Nikon Zf Zf Silver 2023 Review

The Nikon Zf tops our build quality charts at the 95th percentile, and its retro design steals hearts. But that tiny grip might just break your wrist with a heavy lens.

Type mirrorless
Sensor 24.5MP full-frame
AF Points 273
Burst FPS 14 fps
Video 4K @60fps
IBIS Yes
Weather Sealed Yes
Weight 630 g
Nikon Zf Zf Silver 2023 camera
87.3 Overall Score

The 30-Second Version

Build quality is a stunning 95th percentile, making this the best-feeling retro mirrorless on the market. Battery life is equally impressive at 91st percentile, so you can shoot all day. The big caveat is ergonomics: the tiny grip and missing AF-ON button draw frequent complaints, so try one in hand before you commit.

Overview

The Nikon Zf is a rare bird: a camera that our database puts in the 95th percentile for build quality, thanks to a chassis that feels milled from a block of nostalgia. It nails a 90.1 score for beginners, meaning if you're stepping up from a phone or an old DSLR, this thing will make you look good fast. The secret is a 24.5MP full-frame sensor paired with the EXPEED 7 processor, giving you autofocus that snags eyes and animals with 273 points. And with a battery life that lands in the 91st percentile, you can leave the charger at home for most weekend shoots.

But that retro body comes with a cost. The tiny grip and front-heavy balance with anything bigger than a pancake lens are the number one complaint from owners. We're not surprised: the vlogging score sits at 75.9, so this isn't the hybrid powerhouse some might hope for. Still, for stills shooters who want a camera that feels like a classic film SLR and produces rich, low-noise images, the Zf is a strong statement from Nikon.

Performance

Under the hood, the Zf is surprisingly quick. The burst rate hits 14fps with the mechanical shutter and 30fps in silent electronic mode, putting it in the top 20% of mirrorless cameras we've tracked. Autofocus is equally confident: subject detection with 3D tracking is sticky, and while it's not the absolute fastest system around, it's well above average at the 81st percentile. You'll nail focus on a running dog or a dancing kid without much fuss.

Image stabilization is another win. With 5 stops of IBIS and focus-point stabilization, you can handhold slow shutter speeds that would blur on lesser bodies. Video specs are respectable—4K up to 30p full-width, 60p with a crop, and 10-bit Log—but it's clear this camera was built for stills first. The sensor resolution is a middle-of-the-pack 24.5 megapixels, so you won't be cropping into eagle eyes from a mile away, but the BSI design does wonders for low-light performance.

Performance Percentiles

AF 82.7
EVF 89.4
Build 95.4
Burst 82.3
Video 80.3
Sensor 53.9
Battery 91.6
Display 84.3
Connectivity 93
Social Proof 94.6
Stabilization 84.7

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Best-in-class build quality that feels indestructible (95th percentile) 95th
  • Gorgeous retro design wins compliments everywhere (user sentiment) 95th
  • Fast autofocus with reliable subject detection (81st percentile) 93th
  • Excellent battery life for a mirrorless body (91st percentile) 92th
  • Effective IBIS lets you shoot handheld in dim light (83rd percentile)

Cons

  • Small grip makes long shoots uncomfortable (owner complaints)
  • No dedicated AF-ON button frustrates back-button focus fans
  • Weight balance feels front-heavy with pro lenses
  • Vlogging score drags at 75.9, missing modern video niceties
  • Menu system is overly complex for a retro camera

The Word on the Street

4.7/5 (830 reviews)
👍 Owners can't get enough of the vintage design, saying it sparks conversations and feels like a real camera again.
👍 The image quality and low-light performance are consistently called out as stellar, with many feeling it punches above its resolution.
🤔 The small grip divides users; some love the compact feel, but many with larger hands or heavier lenses find it uncomfortable for long shoots.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Sensor

Type CMOS
Size full-frame
Megapixels 24.5
ISO Range 100
Processor EXPEED 7

Autofocus

AF Points 273
AF Type Photo, VideoContrast Detection, Phase Detection: 273
Eye AF Yes
Animal AF Yes
Subject Detection Yes

Shooting

Burst (Mechanical) 14
Burst (Electronic) 30
Max Shutter 1/8000
Electronic Shutter Yes

Video

Max Resolution 4K
4K FPS 60
1080p FPS 120
10-bit Yes
Log Profile Yes
RAW Video No
Codec H.265

Display & EVF

Screen Size 3.2
Touchscreen Yes
Articulating Yes
EVF Resolution 3690000

Build

Weather Sealed Yes
Weight 0.6 kg / 1.4 lbs
Battery Life 410

Connectivity

Wi-Fi Yes
Bluetooth Yes
USB USB-C
HDMI Micro-HDMI
Hot Shoe Yes

Value & Pricing

Pricing for the Zf is all over the map, with retailers listing it anywhere from $1,147 to over half a million dollars—yes, you read that right. Clearly, you should ignore the absurd high end and shop around. At around $1,200, you're getting a full-frame camera with top-tier build, great autofocus, and a bundled 40mm f/2 lens. That's an absolute steal for the performance and style on offer. Even at $2,000 with a kit zoom, it undercuts many competitors while delivering more character.

