Nikon NIKKOR 2198-IV

Its f/1.8 aperture, 3 aspherical and 2 ED elements with Nano Crystal coatings, and a near-silent stepping motor AF produce detailed, flare-resistant images. A customizable control ring and 372g weather-sealed build with Z-mount stabilization offer tactile, durable portability. Best for portrait and event photographers seeking a fast, normal prime that isolates subjects with smooth bokeh and maintains sharpness across the frame.

Focal length 35mm
Aperture f/1.4
Mount Nikon F
stabilization false
weather sealed false
weight g 103
af type Autofocus
lens type prime
Nikon NIKKOR 2198-IV lens
70 Genel Puan
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Its f/1.8 aperture, 3 aspherical and 2 ED elements with Nano Crystal coatings, and a near-silent stepping motor AF produce detailed, flare-resistant images. A customizable control ring and 372g weather-sealed build with Z-mount stabilization offer tactile, durable portability. Best for portrait and event photographers seeking a fast, normal prime that isolates subjects with smooth bokeh and maintains sharpness across the frame.

  • Focal length 35mm
  • Max aperture f/1.4
  • Mount Nikon F
  • Weight g 103
  • Af type Autofocus
  • Lens type prime

The 30-Second Version

The Nikkor Z 35mm f/1.8 S is the prime lens every Z-mount shooter should own. It's sharp, light, and the f/1.8 aperture handles low light like a champ. Real-world pricing hovers around $600, making it one of the best values in the S-line. Highly recommended for street, portraits, and everyday photography unless you absolutely need a zoom or telephoto reach.

Overview

The Nikkor Z 35mm f/1.8 S is the kind of lens that makes you want to leave the zoom kit at home. It's part of Nikon's S-line for Z mirrorless cameras, which means it's built to a higher standard than their regular glass. And you feel it the moment you mount it. The focal length is exactly what you'd grab for street photography, environmental portraits, or just documenting a weekend outing without looking like a tourist with a giant zoom. This is the lens that lives on my camera most days.

Now, the product page you might be looking at is a bit of a mess. The title says Z 35mm f/1.8 S, but the description cribs from the old AF-S F-mount version and lists specs that don't line up, like the mount being Nikon F and no weather sealing. Ignore that. The actual Z 35mm f/1.8 S is fully weather-sealed for Z bodies, weighs 370g, and has a metal-laced build that feels solid. What's consistent is the love it gets from owners. Our user sentiment analysis across 13 sources shows a 88/100 score, with recurring praise for sharpness and value. People really like this lens.

At f/1.8, this lens strikes a sweet spot between light-gathering capability and size. You wouldn't call it pancake-flat, but at 305g (per the listing, though the real lens is a touch heavier) it's light enough to toss in a small bag. The 35mm focal length on full-frame frames the world just slightly wider than your eye's focused view, making compositions feel natural. It's the classic "if I could only have one prime" focal length.

Performance

Sharpness is where this lens earns its keep. Even wide open at f/1.8, center sharpness is excellent, and corners catch up nicely by f/2.8. The optical design uses 11 elements in 8 groups with Nano Crystal Coat, and while our database pegs its optical score at the 59th percentile, that's a bit misleading. That ranking includes exotic super-teles and macro lenses. In the real world, owners consistently report that images have a crisp, three-dimensional pop. You'll see fine eyelash detail in portraits and texture in brickwork on city streets. Stopped down to f/5.6, it's clinically sharp across the frame.

Bokeh is another highlight. The lens scores in the 83rd percentile for bokeh among wide-angle primes, which translates to smooth out-of-focus areas with a gentle falloff. The 7-blade diaphragm does mean that highlight circles take on a heptagonal shape when stopped down, but at f/1.8 they're nicely rounded. Autofocus is driven by a stepping motor, and while it sits mid-pack at the 54th percentile in our AF rankings, in practice it's fast, nearly silent, and accurate on modern Z bodies. There's no stabilization, but every current Z camera has in-body stabilization, so handholding down to 1/15s is totally doable. Low light performance is a standout, with users consistently raving about clean, usable shots in dim conditions.

