Relevant Porcine flexor tendons were decellularized to produce the dECM bioink hydrogel. hASCs were used as cell source and the bioink was directly printed within the CNC fluid gel. Tendon constructs were co-printed with compartmentalized microvascular structures to evaluate the cellular crosstalk with endothelial cells. The tendon-on-chip models showed high cell viability and proliferation during culture up to 21 days, and the synergy between dECM cues and printed patterns induced anisotropic cell organization similar to tendon tissues. Gene and protein analysis showed upregulation of the most important tendon related markers on tendon constructs, demonstrating that the biophysical and biochemical cues of dECM induced hASCs commitment toward tenogenic phenotype. In co-culture system, chemotaxis induced endothelial cells migration toward the tendon compartment, but without significant infiltration. Gene and protein expression results suggest that the cellular crosstalk established in this MPS with endothelial cells boosted hASCs tenogenesis, emulating tendon development stages. Overall, the proposed system might be promising for the automated fabrication of organotypic tendon-on-chip models that will be a valuable new tool to study tendon physiology, pathology, or the effect of drugs for the treatment of tendinopathy.