It is called Total Cost of Ownership (TCO). Simply, how much does it cost to buy and run a printer over time. This is also way, for many printers, $100 toner is cheaper than $35 ink.
A typical ink jet printer is around $100-$300. It prints in color. It probably scans, copies, and faxes. It uses liquid ink. Typically it uses two ink cartridges, black and tri-color. The tri-color combines cyan (light blue), magenta, and yellow in one unit. For some models, each color is separate. Most new printers need all four colors to print, even to print black only.
A laser printer can also print in color. Its toner is a power. Each of the four colors are separate. Again, most printers need all four colors, even for black only printing. Typically laser toner is much more expensive on the shelf. Over $100 each. But they also print thousands of pages per cartridge. Inkjet ink cartridges are about $3-50 each. But some print less than 100 pages.
This is so much easier with a spread sheet. There is one attached below.
What you need to do your calculations:
The Gotachas:
For each ink you will need to divide 10,000 by the number of pages used. Then multiply that by the price of the toner. Do this for each ink you will need. Thankfully on color lasers the price and yield is the same for all of the colors. The spreadsheet does the math once and then multiplies that by three. My example spreadsheet includes a great deal on the inkjet printer. It works out to 18 cents a page. This is about half what most inkjets cost per page.
Printer TCO.xlsx for Office 2013 and above
Printer TCO.xls for Office 2010 and earlier