Samyang Rokinon 16mm f/2.0 ED AS UMC CS Lens for Canon Review

The Rokinon 16mm f/2.0 delivers stunning image quality for its price, but it demands you master manual focus. Is that a trade-off you can live with?

Focal Length 16mm
Max Aperture f/2
Mount Canon EF-S
Stabilization No
Weather Sealed No
Weight 581 g
Samyang Rokinon 16mm f/2.0 ED AS UMC CS Lens for Canon lens
59.4 Totaalscore

Overview

The Rokinon 16mm f/2.0 is a fast, wide-angle prime for Canon APS-C cameras. Its 16mm focal length gives you a 25.6mm equivalent field of view, which is perfect for landscapes, architecture, and tight interiors. And with an f/2.0 maximum aperture, it's also a solid choice for astrophotography or low-light shooting where you want to keep your ISO down.

It's a chunky lens at 581g, and it's manual focus only. That's a deal-breaker for some, but for the price, you're getting optical performance that lands in the 81st percentile. That means for still subjects where you have time to focus, the image quality punches well above its weight.

Performance

Let's talk about what this lens does well. Its optical score is its standout feature, sitting in the 81st percentile. In practice, that means sharpness and color rendering are excellent for the price, especially when stopped down a bit from f/2.0. The f/2.0 aperture itself is decently fast, ranking in the 69th percentile, giving you good light gathering ability and some background separation.

Where it stumbles is in the features that make a lens easy to live with. Autofocus is non-existent, putting it in the 47th percentile, and there's no stabilization (39th percentile). You have to be deliberate with your shooting. Its versatility score is also low at 39th percentile, which makes sense—it's a specialized, manual-focus wide-angle, not a walk-around lens.

Performance Percentiles

AF 46.3
Bokeh 63.7
Build 62.9
Macro 75
Optical 83.6
Aperture 69
Versatility 37.5
Social Proof 5.2
Stabilization 37.9

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Optical quality is excellent for the price (81st percentile). 84th
  • Fast f/2.0 aperture (69th percentile) is great for low light. 75th
  • Solid build quality feels durable (60th percentile). 69th
  • Wide 16mm (25.6mm equiv.) field of view is perfect for landscapes.
  • Large 77mm filter thread supports common accessories.

Cons

  • Manual focus only (AF percentile: 47th). 5th
  • No image stabilization (39th percentile).
  • Heavy and bulky at 581g for an APS-C lens.
  • Minimum focus distance of 200mm limits close-up ability.
  • Not weather-sealed, so keep it out of the rain.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Optics

Focal Length Min 16
Focal Length Max 16
Elements 13
Groups 11

Aperture

Max Aperture f/2
Min Aperture f/22

Build

Mount Canon EF-S
Format APS-C
Weight 0.6 kg / 1.3 lbs
Filter Thread 77

AF & Stabilization

Stabilization No

Focus

Min Focus Distance 200

Value & Pricing

At around $259, the value proposition is straightforward. You're paying for the glass, not the features. You get top-tier optical performance for your dollar, but you sacrifice autofocus, stabilization, and portability. Compared to an autofocus wide-angle from Canon, you'd save a few hundred bucks, but you have to be okay with focusing manually. It's a classic trade-off: budget for performance.

vs Competition

Stacked against popular budget primes, the Rokinon 16mm f/2.0 carves out a specific niche. A lens like the Viltrox 35mm f/1.7 for Z-mount offers autofocus and is more versatile for everyday use, but it's not as wide. The Meike 55mm f/1.8 Pro has AF and is sharper for portraits, but again, it's a totally different focal length. The Rokinon wins on pure wide-angle image quality per dollar, but loses hard on convenience. If you need autofocus in a wide lens, you'll have to spend significantly more, likely on a first-party option.

Verdict

This lens is a specialist. If you shoot landscapes, real estate, or the night sky with a Canon APS-C camera and don't mind manual focus, it's a fantastic, high-value tool. The image quality is genuinely great. But if you need a walk-around lens or shoot anything that moves, the lack of autofocus is a deal-breaker. For the right shooter, it's a gem. For everyone else, it's a paperweight.