Leica M EV1
The first M-series camera to integrate a 5.76m-dot OLED electronic viewfinder, the Leica M EV1 pairs a 60MP full-frame BSI CMOS sensor with the classic slim M body, enabling precise framing with ultra-wide and telephoto lenses. Its Leica Content Credentials technology and a lightweight aluminum top plate add image authenticity and durable build at just 413g. This camera is best for detail-focused stills photographers who need an M-mount system with EVF precision for challenging focal lengths.
Bu Camera hakkında
The first M-series camera to integrate a 5.76m-dot OLED electronic viewfinder, the Leica M EV1 pairs a 60MP full-frame BSI CMOS sensor with the classic slim M body, enabling precise framing with ultra-wide and telephoto lenses. Its Leica Content Credentials technology and a lightweight aluminum top plate add image authenticity and durable build at just 413g. This camera is best for detail-focused stills photographers who need an M-mount system with EVF precision for challenging focal lengths.
- Type mirrorless
- Sensor 60.3MP full-frame
- Burst fps 4.5
- Weight g 413
The 30-Second Version
The Leica M EV1 is a niche mirrorless camera that grafts a stellar 60MP sensor and a gorgeous EVF onto the classic M body. It's slow, expensive, and lacks stabilization, but for deliberate photographers with a bag of Leica glass, the image quality and experience are tough to beat.
Overview
If you've been curious about what happens when Leica builds an M camera without the optical rangefinder, the M EV1 is your answer. It's the first M-series body with a built-in electronic viewfinder, and it pairs that 5.76M-dot OLED with a 60.3MP full-frame BSI CMOS sensor borrowed from the M11 lineup. The design stays slim and familiar, and at 413g it's light enough to carry all day. But this isn't a spec-sheet warrior. It's a camera for people who want to slow down, compose deliberately, and wrestle with manual focus. Think of it as Leica's love letter to purists, with a modern twist. The price, though, starts at a knee-buckling $8,547 and can climb past $12,000 depending on where you shop, so it's absolutely a considered purchase.
Performance
That 60MP sensor is the star here. In our database it lands in the 71st percentile overall, which is strong but not chart-topping. In practice, files are ridiculously detailed, with the kind of dynamic range and color depth that makes post-processing a joy. We're talking the kind of resolution where you can crop till you're bored and still print big. But everything around that sensor moves at a different tempo. The burst rate is a glacial 4.5fps, which puts it in the bottom 2% of all mirrorless cameras we've tested. Autofocus is contrast-detect only and, well, it exists. It's not fast, not predictive, and often hunts. The 97th percentile EVF is genuinely beautiful, big, crisp, and virtually lag-free, making manual focus with fast glass much easier than on an optical M. Just don't expect it to rescue you in low light, because battery life is 237 shots per charge, dead last in our rankings. You'll be carrying spares. No two ways about it.
Pros & Cons
Pros
- Stunning 60MP full-frame sensor with gorgeous Leica colors 97th
- Best-in-class 5.76M-dot EVF with 0.76x magnification 71th
- Compact, classic M body under 415g 71th
- 64GB internal storage plus UHS-II SD slot 67th
- USB-C and FOTOS app connectivity for tethered shooting
Cons
- No in-body image stabilization whatsoever 1th
- Abysmal 4.5fps burst rate for a $9K+ camera 2th
- Battery life that'll make you anxious after 200 shots 33th
- Autofocus feels a decade behind modern mirrorless 34th
- No weather sealing to protect that pricey sensor
The Word on the Street
Specifications
Full Specifications
Sensor
| Type | BSI CMOS |
| Size | full-frame |
| Megapixels | 60.3 |
| ISO Range | 64 |
| Processor | Leica Maestro series (Maestro III) |
Autofocus
| AF Type | Manual Focus Only |
Shooting
| Burst (Mechanical) | 4.5 |
| Max Shutter | 1/16000 |
| Electronic Shutter | Yes |
Video
| RAW Video | Yes |
Display & EVF
| Screen Size | 3 |
| Touchscreen | Yes |
| Articulating | No |
| EVF Resolution | 5760000 |
Build
| Weather Sealed | No |
| Weight | 0.4 kg / 0.9 lbs |
| Battery Life | 237 |
Connectivity
| Wi-Fi | Yes |
| Bluetooth | Yes |
| USB | USB-C 3.0 / 3.1/3.2 Gen 1 |
| Hot Shoe | Yes |
Value & Pricing
At $8,547 to $12,365 across vendors, calling the M EV1 expensive is like saying the Pacific is damp. For context, a Sony Alpha a1 II with stacked sensor, blackout-free 30fps burst, and 8-stop IBIS costs less. A Nikon Z9, a camera built for war zones, is cheaper. But value here isn't about specs per dollar. It's about the experience. You're paying for the privilege of shooting Leica glass on a body that sees the world through an EVF instead of a rangefinder patch. If you're already deep in M lenses and hate clip-on finders, the sheer joy might justify the cost. For everyone else, it's a statement piece with a few too many compromises. If you can stomach the price spread, keep an eye on the vendor offering the lowest price, that's where the real 'deal' is.