Price History

New Refurbished
CA$2,600 CA$2,800 CA$3,000 CA$3,200 CA$3,400 May 1May 27 CA$2,699

vs Competition

Stack it against the Canon EOS R6 Mark III, and the Zf trades blows on autofocus but wins on sheer build feel and design. The R6 Mark III might edge ahead in pure speed, but it can't match that brass-dial charm. The Fujifilm X-H2 packs a 40MP sensor for detail freaks, but the Zf's full-frame BSI sensor gives you better dynamic range and low-light muscle. For video-first shooters, the Panasonic GH7 is the clear winner, but if stills are your priority and you want a camera that makes you smile every time you pick it up, the Zf is the one.

Spec Nikon Zf Zf Fujifilm X-H2 X-H2 Canon EOS R6 Mark III R6 Mark III Sony a7 a7 V Panasonic LUMIX GH7 GH7 OM System OM OM-1 Mark II
Type mirrorless mirrorless mirrorless mirrorless mirrorless mirrorless
Sensor 24.5MP full-frame 40.2MP aps-c 32.5MP full-frame 33MP full-frame 25.2MP micro-four-thirds 20.4MP micro-four-thirds
AF Points 273 425 1053 759 315 1053
Burst FPS 14 20 40 30 75 120
Video 4K @60fps 8K @60fps 6K @120fps 4K @120fps 5K @120fps 4K @60fps
IBIS true true true true true true
Weather Sealed true true true true true true
Weight (g) 630 579 609 610 721 511
Compare Compare Compare Compare Compare
Product AfEvfBuildBurstVideoSensorBatteryDisplayConnectivitySocial ProofStabilization
Nikon Zf Zf 82.789.495.482.380.353.991.684.39394.684.7
Fujifilm X-H2 X-H2 Compare 88.195.489.585.499.997.196.984.39394.693.5
Canon EOS R6 Mark III R6 Mark III Compare 98.487.894.89389.358.996.599.49394.699.6
Sony a7 a7 V Compare 95.788.694.990.989.360.296.699.79394.696.1
Panasonic LUMIX GH7 GH7 Compare 84.687.897.295.297.456.389.284.39394.696.1
OM System OM OM-1 Mark II Compare 98.499.781.899.88542.394.284.39394.699.6

Common Questions

Q: How does the Zf perform in low light?

It's a standout. The full-frame BSI sensor combined with 5-stop IBIS delivers clean high-ISO shots, and our data puts low-light user sentiment among the top strengths. You can comfortably shoot at ISO 6400 and get very usable results.

Q: Is the autofocus reliable for wildlife or sports?

Absolutely. With 273 AF points, subject detection, and 14fps mechanical burst, the Zf sits in the 81st percentile for AF performance. It'll track birds and runners well, though for the most demanding pro sports, a stacked sensor body would be faster.

Q: Can I use old Nikon lenses with this camera?

Yes, via the FTZ adapter, you can mount nearly any F-mount lens, which plays perfectly into the vintage vibe. Native Z-mount glass is sharp and modern, but adapting manual-focus classics is where the Zf really shines.

Who Should Skip This

Skip the Zf if you shoot a lot of video, especially vlogging. The 75.9 vlogging score reflects missing features like 4K 120p and a fully articulating screen that's not exactly flip-forward friendly. If you have large hands or plan to use heavy telephoto lenses all day, the cramped grip will become a pain. And if you need super high resolution for massive prints, the 24.5MP sensor is just average—look at the Fujifilm X-H2 or Sony a7R series instead.

Verdict

The Nikon Zf is an oddball hit. It's not the most practical camera—the ergonomics will turn off some, and the video specs are merely decent. But the combination of a 95th-percentile build, rich image quality, and genuinely charming retro design makes it a joy for stills photographers. Our data gives it an 87.3 overall, with a 90.1 for beginners and 87.5 for sports and wildlife. If you love the look and can live with the grip, you'll adore shooting with it.