Do you have any specific brand/model printer(s) that you would recommend?
P.S. Is there anything that you would stay away from?
Like many things, you get what you pay for. There are hobby grade printers that are very cheap and you can get some "good" deals where they include a few spools of material with the purchase but many of these printers can be easily thrown out of calibration and a lot of times the customer service after purchase is little to none; but for many people who don't expect to do a lot of printing these kind of printers can be a good way to "dip a toe" into 3D printing without making the bank account beg for mercy.
Ultimaker makes a good printer along with handy printer accessories and material management systems but they are somewhere in between home/hobby grade printers and industrial printers in both print quality and price (around $3 to $7k if I remember correctly) 3DGence is another company who has a printer (the Double p255) that falls into that same category as Ultimaker.
Unfortunately I have the least personal experience with home/hobby grade printers because i have free access to more capable printers through my work; but if I had to list what I would look for in a home printer it would go like this (in order of priority for me):
Duel extruder print head
print bed movement that is controlled with long worm gears rather than belts
print area size
reviews of customer service/ tech support after the initial purchase period
material sensors (printer senses when it runs out of material and pauses the print until more material is added)
ease of use of the slicing software UI
print head tips/nozzles that are easy to change/replace
heated print bed
enclose-able print area
enclosed/climate controlled material bays
I have heard almost nothing good about the Makerbot line of printers as well as the Prusa line of printers. Part of Pursa's marketing is that many of the parts on their printers are 3D printed so the customer can print out their own replacement parts as they wear out. Problem is that several of these parts are the drive gears for the movement of the print head and if those start to wear out you are going to have a hard time printing out a replacement that is clean and accurate enough to not still give you problems (i would rather have parts made out of metal or molded plastic that aren't going to wear out anytime soon). Makerbot has a reputation of poor manufacturing quality control and even worse customer/tech support.
There are companies out there that deal in used 3D printers as well, so you might be able to get a very capable printer for close to the price of a new yet less capable printer.
FDM printing is the most common type of printing right now and is tried and true, but SLA printers are really starting to get affordable and the quality of the finished product is several orders of magnitude better than anything a FDM printer can manage.