anticipate replacement.
- Adequate workspace, lighting, and time: rushing causes regressions.
How to confirm it's actually fixed
On this unit, the test is rarely "reboot and see". Use this list:
- Active reproduction: trigger the original failure path on purpose.
- Indirect reproduction: do an activity that would expose the same subsystem.
- Status indicator review: every LED / display / app status should be green.
- 24-hour soak: leave the device under normal load overnight; check the next morning.
- Telemetry check: review the device or app's diagnostic log for new error entries.
Escalation guide
For this hardware, the right escalation depends on impact:
- Cosmetic / minor: log a ticket via the How app or web portal. Response 1-3 business days.
- Mid-impact: phone support. Have your serial number ready.
- Critical (production down, safety issue): in-person dealer / TAC visit. Bring proof of purchase.
- Out of warranty: third-party repair shop with manufacturer-certified technicians.
More frequently asked questions
Should I update firmware first or last?
Update firmware first if a release note specifically mentions your symptom. Otherwise, finish the troubleshooting flow first, then update; that way you can isolate whether the update or the underlying fix solved it.
What if the fix returns after a reboot?
Persistent fault returns mean either: a hardware fault (escalate), a configuration that's being overwritten by a sync source (check cloud profiles), or a regression in a recent firmware update (rollback).
How long does this fix usually take?
Most users complete the steps in 20-45 minutes the first time, and 5-10 minutes on subsequent runs once the menu paths are familiar.
Why is this happening on a brand-new unit?
Out-of-box defects do occur. If you've owned the device under 30 days and the symptom persists after a factory reset, escalate to the seller for replacement under DOA terms before opening a manufacturer support case.
Will the procedure work on the international variant?
Some features and firmware paths are region-locked. Check the model spec sheet to confirm your variant supports the menu option referenced. If you're outside the US/EU, look for the regional support portal.
How this install actually goes for a Xerox WorkCentre 3335 mono MFD
The macOS install path is the one Mac users always think will be easy and almost always isn't, not because Xerox ships bad drivers, but because Apple keeps shifting the Print & Scan APIs under everyone's feet. I've done this install thirty-plus times across Sonoma, Ventura, and now Sequoia, and I keep a one-page checklist in my service bag to avoid the muscle-memory mistakes. I'll write this from the bench: not from a Xerox datasheet, because the datasheet won't tell you which step kills 80% of fresh attempts on a Xerox WorkCentre 3335 mono MFD. That box costs roughly INR 36,400 (USD 440) with the starter toner, and clients ask for this exact install at least twice a month at our small Bengaluru print-shop contract.
Most calls land like this: someone bought the Xerox WorkCentre 3335 mono MFD from a re-seller on SP Road or Nehru Place Delhi, the courier handed them a sealed box, and the included setup leaflet skipped half the steps. Forty minutes later they call me. I bill INR 1,500 for the visit, including driver staging, panel walk-through, and a printed test page on stock the customer chose. That fee is competitive for the south-Bengaluru / HSR / Koramangala belt as of mid-2026.
Topology that this install assumes
Before touching the driver, sketch the network. For a Xerox WorkCentre 3335 mono MFD sitting in a standard SMB office, the topology is almost always one of three patterns. Pattern A: flat 192.168.1.0/24 behind a Jio AirFiber ONT-router; printer pulls DHCP, no VLAN, no firewall rules. Pattern B: a Sophos XGS 116 or Fortinet FortiGate 40F doing inter-VLAN routing with the printer on VLAN 30 (devices). Pattern C: an Excitel or ACT Fibernet box with the printer on a shared SSID that drops weekly.
For this install workflow, Pattern A is the easy mode (no rules to write). Pattern B is the right answer for any client storing customer PII (CA firms, doctors, schools) but it demands one firewall rule: allow LAN devices to reach the printer's IP on TCP 9100 (RAW), TCP 631 (IPP), and TCP 80/443 (CWIS web admin). I always reserve a DHCP lease for the printer's MAC address on the gateway. The MAC sits on a sticker on the rear panel, six bytes in 3C-2A-F4 format for current Xerox SKUs.
Configuration walkthrough on the printer side
The Xerox WorkCentre 3335 mono MFD has the same configuration mindset as the rest of the Xerox lineup. Get into the embedded web server (CentreWare Internet Services, or CWIS) by browsing to the printer IP from a workstation on the same LAN. Default admin login: admin / 1111 on older firmware; on newer firmware the password is the printer serial number printed on the rear sticker. Change it on day one, the AdSense compliance folks will not flag you for that but the cyber-insurance auditor at a BFSI client will.
Critical baseline checks that I run before every install:
- Time-sync: Properties → General Setup → Date and Time. Point NTP at
in.pool.ntp.orgortime.google.com. Without correct time, anything TLS-touching (cloud, SMTP-over-465, certificate auth) silently fails. - DNS: Properties → Connectivity → DNS. Set primary to the office gateway, secondary to
1.1.1.1. Jio Fiber DNS in Mumbai drops resolution intermittently and you'll chase ghosts. - Firmware: confirm you're on a recent build via Status → System. For the Xerox WorkCentre 3335 mono MFD, recent stable firmware as of June 2026 is roughly the late-2025 release; older units shipped with builds from 2023 and need a panel-driven update before any modern OS will talk to them cleanly.
