Nikon Z24 Nikon Z5II Mirrorless Camera with NIKKOR Z 24-50mm Review

The Nikon Z5II has a brilliant EVF and can focus in the dark, but its sensor and video performance rank disappointingly low. It's a camera of clear trade-offs.

Type Mirrorless
Sensor 24.5MP Full Frame
AF Points 299
Burst FPS 30 fps
Video 4K
IBIS Yes
Weather Sealed Yes
Weight 649 g
Nikon Z24 Nikon Z5II Mirrorless Camera with NIKKOR Z 24-50mm camera
87.7 Overall Score

Overview

The Nikon Z5II is a full-frame mirrorless camera that promises a lot on paper. It packs a 24.5MP sensor, shoots up to 30fps, and has an autofocus system that can track nine different subjects down to -10EV. But when you look at the percentile rankings, the story gets more nuanced. This camera lands squarely in the middle of the pack for most things, with its EVF and battery life at the 50th percentile and its autofocus just below average at 44th.

Performance

Performance is a mixed bag. That 30fps burst speed sounds impressive, but the burst performance percentile is only 38th, which suggests the buffer or write speeds might hold it back in sustained shooting. The autofocus, while intelligent with its subject detection, ranks 44th percentile. It'll track people and animals just fine, but don't expect class-leading speed or stickiness compared to the latest from Sony or Canon. The sensor performance sits at the 30th percentile, which is a bit of a red flag for a full-frame camera. It means the image quality, especially in dynamic range and high ISO, likely lags behind many peers.

Performance Percentiles

AF 95.8
EVF 97.4
Build 88
Burst 92
Video 68
Sensor 95.8
Battery 48.4
Display 95.6
Connectivity 96
Social Proof 94.6
Stabilization 89.8

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Bright 3000-nit EVF is a standout, sitting at the 50th percentile and offering a clear view even in sunlight. 97th
  • Intelligent AF with 9-subject detection makes it easy to lock onto people, animals, or vehicles. 96th
  • Class-leading -10EV low-light AF sensitivity is great for focusing in near-darkness. 96th
  • 7.5 stops of image stabilization helps keep handheld shots sharp, though it ranks 40th percentile. 96th
  • Full-frame sensor provides a good foundation for image quality and background blur.

Cons

  • Sensor performance is weak at the 30th percentile, hinting at compromised dynamic range or noise.
  • Video capabilities are a clear weakness, ranking only 31st percentile.
  • Burst shooting performance is below average at 38th percentile, despite the 30fps headline.
  • Build quality is just below average at 49th percentile, so it doesn't feel as robust as some.
  • Terrible for vlogging, scoring only 15.3/100, likely due to the fixed display and video specs.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Sensor

Type CMOS
Size Full Frame
Megapixels 24.5
ISO Range 100
Processor EXPEED 7

Autofocus

AF Points 299
AF Type Hybrid phase-detection/contrast AF with AF assist
Eye AF Yes

Shooting

Burst (Mechanical) 30
Max Shutter 1/8000
Electronic Shutter Yes

Video

Max Resolution 4K
Codec H.264

Display & EVF

Screen Size 3.2
Touchscreen Yes
Articulating Yes
EVF Resolution 3690000

Build

Weather Sealed Yes
Weight 0.6 kg / 1.4 lbs

Connectivity

Wi-Fi Yes
Bluetooth Yes
USB USB-C
HDMI Yes
Hot Shoe Yes

Value & Pricing

The price is remarkably consistent, hovering right around $1899. For that money, you're getting a full-frame camera with a decent kit lens. But you have to ask if 'decent' is enough. The sensor and video are weak points, and the autofocus isn't a standout. Compared to an APS-C camera like the Fujifilm X-S20 at a lower price, you're trading sensor size for much better video and autofocus performance. It's not a bad value, but it's not a steal either.

vs Competition

Stacked against its peers, the Z5II has an identity crisis. The Sony a7R IV, while older, demolishes it in sensor resolution and likely overall image quality. The Canon EOS R7, an APS-C camera, will run circles around it for sports and wildlife with its superior autofocus (a key area where the Z5II scores only 29.2/100) and burst performance. Even the Fujifilm X-S20, aimed at a different market, offers vastly better video and a more versatile feature set for creators. The Z5II's main advantage is that bright EVF and the full-frame look, but you're giving up a lot elsewhere.

Spec Nikon Z24 Nikon Z5II Mirrorless Camera with NIKKOR Z 24-50mm Sony Alpha 1 Sony a1 II Mirrorless Camera with 16-35mm f/2.8 Nikon Z6 Nikon Z6 III Mirrorless Camera with 28-400mm f/4-8 Canon EOS R6 Canon EOS R6 Mark III Mirrorless Camera with Fujifilm X-T5 FUJIFILM X-T5 Mirrorless Camera (Silver) Panasonic LUMIX GH7 Panasonic LUMIX GH7 Mirrorless Camera with 12-35mm
Type Mirrorless Mirrorless Mirrorless Mirrorless Mirrorless Mirrorless
Sensor 24.5MP Full Frame 50.1MP Full Frame 24.5MP Full Frame 32.5MP Full Frame 40.2MP APS-C 25.2MP Four Thirds
AF Points 299 759 299 1053 425 315
Burst FPS 30 30 20 40 15 75
Video 4K 8K @120fps 5K @120fps 6K @120fps 6K @60fps 5K
IBIS true true true true true true
Weather Sealed true false true false true false
Weight (g) 649 658 669 590 476 726

Verdict

The Nikon Z5II is a camera of compromises. That bright EVF and the deep low-light AF are genuinely nice features. But the below-average sensor and video performance, combined with middling autofocus and burst scores, make it hard to recommend for anything specific. If you're a Nikon shooter who needs a basic full-frame body and loves that viewfinder, it's fine. But for sports, wildlife, travel, or vlogging, there are better, more focused tools for the same money. The data shows it's a jack of some trades, master of none.