Laowa Venus Optics Laowa 4mm f/2.8 Fisheye Lens for Review
The Laowa 4mm f/2.8 gives you a insane 210-degree circular fisheye view for $199, but our data shows its optical quality lands in the bottom 6%. This is a lens for one very specific trick.
The 30-Second Version
The Laowa 4mm f/2.8 delivers a full 210-degree circular fisheye view in a tiny, well-built package for $199. Just know that its optical quality scores in the 6th percentile, and it's manual focus only. Buy it for the one incredible trick, not as a versatile optic.
Overview
The Laowa 4mm f/2.8 Fisheye is a lens that makes a promise and keeps it, but that promise is very specific. For $199, you get a 4mm prime that delivers a full 210-degree circular fisheye image on APS-C cameras, which is about as wide as it gets without stitching. It's a tiny, 136g piece of glass that feels surprisingly solid, landing in the 96th percentile for build quality in our database. That's the good news.
Now, the trade-offs are just as specific. This is a manual focus-only lens, with autofocus performance sitting in the 46th percentile (which is basically 'non-existent'). Its optical quality scores are in the 6th percentile, which tells you this isn't a lens you buy for clinical sharpness corner-to-corner. You buy it for one wild, distorted perspective and creative freedom, not for pixel-peeping perfection.
Performance
Performance here is all about the field of view. The 4mm focal length gives you a 210-degree angle of view, which translates to a 6.4mm full-frame equivalent on APS-C. That's the headline spec, and it's genuinely extreme. The f/2.8 aperture is decent, sitting in the 54th percentile, giving you a bit of leeway in low light. But with a minimum focus distance of just 80mm (about 3 inches), this lens has a secret talent: it's weirdly good for close-up, distorted 'macro' shots, scoring in the 85th percentile for macro capability. The depth of field is enormous once you stop down past f/5.6, letting you focus on composition rather than focus itself. Just don't expect silky bokeh (48th percentile) or any help from image stabilization (37th percentile).
Pros & Cons
Pros
- Extreme 210-degree field of view for unique circular fisheye shots. 97th
- Excellent build quality feels premium, ranking in the 96th percentile. 85th
- Surprisingly capable for close-up, creative macro work (85th percentile).
- Incredibly compact and light at just 136g, easy to toss in a bag.
- Fast f/2.8 aperture provides flexibility in lower-light situations.
Cons
- Optical quality scores are very low, in the 6th percentile overall. 5th
- Manual focus only, with AF performance at the 46th percentile. 6th
- No image stabilization (37th percentile), demanding steady hands or a tripod.
- Extreme distortion makes it a one-trick pony with low versatility (39th percentile).
- Very little user feedback or social proof exists (7th percentile).
The Word on the Street
Specifications
Full Specifications
Optics
| Type | Fisheye |
| Focal Length Min | 4 |
| Focal Length Max | 4 |
| Elements | 7 |
| Groups | 6 |
Aperture
| Max Aperture | f/2.8 |
| Min Aperture | f/16 |
| Diaphragm Blades | 7 |
Build
| Mount | Canon RF |
| Format | APS-C |
| Weight | 0.1 kg / 0.3 lbs |
AF & Stabilization
| Stabilization | No |
Focus
| Min Focus Distance | 80 |
| Max Magnification | 1:9.09 |
Value & Pricing
At $199, the value proposition is straightforward. You're not paying for optical perfection or versatility. You're paying for access to an ultra-niche, creative perspective that most zoom lenses can't touch. Compared to adapting older manual fisheyes, this is a native, compact RF-mount option. The price is low enough that it can be a 'fun' lens purchase without breaking the bank, but high enough that you should be sure you really want that circular fisheye look.
Price History
vs Competition
This lens doesn't really compete with the listed alternatives like the Viltrox 35mm f/1.7 or Tamron 17-70mm f/2.8. Those are versatile, autofocus lenses for everyday shooting. The Laowa 4mm is a specialty tool. A better comparison might be other ultra-wide or fisheye options. For instance, a used Canon EF-S 10-18mm gives you autofocus, stabilization, and a rectilinear (non-distorted) wide-angle view for similar money, but it can't do the circular fisheye thing. The Laowa's value is in doing that one specific, exaggerated effect that standard zooms and even most fisheyes can't match on APS-C.
| Spec | Laowa Venus Optics Laowa 4mm f/2.8 Fisheye Lens for | Meike Meike 55mm F1.8 Pro Full Frame AF STM Lens High | Viltrox VILTROX 25mm F1.7 f/1.7 AF Lens for Fuji X Mount, | Canon Canon RF 24mm f/1.8 Macro IS STM Lens | Tamron Tamron Di III Tamron 17-70mm f/2.8 Di III-A VC RXD Lens for Sony | Nikon Nikon S-Line Nikon NIKKOR Z 24-70mm f/2.8 S II Lens (Nikon Z) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Focal Length | 4mm | 55mm | 25mm | 24mm | 17-70mm | 24-70mm |
| Max Aperture | f/2.8 | f/1.8 | f/1.7 | f/1.8 | f/2.8 | f/2.8 |
| Mount | Canon RF | Sony E | Fujifilm X | Canon RF | Sony E Mount | Nikon Z |
| Stabilization | false | true | true | true | true | true |
| Weather Sealed | false | false | false | false | false | true |
| Weight (g) | 136 | 201 | 400 | 269 | 544 | 676 |
| AF Type | - | STM | STM | Autofocus | Autofocus | Autofocus |
| Lens Type | Fisheye | - | - | Zoom | Zoom | Zoom |
Common Questions
Q: Is this lens sharp?
Our data places its overall optical quality in the 6th percentile. It's sharp enough for creative shots and smaller prints, but don't expect corner-to-corner clinical sharpness. It's a character lens, not a technical masterpiece.
Q: Can I use this on a full-frame Canon R camera?
Yes, but it's designed for APS-C coverage. On a full-frame body, you'll get a circular fisheye image with heavy vignetting, which some users actually seek out for that specific look. It won't cover the full sensor.
Q: How hard is it to focus manually?
With an enormous depth of field, especially when stopped down past f/5.6, focusing is surprisingly forgiving. The short 80mm minimum focus distance also means you can get very close. The challenge is more about composing within the extreme distortion.
Who Should Skip This
Skip this lens if you need versatility. Its score of 39th percentile for versatility says it all. If you're looking for a primary walk-around lens, a sharp landscape optic (it scores 24.4/100 there), or anything with autofocus, this isn't it. Photographers who pixel-peep or demand high optical consistency will be frustrated by its 6th percentile optical ranking. This is a toy for specialists, not a workhorse.
Verdict
We can only recommend the Laowa 4mm f/2.8 if you know exactly what you're getting into. It's a brilliantly built, niche creative tool that delivers a truly wild perspective. The data is clear: its strengths (build, macro, unique FOV) are offset by major weaknesses in optics and versatility. If your goal is to experiment with circular fisheye photography on your Canon RF APS-C camera without spending a fortune, this is your ticket. For anything resembling a general-purpose lens, look elsewhere immediately.