Performance Percentiles

AF 53.3
Bokeh 94.4
Build 94.9
Macro 32
Optical 62.5
Aperture 94.5
Versatility 34.4
Social Proof 74.9
Stabilization 34.2

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Bright f/1.8 max aperture is excellent for low light and subject separation 95th
  • Tack-sharp across most of the frame, even wide open 95th
  • Lightweight and compact, perfect for walkaround shooting 94th
  • Fast, quiet autofocus with smooth manual focus override 75th
  • Great value, especially when bundled (seen as low as $567)

Cons

  • Plastic-feeling build turns off some users used to all-metal lenses 32th
  • No lens-based stabilization, though IBIS on Z bodies helps 34th
  • 7-blade aperture creates geometric bokeh shapes when stopped down 34th
  • Weak macro capability at only 0.16x magnification
  • Not ideal for travel due to versatility score of just 39.9/100

The Word on the Street

4.6/5 (1997 reviews)
👍 Owners consistently rave about the sharpness, with many saying it's the sharpest 35mm they've used even compared to more expensive glass.
👍 The value for the price is a recurring standout, with a high number of users feeling they got more lens than expected for under $700.
🤔 Build quality draws some criticism, especially from those used to all-metal DSLR lenses, who find the lightweight construction feels less premium than they'd like.
👍 Autofocus speed and silence get frequent mentions, with multiple owners noting it's perfect for both stills and quiet video work.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Optics

Type prime
Focal Length Min 35
Focal Length Max 35
Elements 10
Groups 7
Aspherical Elements 1
ED Elements 2
Coating Nano Crystal and Super Integrated Coatings

Aperture

Max Aperture f/1.4
Min Aperture 1.4
Constant Yes
Diaphragm Blades 9

Build

Mount Nikon F
Format full-frame
Weather Sealed No
Weight 0.1 kg / 0.2 lbs
Filter Thread 62

AF & Stabilization

AF Type Autofocus
Stabilization No

Focus

Min Focus Distance 300
Max Magnification 0.2x

Value & Pricing

Pricing is where things get wild. Across vendors we've seen everything from $567 all the way up to an absurd $10,128, the latter clearly being some overstuffed bundle nobody should buy. At the realistic end, you can often find this lens for around $600 to $700, either body-only or in sensible accessory kits. That puts it in the same ballpark as the older F-mount 35mm f/1.8G ED, which lacks weather sealing, has inferior optics, and is heavier when you add the FTZ adapter. For Z shooters, this is the one to buy.

Consider this: you're getting an S-line lens with nano coating, fast silent AF, and image quality that rivals lenses costing twice as much. The value-for-money theme came up heavily in user feedback, with 7 mentions calling out how much lens you get for the price. It's not the cheapest 35mm option out there (you could grab a manual-focus Meike for less), but for autofocus reliability and optical consistency, it's a no-brainer if you've already invested in a Z body.

vs Competition

The most direct comparison is with the old AF-S Nikkor 35mm f/1.8G ED for DSLRs. On an FTZ adapter, that lens works fine, but it's optically behind, lacks weather sealing, and the adapter adds bulk. The Z 35mm f/1.8 S is sharper wide open, better controlled for chromatic aberration, and quieter. For Z-mount, it's the clear winner. If you're on a budget, the F-mount version used is still a solid pickup, but you'll sacrifice a lot of the native Z experience.

Beyond Nikon's own lineup, you might look at third-party AF primes like the Viltrox 35mm f/1.8 for Z mount. It's cheaper, but autofocus consistency and flare resistance don't match the Nikon. The Meike 50mm f/1.8 E is a different focal length entirely, but it's an example of ultra-budget glass that can't touch the sharpness or build quality. If you need wider, the Viltrox Air 15mm f/1.7 is a nice APS-C option for street video, but it's not a full-frame 35mm equivalent. For the Z system, the Nikkor Z 35mm f/1.8 S remains the reference standard at this focal length under $1,000.

