Panasonic Lumix GH4 Panasonic Lumix GH4 Mirrorless Camera Review

The Panasonic GH4 is a durable video pioneer, but its aged sensor and lack of modern features make it a hard sell against today's hybrids.

Type Mirrorless
Sensor ?MP
Burst FPS 40 fps
Video 4K @30fps
IBIS No
Weather Sealed Yes
Weight 558 g
Panasonic Lumix GH4 Panasonic Lumix GH4 Mirrorless Camera camera
66.7 Pontuação Geral

Overview

The Panasonic GH4 is a weird one. It's a camera that was built for a specific moment in time—the early days of 4K video—and if you're looking for that specific, rugged, no-frills video workhorse today, it's still kind of compelling. But that's the one thing to know: this is a 2014 camera being sold in 2024. Its superpower is a durable, weather-resistant body and clean 4K output, but you're buying a time capsule.

Performance

Honestly, the biggest surprise is how dated it feels. The sensor performance is in the 30th percentile, which means low-light photos get noisy fast. The autofocus, even with its 49-point system, lands in the 44th percentile and can't touch modern hybrid cameras. It's fine for controlled video shots, but for anything moving quickly, you'll be manually focusing. The video quality itself is still clean and detailed, which is why it scored in the 69th percentile there, but it lacks the stabilization, color science, and high-frame-rate options we take for granted now.

Performance Percentiles

AF 42.8
EVF 42.8
Build 96.8
Burst 96
Video 66.2
Sensor 68.7
Battery 98.3
Display 76.7
Connectivity 78.7
Social Proof 83.6
Stabilization 40.9

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Built like a tank with a magnesium alloy body. 98th
  • Delivers clean, professional 4K video output. 97th
  • Operating temperature range makes it reliable in tough conditions. 96th
  • Exceptionally long shutter life for heavy use. 84th

Cons

  • Sensor performance is poor by modern standards.
  • No in-body image stabilization at all.
  • Autofocus is slow and can't compete with newer systems.
  • The fixed rear display feels ancient and limiting.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Sensor

Type 17.3 x 13 mm (Four Thirds) MOS
ISO Range 200

Autofocus

AF Type -4 to +18 EV

Shooting

Burst (Mechanical) 40
Max Shutter 1/8000
Electronic Shutter No

Video

Max Resolution 4K
4K FPS 30

Display & EVF

Touchscreen Yes

Build

Weather Sealed Yes
Weight 0.6 kg / 1.2 lbs
Battery Life 530

Connectivity

HDMI Micro-HDMI

Value & Pricing

At $771, it's a tough sell. You're paying a premium for build quality and a specific video feature set that's a decade old. For the same money, you can get a modern camera that smokes it in every other category. It's only worth it if you need an absolute beater camera for a multi-cam 4K shoot where durability is the only concern.

Price History

New Refurbished
US$ 200 US$ 400 US$ 600 US$ 800 US$ 1.000 22 de fev.15 de abr. US$ 771

vs Competition

Look at the Sony a6400 or Fujifilm X-S20. Both are similarly priced but are from this decade. The a6400 has vastly superior autofocus, a better sensor, and a flip-up screen for vlogging. The X-S20 adds fantastic in-body stabilization, 6K video, and Fuji's great film simulations. Even the Canon R7, though more expensive, offers blistering speed and 4K 60p. The GH4's only advantage over these is its sheer physical toughness.

Spec Panasonic Lumix GH4 Panasonic Lumix GH4 Mirrorless Camera Sony Alpha 1 Sony a1 II Mirrorless Camera Nikon Z6 Nikon Z6 III Mirrorless Camera with 50mm f/1.4 Canon EOS R6 Canon EOS R6 Mark II Mirrorless Camera Fujifilm X-H2 FUJIFILM X-H2 Mirrorless Camera Panasonic LUMIX GH7 Panasonic LUMIX GH7 Mirrorless Camera with 12-35mm
Type Mirrorless Mirrorless Mirrorless Mirrorless Mirrorless Mirrorless
Sensor ?MP 50.1MP Full Frame 24.5MP Full Frame 24.2MP Full Frame 40.2MP APS-C 25.2MP Four Thirds
AF Points - 759 299 1053 425 315
Burst FPS 40 30 20 40 20 75
Video 4K @30fps 8K @120fps 5K @120fps 4K @60fps 8K @60fps 5K
IBIS false true true true true true
Weather Sealed true false true true true false
Weight (g) 558 658 669 590 590 726
Compare Compare Compare Compare Compare

Verdict

I can't recommend buying the GH4 new in 2024. It's a legendary camera that helped define the mirrorless video scene, but its time has passed. Unless you're building a cheap, disposable rig for a dangerous shoot, put your money into a modern hybrid camera. You'll get better photos, better video features, and a camera that doesn't feel like a relic.