vs Competition
Stacked against the Sony a1 II, Canon R6 Mark III, or Nikon Z9, the M EV1 looks like it came from a parallel universe where sports and wildlife photography don't exist. Those cameras are hybrid monsters built for speed and video. The M EV1 is a manual-focus, slow-shooting, stills-only tool with essentially no creature comforts. The Fujifilm X-H2S even outguns it in burst rate and autofocus while costing a third of the price. But none of those cameras accept Leica M glass natively or feel like anything other than a modern computer with a lens mount. The M EV1's competition isn't really those cameras. It's the Leica M11 with an external Visoflex finder. And for M shooters who've always wanted a clean, integrated EVF, this camera is a no-brainer upgrade. Just don't compare spec sheets unless you enjoy crying.
| Spec | Leica M EV1 | Canon EOS R6 Mark III R6 Mark III | Fujifilm X-H2 X-H2 | Sony a7 a7 V | Nikon Z9 Z9 | Panasonic LUMIX S5IIX S5IIX |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Type | mirrorless | mirrorless | mirrorless | mirrorless | mirrorless | mirrorless |
| Sensor | 60.3MP full-frame | 32.5MP full-frame | 40.2MP aps-c | 33MP full-frame | 45.7MP full-frame | 24.2MP full-frame |
| AF Points | - | 1053 | 425 | 759 | 1053 | 779 |
| Burst FPS | 4.5 | 40 | 20 | 30 | 30 | 30 |
| Video | - | 6K @120fps | 8K @60fps | 4K @120fps | 8K @120fps | 6K @60fps |
| IBIS | false | true | true | true | true | true |
| Weather Sealed | false | true | true | true | true | true |
| Weight (g) | 413 | 609 | 579 | 610 | 1160 | 740 |
| Compare | Compare | Compare | Compare | Compare |
| Product | Af | Evf | Build | Burst | Video | Sensor | Battery | Display | Connectivity | Social Proof | Stabilization |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Leica M EV1 | 33.6 | 97.1 | 67 | 2 | 43.3 | 70.9 | 1 | 56.4 | 70.8 | 59.5 | 32.5 |
| Canon EOS R6 Mark III R6 Mark III Compare | 98.5 | 88.1 | 94.6 | 93 | 89.9 | 58.6 | 96.5 | 99.1 | 93.1 | 94.7 | 99.5 |
| Fujifilm X-H2 X-H2 Compare | 88.1 | 95.5 | 89.3 | 85.4 | 99.9 | 97.1 | 96.9 | 84.1 | 93.1 | 94.7 | 93.4 |
| Sony a7 a7 V Compare | 95.8 | 88.9 | 94.7 | 91 | 89.9 | 59.9 | 96.6 | 99.5 | 93.1 | 94.7 | 96 |
| Nikon Z9 Z9 Compare | 98.5 | 89.7 | 99.2 | 96 | 98 | 64.7 | 97.3 | 84.1 | 93.1 | 85.1 | 84.7 |
| Panasonic LUMIX S5IIX S5IIX Compare | 97.3 | 88.5 | 97.4 | 91 | 93.5 | 49.1 | 90.3 | 84.1 | 93.1 | 94.7 | 84.7 |
Common Questions
Q: Can I set ISO with the FN button on the Leica M EV1?
Yes, the FN button is customizable and can be assigned to adjust ISO directly, which is handy for quick changes while shooting manually.
Q: Will my Voigtländer or uncoded lenses work on the M EV1?
They'll mount and shoot fine, but without 6-bit coding the camera won't apply lens corrections for vignetting, color shift, or distortion, and EXIF data will be missing.
Q: Does the Leica M EV1 have image stabilization?
There's no sensor-shift IBIS. The camera only offers electronic viewfinder stabilization to steady the live view image while you're focusing, but your actual photo gets no mechanical help.
Q: Is the Leica M EV1 good for video?
It can capture RAW video, but without in-body stabilization, reliable autofocus, or advanced video tools, it's a poor choice for serious video work compared to modern hybrid cameras.
Who Should Skip This
Anyone who needs speed, autofocus, or video should look elsewhere. Sports and wildlife shooters will find the 4.5fps burst and contrast-detect AF unusable. If you want high-res stills with modern features, grab a Sony a7R V or Fujifilm GFX 50S II. For hybrid shooters, the Panasonic S5 IIX or Canon R6 Mark III offer far more flexibility for less money. Basically, if you're not already a Leica M user or a manual-focus purist with cash to burn, skip this camera and don't look back.
Verdict
For the right person, the Leica M EV1 is an absolute treasure. If you already own a stack of M lenses and are tired of squinting through a rangefinder or fumbling with a bolt-on finder, this is the camera you've been waiting for. The image quality is sublime, the EVF is incredible, and the whole package feels like a natural evolution of the M system. But for anyone else, it's a puzzling financial decision. The slow burst, awful battery, missing stabilization, and uncompetitive autofocus make it feel archaic next to cameras that cost half as much. Buy it if you're a Leica die-hard who values the process over speed. If you shoot portraits, landscapes, or anything slow and intentional, it'll reward you handsomely. If you're after sports, wildlife, video, or anything where things move quickly, walk away, no, run.