Canon Canon EF 24-105mm f/4L IS USM Zoom Lens - White Review

The Canon 24-105mm f/4L has 99th percentile autofocus but only 34th percentile optics. It's the ultimate reliable tool, not the ultimate sharp lens.

Focal Length 24-105mm
Max Aperture f/24
Mount Canon EF
Stabilization Yes
Weather Sealed No
Weight 907 g
AF Type USM
Lens Type Zoom
Canon Canon EF 24-105mm f/4L IS USM Zoom Lens - White lens
48.1 Общая оценка

Overview

The Canon EF 24-105mm f/4L IS USM is a classic workhorse lens that's all about covering your bases. Its 24-105mm zoom range lands it in the 94th percentile for versatility, meaning it can handle landscapes, portraits, and events without you needing to swap glass. And with autofocus performance sitting in the 99th percentile, it locks on fast and reliably, which is a huge plus for anything that moves.

But you're not buying this for ultimate sharpness or dreamy backgrounds. Its optical quality percentile is a modest 34, and its constant f/4 aperture puts it in the bottom 10% for light gathering and bokeh. This is a lens built for getting the shot in a wide range of situations, not for wowing you with technical perfection. Think of it as a reliable, all-day tool.

Performance

Performance here is a story of extremes. The autofocus is top-tier, in the 99th percentile. That USM motor is quick, quiet, and accurate, making it a great partner for anything from street photography to capturing kids or pets. The image stabilization is solid too, at the 86th percentile, giving you a few extra stops of handheld flexibility.

Where it stumbles is in the pure optics department. That 34th percentile ranking for optical quality tells you it's decent, not exceptional. You'll get usable sharpness, especially stopped down, but don't expect it to compete with prime lenses or higher-end zooms. And the f/4 aperture, while constant, is a limitation. It puts bokeh quality in the 8th percentile and low-light capability right there with it. For macro work, it's basically a non-starter at the 16th percentile.

Performance Percentiles

AF 99
Bokeh 8.4
Build 7.2
Macro 20.6
Optical 35.8
Aperture 8.4
Versatility 94.1
Social Proof 84.3
Stabilization 87.6

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Autofocus is in the 99th percentile. It's fast, quiet, and dependable. 99th
  • Versatility score is 94th percentile. The 24-105mm range covers most everyday needs. 94th
  • Image stabilization lands in the 86th percentile, helpful for handheld shots. 88th
  • Constant f/4 aperture means your exposure stays consistent as you zoom. 84th
  • USM motor allows for full-time manual focus override, which is handy.

Cons

  • Optical quality is only in the 34th percentile. It's good, not great. 7th
  • Bokeh quality is in the 8th percentile. Don't expect creamy backgrounds. 8th
  • Aperture performance is in the 8th percentile. f/4 is limiting in low light. 8th
  • Macro capability is terrible at the 16th percentile. Look elsewhere for close-ups. 21th
  • Build quality percentile is just 7. It's not the most rugged L-series lens.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Optics

Type Zoom
Focal Length Min 24
Focal Length Max 105

Aperture

Max Aperture f/24
Constant Yes

Build

Mount Canon EF
Weight 0.9 kg / 2.0 lbs

AF & Stabilization

AF Type USM
Stabilization Yes

Value & Pricing

At its current street price of around $689, the value proposition is a bit tricky. You're paying for that legendary Canon L-series build and the incredible USM autofocus system. If you need a single, do-it-all lens for a full-frame Canon DSLR and your priority is reliable performance over optical brilliance, it's a reasonable buy. But you can find sharper prime lenses for less money, and third-party zooms sometimes offer better value if you're willing to compromise on the AF speed.

Price History

500 CA$ 1 000 CA$ 1 500 CA$ 2 000 CA$ 7 мар.22 мар.29 мар. 1 446 CA$

vs Competition

Compared to a prime like the Nikon NIKKOR Z 35mm f/1.8 S, the Canon loses badly on sharpness, low-light ability, and bokeh. But the Nikon is one focal length. The Canon gives you four. Against a superzoom like the Panasonic 14-140mm f/3.5-5.6, the Canon has a brighter constant aperture and much better autofocus, but the Panasonic has a far wider zoom range. The real competition is other standard zooms. This Canon's trade-off is clear: you get best-in-class AF and great versatility, but you accept middling optics and a slow aperture. A lens like the Viltrox 35mm F1.7 will destroy it for portrait quality and low light for a fraction of the cost, but you lose the zoom.

Verdict

This is a lens for the Canon DSLR shooter who values reliability and range above all else. If you need one lens to handle a wedding, a vacation, or a day of street photography and you can't afford to miss focus, it's a solid, if unspectacular, choice. The data is clear: buy it for the 99th percentile autofocus and 94th percentile versatility. But if you're chasing the best image quality, bokeh, or low-light performance, look at primes or faster zooms. Your money can buy more sharpness elsewhere.