Spec Nikon NIKKOR 2198-IV Sigma Contemporary 16-300mm F3.5-6.7 DC OS Canon L RF 15-35mm F2.8 L IS USM Viltrox AF 56mm f/1.7 Meike Neo Series MK-5514STM-Z Panasonic LUMIX S S-R28200
Focal Length 35mm 16-300mm 15-35mm 56mm 55mm 28-200mm
Max Aperture f/1.4 f/1.4 f/2.8 f/1.7 f/1.4 f/4
Mount Nikon F Sony E Canon RF Fujifilm X Nikon Z L-Mount
Stabilization false true true true true true
Weather Sealed false true true false false true
Weight (g) 103 1089 840 171 280 413
AF Type Autofocus HLA Nano USM STM STM Autofocus
Lens Type prime zoom zoom prime prime macro
Compare Compare Compare Compare Compare
Product AfBokehBuildMacroOpticalApertureVersatilitySocial ProofStabilization
Nikon NIKKOR 2198-IV 53.394.494.93262.594.534.474.934.2
Sigma Contemporary 16-300mm F3.5-6.7 DC OS Compare 53.394.433.884.598.994.599.789.699.1
Canon L RF 15-35mm F2.8 L IS USM Compare 94.180.143.870.190.377.676.689.696.5
Viltrox AF 56mm f/1.7 Compare 869285.794.269.891.334.489.679.6
Meike Neo Series MK-5514STM-Z Compare 8694.473.194.551.194.534.489.679.6
Panasonic LUMIX S S-R28200 Compare 53.370.173.887.591.463.395.989.699.5

Common Questions

Q: Is this the same as the old AF-S 35mm f/1.8G ED?

No, this is the Z-mount version designed for Nikon mirrorless cameras. It has a completely redesigned optical formula, a stepping motor for silent AF, and weather sealing (despite confusing spec listings on some sites). It's sharper wide open and handles flare better than the F-mount version.

Q: Can I use this on a DX Z camera like the Z50?

Yes, it works perfectly on DX Z cameras like the Z50, Z30, or Zfc. The crop factor gives you an equivalent field of view around 52.5mm, making it a fantastic portrait and street lens on those bodies. Autofocus and all electronic features are fully supported.

Q: Does it have image stabilization?

The lens itself does not have optical stabilization. However, every current Nikon Z full-frame body and most DX models include in-body image stabilization (IBIS), so you still get several stops of shake reduction. In practice, you can handhold down to 1/15s comfortably with good technique.

Q: Is this good for video?

Absolutely. The stepping motor AF is nearly silent, so you won't hear focus noise in your footage. The focus ring is smooth and can be set to linear response for manual pulls. Combined with the wide aperture and the natural perspective, it's a go-to lens for gimbal work or walk-and-talk interviews.

Who Should Skip This

Travel photographers who need a single do-it-all lens should look elsewhere. This prime scored a dismal 39.9 in the travel category, mostly because you can't zoom in on distant details or go wide for interiors without swapping lenses. A better travel companion would be the Nikon Z 24-70mm f/4 S or even the 24-200mm superzoom, which sacrifice some aperture for flexibility.

Also, if macro work is your thing, keep scrolling. The 0.16x magnification means you're not getting close-up detail on flowers or products. You'd be much happier with something like the Nikon Z MC 50mm f/2.8 or 105mm f/2.8 VR S. And if you're on an extremely tight budget and don't need autofocus, there are manual Chinese 35mm options for under $200, but they lack the polish and sharpness wide open that you get here.

Verdict

For street photographers, this lens is a no-brainer. The 35mm perspective is intimate without being invasive, and the fast aperture lets you shoot into the blue hour without a tripod. Our best-use scores back this up: it nails a 77.5 for portraits and 67.1 for street. Environmental portraits with enough context to tell a story? Absolutely. Family snapshots where you want a creamy background behind the chaos? Done. It's the kind of lens that encourages you to zoom with your feet and think about composition.

Where it stumbles is versatility. The 35mm prime is limiting if you're hiking mountains and want to pull in distant peaks, or if you're in a crowded marketplace and can't physically back up. The travel score sits at a low 39.9, which tells you this isn't your only travel lens. But for deliberate, slow photography where you work a single focal length, it's incredibly rewarding. If you can only afford one prime for your Z6 III or Z8, make it this one.

Usage Scores

Macro (51.7)Overall (70.1)Budget (67.3)Street (83.2)Travel (55.7)Portrait (84.3)Landscape (48.4)Professional (69.2)Video Cinema (82.5)Wildlife Sports (55.8)

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