Canon High-Power 500mm/1000mm f/8 Manual Focus Telephoto Review

The Canon High-Power 500mm f/8 gives you 1000mm reach for just $130, but you'll work for every shot with slow, manual focus. It's a fascinating budget experiment, not a daily driver.

Focal Length 500mm
Max Aperture f/8
Mount Canon RF
Stabilization Yes
Weather Sealed No
Weight 1080 g
Lens Type Telephoto
Canon High-Power 500mm/1000mm f/8 Manual Focus Telephoto lens
32.4 Overall Score

Overview

Alright, let's talk about this Canon High-Power 500mm/1000mm f/8 lens. It's a manual focus telephoto that gives you a massive 500mm reach, and it comes with a 2x teleconverter to push that to 1000mm. That's a lot of zoom for the money, especially at around $130. But you need to know what you're getting into. This is a very specific, very manual tool for a very specific job. It's not your everyday walk-around lens. It's for when you need to reach out and touch something far, far away, and you're willing to work for the shot. The specs tell the story: it's got stabilization, which is a huge plus for such a long lens, but it's manual focus only, has a slow f/8 aperture, and isn't weather-sealed. Think of it as a budget telescope for your camera.

Performance

Performance is a mixed bag, which is exactly what you'd expect at this price. The stabilization is genuinely good, landing in the 89th percentile. That's critical because at 500mm or 1000mm, even the tiniest shake ruins a shot. The optical quality is okay for the price, sitting in the 34th percentile. Don't expect pro-level sharpness, but it gets the job done. The weak spots are exactly where you'd guess. The f/8 aperture is in the 13th percentile, so you need a lot of light. Manual focus at these focal lengths is tough, and the build quality is in the bottom 5th percentile. It feels cheap, because it is. This lens is all about that extreme reach on a tight budget, and you trade a lot of convenience and speed to get it.

Performance Percentiles

AF 46.2
Bokeh 13.8
Build 4.4
Macro 53.4
Optical 35.8
Aperture 14
Versatility 37.5
Social Proof 45.7
Stabilization 87.6

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Insane 1000mm reach with the included teleconverter. 88th
  • Effective image stabilization helps combat shake.
  • Extremely low price for such a long focal length.
  • Simple, manual operation with no electronics to fail.

Cons

  • Very slow f/8 aperture limits use in low light. 4th
  • Manual focus is challenging at such long distances. 14th
  • Build quality feels plasticky and not durable. 14th
  • Not weather-sealed, so keep it away from the elements.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Optics

Type Telephoto
Focal Length Min 500
Focal Length Max 500

Aperture

Max Aperture f/8

Build

Mount Canon RF
Weight 1.1 kg / 2.4 lbs

AF & Stabilization

Stabilization Yes

Focus

Min Focus Distance 500

Value & Pricing

For $130, the value proposition is simple. If you absolutely need a 500mm or 1000mm lens and your budget is rock bottom, this is it. You are getting a functional super-telephoto for the price of a cheap prime lens. That's wild. But you're paying for that reach with major compromises in speed, autofocus, and build quality. It's not a good value if you want a versatile, easy-to-use lens. It's a fantastic value if your only requirement is 'make that thing over there look bigger' and you're patient.

Price History

R$0 R$10,000 R$20,000 R$30,000 R$40,000 Feb 18Mar 26Mar 26Mar 29Mar 30 R$179

vs Competition

This lens doesn't really compete with the listed primes like the Viltrox 35mm or Meike 55mm. Those are fast, autofocus lenses for general use. This Canon is a specialty tool. A better comparison is against other budget super-telephotos, like old manual lenses or used gear. Compared to a used Sigma 150-600mm, you lose zoom range and autofocus but gain the 1000mm reach and pay a fraction of the price. Against a proper modern super-telephoto, there's no contest, you'd pick the modern lens every time. This Canon exists in its own niche of ultra-budget, ultra-reach optics.

Verdict

Buy this lens if you're a curious beginner on a strict budget who wants to try wildlife or moon photography without breaking the bank, and you understand the manual focus challenge. It's also a fun, low-risk experimental tool. Do not buy this if you need autofocus for moving subjects, shoot in anything but bright light, or want a lens that feels solid. It's a one-trick pony, but for $130, that trick is pretty impressive.