Canon Altura Photo 49MM 0.43x HD Wide Angle Lens with Review

The $37 Altura Photo wide-angle adapter boasts autofocus in the 94th percentile and a fun macro mode. The catch? Its optical quality ranks in the bottom third. A budget experiment, not a true upgrade.

Mount Screw-on lens fits camera lenses with a 49mm front filter thread
Stabilization Yes
Weather Sealed No
Weight 298 g
AF Type STM
Lens Type Wide-Angle
Canon Altura Photo 49MM 0.43x HD Wide Angle Lens with lens
70.4 综合评分

The 30-Second Version

For $37, you get surprisingly good autofocus (94th percentile) and a fun macro mode (88th percentile) in a screw-on adapter. The trade-off is major: optical quality ranks in the bottom third (36th percentile). It's a budget experiment, not a lens upgrade.

Overview

For $37, the Altura Photo 49MM 0.43x HD Wide Angle Lens is a screw-on attachment that promises to turn your kit lens into a wider, macro-capable tool. It's a simple concept: screw it onto any lens with a 49mm filter thread, and you get a 0.43x magnification factor. That means your 15mm kit lens becomes roughly a 6.5mm ultra-wide, at least in field of view. The catch? You're adding nearly 300 grams of glass and plastic to the front of your lens, and optical quality is a big question mark.

Our data shows this accessory scores a 64.6 out of 100 overall, with its strengths and weaknesses being wildly lopsided. It ranks in the 88th percentile for macro capability and the 94th percentile for autofocus performance among similar products. But for pure optical quality and versatility, it's down in the bottom third. This isn't a lens replacement; it's a budget experiment.

Performance

Performance is a story of two extremes. On one hand, the autofocus is shockingly good for a $37 add-on, landing in the 94th percentile. It uses an STM motor that's quiet and reasonably quick, especially in good light. The macro function, which comes from a detachable secondary lens, is its other standout, scoring in the 88th percentile. You can get extremely close to subjects, which is fun for detail shots.

On the other hand, the optical performance percentile tells the real story: 36th. That's not great. Expect noticeable vignetting (dark corners), soft edges, and potential chromatic aberration, especially when used at wider apertures. The stabilization score is a solid 85th percentile, but that's mostly borrowing the IS from your host lens. This thing doesn't stabilize itself; it just doesn't interfere too much with your lens's existing system.

Performance Percentiles

AF 95.3
Bokeh 27.1
Build 80.8
Macro 91
Optical 35.8
Aperture 30.3
Versatility 37.5
Social Proof 79.9
Stabilization 87.4

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Autofocus punches way above its price: STM motor performance is in the 94th percentile for speed and quietness. 95th
  • Macro capability is legit: The detachable macro lens puts it in the 88th percentile for close-up work. 91th
  • Build feels decent for the money: It scores in the 80th percentile for construction, feeling more substantial than a toy. 87th
  • Easy to use: Just screw it on. No electronics to configure, making it compatible with a huge list of 49mm-threaded lenses. 81th
  • Stabilization compatibility is good: It plays nicely with lens-based IS, contributing to its 85th percentile score there.

Cons

  • Optical quality is the big trade-off: It ranks in the 36th percentile, so expect soft edges and vignetting. 27th
  • Very niche versatility: With a 38th percentile versatility score, it's basically a wide-angle/macro tool and not much else. 30th
  • Poor for portraits: It scores a dismal 39.9/100 for portrait work, thanks to its 28th percentile bokeh and 29th percentile aperture limitations.
  • Adds significant bulk and weight: At 298g, it can make a small mirrorless kit lens front-heavy and awkward.
  • No weather sealing: Keep it away from dust and moisture.

The Word on the Street

4.2/5 (8855 reviews)
👍 Many buyers are thrilled with the value, praising the autofocus performance and macro capability as 'shockingly good' for such a low-cost accessory.
🤔 A common theme is users appreciating the widened field of view for vlogging and landscapes but noting the need for good lighting and post-processing to fix soft edges and vignetting.
👎 Some photographers report frustration with optical flaws, describing the image quality as noticeably soft compared to even their basic kit lenses, especially at the frame edges.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Optics

Type Wide-Angle

Build

Mount Screw-on lens fits camera lenses with a 49mm front filter thread
Weight 0.3 kg / 0.7 lbs

AF & Stabilization

AF Type STM
Stabilization Yes

Focus

Min Focus Distance 45

Value & Pricing

At $37, the value proposition is entirely about access. You're not buying optical excellence; you're buying the idea of a wide-angle and macro lens for less than a nice dinner. Compared to buying a dedicated wide-angle prime, which can cost hundreds, this is pocket change. The price-to-performance ratio is weirdly high if you only care about autofocus and macro features, but it plummets if you care about image quality. It's a classic 'you get what you pay for' scenario, but with a few surprising perks thrown in.

€46

vs Competition

Stacked against real lenses, the Altura is in a different league—a much lower one. The Meike 55mm F1.8 or Viltrox 35mm F1.7 are actual prime lenses with fast apertures, great sharpness, and professional build. They'll run you $150-$250, but they're proper upgrades. The Altura can't touch their optical quality (36th percentile vs. typically 70th+). Even against other screw-on adapters, the Altura's strength is its AF and macro combo. Many cheap wide-angle adapters are fully manual and lack any macro function. So, if you must have autofocus and want to dabble in macro on a shoestring, this has a niche. For anything requiring sharpness, look at the real competitors.

Common Questions

Q: Is this lens sharp?

Not really. Our data places its optical quality in the 36th percentile versus similar products. Expect the center to be okay, but the edges will be soft, and you'll likely see vignetting (dark corners). It's a creative effect tool, not a sharpness champion.

Q: Will it work with my camera?

It works with any camera lens that has a 49mm filter thread, regardless of brand. Check your lens barrel or cap for a 'Ø49' marking. It's compatible with dozens of lenses from Canon, Sony, and Fujifilm, as listed, but it screws onto the lens, not the camera body.

Q: How does the macro attachment work?

The wide-angle lens has a detachable ring on the front. Unscrew it, and you reveal a secondary macro lens. This gives you extreme close-focusing capability, which is why it scores in the 88th percentile for macro performance. It's a two-in-one gadget.

Who Should Skip This

Skip this entirely if you're a portrait photographer. It scores a terrible 39.9/100 for portraits, with bokeh quality in the 28th percentile and aperture performance in the 29th. Also, if you demand corner-to-corner sharpness or shoot in low light often, the optical limitations will frustrate you. This is not a tool for serious work; it's a playful accessory for very specific, well-lit scenarios.

Verdict

We can only recommend the Altura Photo Wide Angle with very specific caveats. If you're a Canon M50 or Sony a6000-series shooter with the kit lens, you have $37 to burn, and you want to play with ultra-wide and macro effects without any expectation of pro-level sharpness, go for it. The autofocus and macro features are genuinely impressive for the price. But if you're serious about image quality, saving that $37 towards a used prime lens is a vastly better investment. This is a toy for enthusiasts, not a tool for creators.