I'm recommending you some affordable color laser printer, that is certified for having just a small negative impact on health, especially think of fine particles emission, and environment (both is covered for instance by the 'Blue Angel' label).
Right now, I do have an almost 8 years old Lexmark C546 dtn duplex printer with separate toner for each color. It is no proofing quality, but fine for color mockups up to paper size DIN A4.
I always had problems with inkjet printers having dried-up ink, because of low quantity printing, but if you need to make lots of larger sized physical presentations or if you need it for color proofing, you should take a look at recent HP, Canon or Epson proofing printers. To avoid dried-up ink, there are some printers printing with dry-ink and therefore the nozzles can't clog, but I'm not sure if those are valid for proofing. If I need a color perfect proof, I do print it at a print shop (preferably at the printer that will output the final result) as I can't maintain such a proofing device by myself at home, due to low frequency I'd need it.
You could go with a recent color laser printer from Lexmark, that does have a good customer service. Any other brand that you might prefer, e.g. Kyocera, is fine, too. Just ask yourself, what needs to be the paper weight and size, how much will be printed and what's the budget to nail down a decision. In general, I don't know of any cheap laser or inkjet printer, that has 1.) accurate color and 2.) has a similar raster accuracy in terms of color gain of letters, compared to offset printing. So my color laser printer recommendation is more or less oriented on how to get some fancy color on paper to catch a rough impression and not on, how you business card or folder will look like, when offset printed. The same goes for size. To print a preview of a (larger) folder, I use to print it on several pages and stick them together. That's how I can avoid a larger size printer in most cases.
For digital printing production that comes as close as possible to offset quality, I can recommend Xerox iGen or HP Indigo printers, but they're out of my budget range for home use (and probably not optimal for health, if it would reside in a dining room). At the moment, I'm much interested in sustainable printing techniques for small number of copies, like possible with a
Risograph. But that device is not fitting all printing needs and more like an alternative reminding a bit of screen printing with its own graphical style.
Hope that helps you, making your decision.