Yongnuo YN 14mm f/2.8N Review

The Yongnuo 14mm f/2.8 offers serious wide-angle image quality at a budget price, but its bulky build and average autofocus mean it's best for patient shooters.

Focal Length 14mm
Max Aperture f/2.8
Mount Nikon F
Stabilization No
Weather Sealed No
Weight 780 g
AF Type Autofocus
Yongnuo YN 14mm f/2.8N lens
34.1 Totaalscore

Overview

So you're looking at a 14mm f/2.8 prime lens for your Nikon F-mount camera. That's an ultra-wide angle, and it's a focal length that's all about drama. You use this for landscapes where you want to fit the whole mountain in, or architecture where you're standing right next to a building and still want to capture it all. It's a specialized tool, not your everyday walk-around lens.

This Yongnuo lens is interesting because it gives you that ultra-wide perspective and a relatively bright f/2.8 aperture at a price that's way below what you'd pay from Nikon themselves. It's for the photographer who wants to experiment with wide-angle shots without emptying their bank account. Think of it as an entry ticket to serious wide-angle work.

The catch, and there's always a catch, is in the compromises. At 780 grams, it's a chunky piece of glass. And with a build quality percentile in the single digits, you know you're not getting a tank. This is a lens you buy for its optical potential at a specific price point, not for its ruggedness or all-around versatility.

Performance

Let's talk about what this lens actually does well. Its optical performance scores in the 74th percentile, which is genuinely solid for a third-party lens at this price. That means in the center of the frame, you can expect sharp, detailed images, especially when you stop down a bit from f/2.8. The inclusion of UD Aspherical and Anomalous Dispersion elements helps control distortion and color fringing, which are huge challenges at 14mm.

Now, the real-world implications. That 80th percentile macro score is a funny one, because its minimum focus distance is 200mm (about 8 inches). You're not doing true macro work, but you can get surprisingly close to a foreground subject for creative, exaggerated perspectives. The autofocus lands in the 49th percentile, so it's average—it'll get the job done in decent light but might hunt a bit in low light. There's no stabilization, so you'll need to keep your shutter speed up or use a tripod, especially since wide angles can show camera shake easily.

Performance Percentiles

AF 46.3
Bokeh 48.8
Build 10.2
Macro 75.3
Optical 77.8
Aperture 54.9
Versatility 37.3
Social Proof 16.3
Stabilization 37.7

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Strong macro (80th percentile) 78th
  • Strong optical (74th percentile) 75th

Cons

  • Below average build (7th percentile) 10th

Specifications

Full Specifications

Optics

Focal Length Min 14
Focal Length Max 14
Elements 12
Groups 9

Aperture

Max Aperture f/2.8
Min Aperture f/22
Diaphragm Blades 7

Build

Mount Nikon F
Format Full-Frame
Weight 0.8 kg / 1.7 lbs

AF & Stabilization

AF Type Autofocus
Stabilization No

Focus

Min Focus Distance 200
Max Magnification 1:6.67

Value & Pricing

The value proposition here is straightforward: you get a 14mm f/2.8 for hundreds less than the Nikon equivalent. You're trading some build quality, autofocus refinement, and possibly edge-to-edge sharpness for that savings. At around $552, it sits in a niche where your other options are either slower, variable-aperture zooms or used first-party glass. It's a purpose-driven purchase. If 14mm is a focal length you know you need, and your budget is tight, this lens makes a lot of sense. Just don't expect it to feel like a $1500 lens.

C$ 758

vs Competition

Looking at the listed competitors, most aren't direct rivals—they're different focal lengths. The real competition is other ultra-wide options. Compared to a Nikon 14-24mm f/2.8G zoom, the Yongnuo is way cheaper and lighter, but you lose zoom flexibility, weather sealing, and arguably some optical consistency. Compared to a used Nikon 20mm f/2.8D prime, you get a much wider view and a newer design, but the older Nikon might have better build quality.

The Viltrox 35mm f/1.7 is a completely different beast—a standard prime great for portraits and low light, not wide-angle drama. The Panasonic 14-140mm is a Micro Four Thirds superzoom, not for Nikon DSLRs. This Yongnuo really competes in the 'budget ultra-wide prime' space. Your trade-off is primarily cost versus overall polish and durability.

Verdict

If you're a landscape or architecture shooter on a Nikon DSLR who's been itching to try a 14mm perspective, this lens is a compelling, low-risk way to do it. The image quality in the center is good enough for most work, and the price is right. Just be ready for its heft and treat it gently.

I wouldn't recommend this as a travel lens (its 17/100 score there is a big red flag) or as your only lens. It's too specialized and bulky. And if you need reliable autofocus for fast-paced event work or demand pro-level build quality, you should save up for a used Nikon lens. But for the specific shooter it targets, the Yongnuo 14mm f/2.8 delivers where it counts: on the sensor.