Tamron Tamron Di III Tamron 18-300mm f/3.5-6.3 Di III-A VC VXD Lens for Review

The Tamron 18-300mm offers insane range in one lens, but you trade away speed and some sharpness for that convenience. It's the ultimate travel companion for those who hate swapping glass.

Focal Length 18-300mm
Max Aperture f/3.5
Mount Sony E Mount
Stabilization Yes
Weather Sealed No
Weight 620 g
AF Type Autofocus
Lens Type Zoom
Tamron Tamron Di III Tamron 18-300mm f/3.5-6.3 Di III-A VC VXD Lens for lens
82.6 ओवरऑल स्कोर

Overview

This Tamron 18-300mm is basically a 'do-everything' lens for your Sony APS-C camera. It goes from a wide 18mm all the way to a super-telephoto 300mm, which is a massive 16.6x zoom range. That means you can shoot landscapes, portraits, and distant wildlife without ever changing lenses.

It's built to be a one-lens travel kit. At 680g, it's not super light, but it's manageable for a lens with this much reach. Just know it's not weather-sealed, so keep it dry.

Performance

The versatility here is off the charts, scoring in the 100th percentile. That's the main event. The VXD autofocus is decent, landing in the 47th percentile, so it's fine for general use but not class-leading. Image stabilization is a strong point at the 90th percentile, which helps a lot at the long end. The optical quality is middle-of-the-road (33rd percentile), and the variable aperture gets pretty dark (f/6.3) when you're zoomed all the way in, which hurts low-light performance.

Performance Percentiles

AF 46.1
Bokeh 36
Build 60.7
Macro 63.5
Optical 96.2
Aperture 41.5
Versatility 99.5
Social Proof 91.8
Stabilization 87.5

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Insane 16.6x zoom range covers almost every situation. 100th
  • Excellent image stabilization helps shoot handheld at long focal lengths. 96th
  • Can focus incredibly close for a zoom, almost like a macro lens. 92th
  • You only need this one lens on your camera for most trips. 88th

Cons

  • Optical quality is just okay, especially in the corners.
  • The variable aperture gets slow when zoomed, limiting low-light use.
  • Build quality feels basic and it's not weather-sealed.
  • It's a bit chunky and front-heavy on smaller APS-C bodies.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Optics

Type Zoom
Focal Length Min 18
Focal Length Max 300
Elements 19
Groups 15

Aperture

Max Aperture f/3.5
Constant Yes

Build

Mount Sony E Mount
Weight 0.6 kg / 1.4 lbs
Filter Thread 67

AF & Stabilization

AF Type Autofocus
Stabilization Yes

Focus

Min Focus Distance 300
Max Magnification 1:2

Value & Pricing

At $629, it's a significant investment for an APS-C lens. You're paying a premium for that incredible convenience and range. If you absolutely hate swapping lenses and want one tool for everything, the price might be justified. But if you care more about image quality or shooting in low light, your money goes further with a couple of prime lenses.

€580

vs Competition

This lens is in its own category for range, but let's look at alternatives. The Panasonic Lumix 14-140mm is a popular 'travel zoom' for Micro Four Thirds, but it has less reach. Competitors like the Viltrox 35mm f/1.7 or Nikon Z 35mm f/1.8 S are prime lenses. They'll destroy this Tamron in low-light performance and sharpness, but you give up all the zoom flexibility. The Tamron is the ultimate convenience play, but you trade away speed and some optical quality for it.

Verdict

Buy this if you're a traveler, hiker, or event shooter who needs one lens to rule them all and you're okay with 'good enough' image quality. Don't buy it if you're a pixel-peeper, shoot mostly in dim light, or want professional-grade build. It's the perfect lazy person's lens, and sometimes that's exactly what you need.