Nikon Nikon - NIKKOR Z 50mm f/1.4 Standard lens for Z Review

The Nikon 50mm f/1.4 Z lens nails its core job as a portrait lens, but its middling autofocus and lack of stabilization mean it's not for everyone.

Focal Length 50mm
Max Aperture f/1.4
Mount Nikon Z
Stabilization No
Weather Sealed No
Weight 42 g
AF Type Autofocus
Lens Type Prime
Nikon Nikon - NIKKOR Z 50mm f/1.4 Standard lens for Z lens
82.5 Overall Score

Overview

The Nikon NIKKOR Z 50mm f/1.4 is a lens that knows its job. It's a fast, lightweight prime for Nikon Z full-frame cameras, and it scores a solid 78.7 out of 100 in our total rating. Where it really shines is for portraits, hitting an 84.1, and it even gets an 81.6 for budget, which is a nice surprise for an f/1.4 lens. But it's not a jack-of-all-trades. Its travel score is a low 50.7, which tells you this is a specialist, not a vacation companion.

Performance

Let's talk about what matters. That f/1.4 aperture puts it in the 88th percentile, so you're getting excellent light gathering and a shallow depth of field. The bokeh quality follows suit at the 80th percentile, which is why its portrait score is so high. Optical performance is decent at the 64th percentile, and build quality is respectable at 73. The trade-offs are clear. Autofocus lands in the 47th percentile, so it's not the fastest or quietest. And with no stabilization (39th percentile) and a 1:5.88 max magnification (55th percentile for macro), you're getting a pure, simple prime lens focused on one thing.

Performance Percentiles

AF 46.2
Bokeh 82.3
Build 99.7
Macro 59.3
Optical 76
Aperture 88.2
Versatility 37.1
Social Proof 92.4
Stabilization 37.5

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Strong aperture (88th percentile) 100th
  • Strong bokeh (80th percentile) 92th
  • Strong build (73th percentile) 88th

Cons

Specifications

Full Specifications

Optics

Type Prime
Focal Length Min 50
Focal Length Max 50
Elements 10
Groups 7
Aspherical Elements 1

Aperture

Max Aperture f/1.4
Min Aperture f/16

Build

Mount Nikon Z
Format Full-Frame
Weight 0.0 kg / 0.1 lbs
Filter Thread 62

AF & Stabilization

AF Type Autofocus
Stabilization No

Focus

Min Focus Distance 372
Max Magnification 1:5.88

Value & Pricing

The value story here is interesting. It's priced between $497 and $500, which for a native Nikon Z f/1.4 prime is pretty compelling. Its budget score of 81.6 reflects that. You're getting that coveted fast aperture and good bokeh without a massive price tag, especially compared to Nikon's higher-end S-line lenses. It's a cost-effective way to get classic 50mm f/1.4 performance on the Z mount.

₹38,990

vs Competition

Compared to the Viltrox 35mm f/1.7 Z, you're trading a slightly wider focal length for that faster f/1.4 aperture and likely better overall optics from Nikon. Against the Meike 55mm f/1.8 Pro, the Nikon has a speed advantage (f/1.4 vs f/1.8) but the Meike might have better close-focusing. The real competition is often yourself: do you need the absolute speed of f/1.4, or would a lighter, cheaper f/1.8 lens like the Sony Yongnuo 35mm f/1.8 do the job? For pure portrait work on a budget, this Nikon's combination of aperture and bokeh is hard to beat in its price bracket.

Spec Nikon Nikon - NIKKOR Z 50mm f/1.4 Standard lens for Z Meike Meike 55mm F1.4 Standard Aperture APS-C Frame AF Sony Sony G Master Sony FE 35mm F1.4 GM Full-Frame Large-Aperture Canon Canon L Canon - RF35mm F1.4 L VCM Wide-Angle Lens for EOS Viltrox VILTROX 35mm F1.7 f/1.7 Air AF Lens for Fuji X Nikon Nikon S-Line Nikon - NIKKOR Z 24-70mm f/2.8 S II Wide-angle
Focal Length 50mm 55mm 35mm 35mm 35mm 24-70mm
Max Aperture f/1.4 f/1.4 f/1.4 f/1.4 f/1.7 f/2.8
Mount Nikon Z Nikon Z Sony E-Mount, Sony E-Mount (Full-Frame) Canon RF Fujifilm X Nikon Z
Stabilization false true true true true true
Weather Sealed false false true true false true
Weight (g) 42 281 522 544 400 676
AF Type Autofocus STM Autofocus Autofocus STM Autofocus
Lens Type Prime - Wide-Angle Wide-Angle - Wide-Angle Zoom

Verdict

If you shoot a Nikon Z camera and want a dedicated, affordable portrait lens, this is a strong pick. The data backs it up: an 84.1 portrait score and that 88th percentile aperture are no joke. Just know what you're getting into. The autofocus won't win races, you'll miss stabilization in low light, and it's not a versatile travel zoom. But for what it's designed to do—create beautiful, blurred-background shots—it delivers great performance for the money.