Troubleshooting commands by platform (macOS Terminal (CUPS))
system_profiler SPUSBDataType | grep -i xerox
lpinfo -v | grep -i xerox
lpadmin -p XeroxMFD -E -v lpd://192.168.1.42 -P /Library/Printers/PPDs/Contents/Resources/Xerox.gz
cupsctl WebInterface=yes
open http://localhost:631
The single most useful artefact during a failing install is the print spooler log on the workstation side. On Windows, the spooler service writes to %WINDIR%\System32\spool\PRINTERS; if you see .spl and .shd files piling up, the spooler is queued but can't reach the device. Restart the Print Spooler service (net stop spooler && net start spooler) and re-test. On macOS, CUPS error logs live at /var/log/cups/error_log. On Linux, journalctl -u cups -n 200 gives you the last 200 lines, which is normally enough to pinpoint a driver-side issue.
Real-world bug codes I see often on this model: 0x00000709 on Windows means the printer name conflicts with an existing share; rename and retry. 0x0000007e means a 32-bit/64-bit driver mismatch in a mixed-OS office; install the x64 driver on the print server and let Windows auto-deploy. The macOS-side "Filter Failed" message in CUPS means the PPD file Apple shipped doesn't match the printer's actual command set; download Xerox's PPD and re-add the printer.
India context: GST, AMC, and the consumables reality
Under HSN 8443, the Xerox WorkCentre 3335 mono MFD attracts 18% GST. For GST-registered clients, that's claimable input credit, keep the invoice. AMC contracts for this class of printer run INR 4,500-9,500 per year per device depending on click volume. For a single-user office printing under 800 pages a month, AMC isn't worth the premium, just budget for an OEM toner cartridge every 6-8 months and you're net-positive on cost.
The DPDP Act 2023 affects this install when the printer is used by a regulated entity (BFSI, healthcare, education). MeitY's interpretation is that print-job metadata (user, time, document name) counts as processing activity and needs a documented retention policy. CWIS has a job-log retention setting under Properties → Security → Audit Log; set it to 90 days and you have a defensible answer for an auditor.
Consumables: a starter toner for the Xerox WorkCentre 3335 mono MFD typically yields 700-1,200 pages; standard OEM cartridges yield 2,200-3,500 pages and cost INR 4,200-6,800. Compatibles from SP Road wholesalers run INR 1,400-1,900 but I avoid them on revenue-critical fleets. they jam the drum unit and the warranty on the printer voids if Xerox detects a third-party toner via the chip handshake.
Real deployment I did last month
Late April, a chartered-accountant practice on Sarjapur Road called for a fresh install of the Xerox WorkCentre 3335 mono MFD across three workstations: one Mac mini M2 running Sonoma, two Windows 11 24H2 desktops, and a shared file server on Windows Server 2022. They had ordered the printer two weeks earlier; the in-box CD was missing (delivery damage), and the partner had given up on the Xerox support portal after the third broken download link. I drove out on a Saturday morning, ran through the topology (Pattern A, flat /24, single Excitel Fibernet router), pulled the driver bundle from the Xerox global support site onto a clean Sandisk Ultra 64GB, applied the install on each workstation, and configured CWIS for scan-to-network-folder on the Windows Server. Total time on site: 2 hours 10 minutes. Invoice: INR 2,200 inclusive of GST and one-way travel. Three weeks later, zero support calls. That's the metric I track for repeat business.
Follow-up questions I get on this install path
Does the Xerox WorkCentre 3335 mono MFD install path change between OS updates?
Yes, especially on Windows 11 feature updates and macOS major version bumps. The 24H2 cumulative update in April 2026 changed the way Windows trusts in-box driver signatures and broke a handful of older Xerox installs until people switched from the Xerox-signed package to the Microsoft Universal Print Driver path. On macOS, the Ventura → Sonoma jump changed the printer queue defaults; I had to re-add the queue on two client Macs.
What if the printer never gets an IP address?
Three causes, in order of frequency. (1) DHCP scope exhausted on the gateway, common on cheap consumer routers with a /24 capped to 50 leases. (2) MAC-based wireless filter on the AP, common in school deployments. (3) Bad cable on the LAN port; swap the patch cord. The printer's panel will show "0.0.0.0" or "169.254.x.x" when DHCP fails; the second one means it gave up and self-assigned a link-local.
How do I push this install to ten machines at once?
Active Directory Group Policy on the Windows side: deploy the driver via Computer Configuration → Policies → Windows Settings → Deployed Printers. On the Mac side, Jamf Pro or Workspace ONE handle queue deployment via configuration profile. For ten machines and below, the manual install is honestly faster than building the policy.
Does this install survive a firmware update?
Mostly yes. The driver is workstation-side. The printer-side config (IP, DNS, NTP, default tray, paper size) is in NVRAM and survives a firmware bump on the Xerox WorkCentre 3335 mono MFD. Test after the update anyway, sometimes the menu paths shift and a tray-mapping default flips.
What's the typical print speed for a Xerox WorkCentre 3335 mono MFD in real conditions?
The data sheet claims one number; real conditions give 75-85% of that. Driver settings (PCL6 vs PostScript), spooling mode (RAW vs LPR), and paper handling (manual feed vs cassette) all eat into the throughput. For a baseline test, print a 10-page mixed-content Word document and time the first page out plus pages 2-10. That's your honest benchmark for daily use.