Voigtlander Voigtlander Nokton 50mm f/1.0 Aspherical Lens Review

The Voigtlander 50mm f/1.0 offers breathtaking bokeh and incredible low-light power, but its manual-focus design and high price make it a lens for very specific shooters.

Focal Length 50mm
Max Aperture f/1
Mount Nikon Z
Stabilization No
Weather Sealed No
Weight 590 g
Voigtlander Voigtlander Nokton 50mm f/1.0 Aspherical Lens lens
72.7 Punteggio Complessivo

Overview

The Voigtlander Nokton 50mm f/1.0 is a lens built around one very specific, very impressive number: f/1.0. That max aperture puts it in the 98th percentile for speed, and it's the whole reason this lens exists. It's a manual-focus prime designed to give you an extreme amount of light and a unique look, all wrapped up in a surprisingly compact 590g package with classic, retro styling.

But you have to know what you're getting into. This isn't a do-everything lens. Its percentile scores tell the story: it's a superstar for bokeh (99th percentile) and low-light capability, but it's middling for general optical performance (57th percentile) and lacks modern features like autofocus (48th percentile) or stabilization (41st percentile). It's a specialist's tool, and it knows it.

Performance

Performance here is all about the aperture. That f/1.0 opening is massive, letting in roughly twice as much light as a standard f/1.4 lens. In practical terms, you can shoot in near-darkness or maintain a lower ISO for cleaner images. The 12-blade diaphragm helps create that legendary 99th-percentile bokeh, with smooth, rounded out-of-focus areas that are perfect for portraits, which it scores an 89.5/100 for.

Just don't expect perfection across the frame at f/1.0. The optical performance percentile of 57 suggests you'll see some softness and aberrations wide open, which is typical for such a fast design. It sharpens up as you stop down. The manual focus is precise, with a good damped feel, but it demands your attention, especially for video where it scores a 68.4.

Performance Percentiles

AF 46.5
Bokeh 99.2
Build 62
Macro 56.4
Optical 66.6
Aperture 97.7
Versatility 37.4
Social Proof 73.4
Stabilization 38.3

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Strong bokeh (99th percentile) 99th
  • Strong aperture (98th percentile) 98th

Cons

Specifications

Full Specifications

Optics

Focal Length Min 50
Focal Length Max 50
Elements 9
Groups 7

Aperture

Max Aperture f/1
Min Aperture f/16
Diaphragm Blades 12

Build

Mount Nikon Z
Format Full-Frame
Weight 0.6 kg / 1.3 lbs
Filter Thread 62

AF & Stabilization

Stabilization No

Focus

Min Focus Distance 450

Value & Pricing

At $1699, the value proposition is razor-sharp and entirely subjective. You are paying a premium for that f/1.0 aperture and the unique rendering it provides. There is no autofocus or stabilization at this price, which feels stark compared to modern AF lenses. You're buying an optical experience and a specific look, not convenience or feature-checkboxes. If f/1.4 isn't fast enough for you, this is one of the few native Z-mount options that goes further, and you pay for that exclusivity.

Price History

1.600 BRL 1.800 BRL 2.000 BRL 2.200 BRL 2.400 BRL 28 feb22 mar 2.332 BRL

vs Competition

Compared to the Meike 55mm F1.8 Pro, you're looking at a completely different philosophy. The Meike has autofocus, is much sharper across the frame, and costs a fraction of the price, but it's 'only' f/1.8. The Voigtlander gives you over two stops more light and a different character. Against the Viltrox 35mm f/1.7, the Voigtlander is faster, built better, and offers a more premium manual experience, but the Viltrox has AF and is a fraction of the cost. The Panasonic 14-140mm zoom is the anti-thesis: it scores high in versatility for travel, where the Voigtlander fails. The Voigtlander is for depth and light; the others are for flexibility and sharpness.

Verdict

The Voigtlander Nokton 50mm f/1.0 is a brilliant, flawed, and expensive specialist. If your primary goals are stunning portrait bokeh (99th percentile), shooting in very low light, or you simply crave the f/1.0 look on your Z-mount camera, it's a compelling and unique tool. But with average optical performance, no autofocus, and poor versatility, it's a hard sell for anyone who needs a reliable, sharp, do-it-all lens. For most people, a great f/1.4 or f/1.8 lens will be smarter. But for the shooter who wants that one specific, magical thing, nothing else quite does it.