Viltrox Viltrox AF 85mm f/1.4 Pro Z Lens (Nikon Z) Review

The Viltrox 85mm f/1.4 Pro Z delivers stunning, creamy bokeh that rivals lenses twice its price, but you'll have to live with slower autofocus and no stabilization.

Focal Length 85mm
Max Aperture f/1.4
Mount Nikon Z
Stabilization No
Weather Sealed No
Weight 816 g
AF Type Autofocus
Viltrox Viltrox AF 85mm f/1.4 Pro Z Lens (Nikon Z) lens
60.1 Score global

Overview

The Viltrox AF 85mm f/1.4 Pro Z is a lens that knows its job. It's a portrait specialist, and the numbers back that up. With an 85mm focal length and a fast f/1.4 aperture, it lands in the 94th percentile for bokeh quality and the 88th for aperture. That means creamy, dreamy backgrounds are its default setting. It's a big, heavy piece of glass at 816g, and it's not trying to be a travel companion. Its travel score is a low 28.9 out of 100, so you're buying this for a specific, beautiful purpose.

Performance

This lens is all about the image. Its optical performance is in the 88th percentile, so sharpness and color rendering are excellent, especially for the price. The 11-blade diaphragm helps keep those out-of-focus highlights looking smooth. But you feel the trade-offs. Autofocus performance sits at the 47th percentile. It's not slow, but it's not class-leading either. You won't get stabilization (39th percentile), so you'll need steady hands or a higher shutter speed. And the 1:7.7 max magnification means it's not for close-up work (43rd percentile for macro). It's built to make portraits look incredible, and it does that very well.

Performance Percentiles

AF 46.2
Bokeh 95.1
Build 22.3
Macro 48.3
Optical 88.7
Aperture 88.2
Versatility 37.3
Social Proof 65.8
Stabilization 37.5

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Stellar bokeh quality in the 94th percentile for that classic portrait look. 95th
  • Fast f/1.4 aperture (88th percentile) for great low-light performance and subject isolation. 89th
  • Excellent optical sharpness and rendering, scoring in the 88th percentile. 88th
  • Useful features like a customizable Fn button and dual Hyper VCM motors for quiet AF. 66th

Cons

  • Autofocus is middle-of-the-pack, landing only in the 47th percentile. 22th
  • No image stabilization (39th percentile), which is a notable omission for video.
  • Build quality is a weak point, scoring in the 23rd percentile for its class.
  • Heavy and not versatile, with a travel score of just 28.9/100.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Optics

Focal Length Min 85
Focal Length Max 85
Elements 15
Groups 11

Aperture

Max Aperture f/1.4
Min Aperture f/16
Diaphragm Blades 11

Build

Mount Nikon Z
Format Full-Frame
Weight 0.8 kg / 1.8 lbs
Filter Thread 77

AF & Stabilization

AF Type Autofocus
Stabilization No

Focus

Min Focus Distance 790
Max Magnification 1:7.7

Value & Pricing

At around $598, the value proposition is clear. You're getting near-professional-grade portrait optics for a fraction of the cost of a Nikon S-Line 85mm. You pay for that with slower autofocus, no stabilization, and a less premium build. But if your primary goal is image quality for still portraits, this lens delivers a lot of performance per dollar.

Price History

590 $US 595 $US 600 $US 605 $US 26 févr.16 mars 598 $US

vs Competition

Compared to other third-party options, it's a specialist. The Viltrox 35mm f/1.7 Z is more versatile and better for travel, but its bokeh can't touch this 85mm's. The Meike 55mm f/1.8 Pro is lighter and has a more standard focal length, but again, you lose that dedicated portrait compression and ultra-shallow depth of field. Against the Yongnuo 35mm f/1.8 for Sony, the Viltrox 85mm offers a completely different focal length for a different job. This lens wins on pure portrait rendering but loses on general usability.

Verdict

If you shoot portraits and want pro-level bokeh on a budget, this lens is an easy recommendation. The optical performance is fantastic for the price. Just know what you're signing up for: you'll need to manage the weight, work around the average autofocus, and keep it away from bad weather. It's not a do-everything lens, but for its one job, it excels.