ZHAOHUIXIN Review

The ZHAOHUIXIN packs a wild 30fps burst and a flip screen into a dirt-cheap body, but the image quality and build will have you chasing your smartphone for a redo.

Type mirrorless
Sensor 48MP
Burst FPS 30 fps
Video 4K @30fps
IBIS No
Weather Sealed No
ZHAOHUIXIN camera
42.9 Score global

The 30-Second Version

The ZHAOHUIXIN is a budget camera that looks better on a spec sheet than in your hands. Its best trick is a shockingly high burst rate, but everything else from build to low-light performance screams cost-cutting. It's a decent starter toy for absolute beginners, but anyone with a recent phone can take better photos.

Overview

The ZHAOHUIXIN camera sits in that weird space where the spec sheet promises the moon but the reality is a plastic toy that takes passable snapshots. Amazon lists it as a mirrorless camera, but don't be fooled, it's really a compact point-and-shoot with no lens mount. It aims squarely at beginners and vloggers who want a dedicated camera without spending phone money, and for that crowd, it kind of works. Just know that every corner has been cut to hit the price, and those 48 megapixels are more marketing than miracle.

The 3-inch flip screen, dual batteries, and Wi-Fi app control are genuine quality-of-life wins. But build quality is flimsy, low-light performance is sad, and the autofocus hunts more than a beagle in a rabbit patch. If you're looking for a step up from a phone camera, you might actually be stepping sideways or even backward here.

Performance

That 30fps burst rate sounds wild for anything at this price, and it lands in the 85th percentile of all cameras we track, which is frankly hilarious for a budget vlogging cam. The sensor sits at the 66th percentile, middle of the road, but real-world results are underwhelming because the processing can't keep up. Video tops out at 4K 30fps, which is decent on paper, but the footage lacks detail and falls apart in anything but bright light. No stabilization means handheld clips are jittery, and the autofocus is slow enough that you'll miss fleeting moments. Battery life is unremarkable, and the lack of a viewfinder makes sunny-day shooting an exercise in squinting at a dim screen.

Performance Percentiles

AF 33.9
EVF 36
Build 35.9
Burst 85.4
Video 66.5
Sensor 66.8
Battery 44.9
Display 64.4
User Sentiment 27.5
Connectivity 65.7
Social Proof 26
Stabilization 32.3

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Dirt cheap and comes with two batteries, a 32GB card, and a bag. 85th
  • Flip screen makes selfie framing and vlogging super easy. 67th
  • Wi-Fi transfers get your shots to your phone without a cable fuss. 67th
  • Lightweight and tiny, you'll forget it's in your bag until you need it. 66th

Cons

  • Build quality is all cheap plastic that creaks and flexes in your hand. 26th
  • Low-light shots turn into noisy mush almost immediately. 28th
  • No stabilization means video is shaky unless you have surgeon hands. 32th
  • Image quality doesn't match the 4K or 48MP claims, it's soft and processed. 34th

The Word on the Street

4.2/5 (48 reviews)
👍 Owners consistently call out the value, for the price you get two batteries, a charger, and a workable 4K video mode for vlogging.
👎 Build quality is a frequent disappointment, the plastic body feels flimsy and low-light shots are practically unusable.
🤔 Image quality sparks debate, some find it sharp enough for the cost while others say it's nowhere near true 4K or 48MP.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Sensor

Type CMOS
Megapixels 48
ISO Range 100

Shooting

Burst (Mechanical) 30

Video

Max Resolution 4K
4K FPS 30
1080p FPS 60
Log Profile Yes

Display & EVF

Screen Size 3
Articulating Yes

Connectivity

Wi-Fi Yes
Bluetooth Yes
USB USB-C

Value & Pricing

Pricing across vendors is a fever dream, one store wants a hundred bucks while another asks over twenty-three thousand dollars, so obviously ignore whichever seller is on another planet. The realistic price lands around one hundred to one hundred and twenty dollars, and at that level you're getting a fair deal for a learning tool. You receive a camera, two batteries, a memory card, a lens hood, and even a cleaning cloth, which honestly makes the package feel generous. If you treat it like a disposable way to learn composition and video basics without risking your phone, the value is there. Just don't expect it to outperform a modern mid-range smartphone.

188 €

vs Competition

Stacked against actual mirrorless cameras like the Fujifilm X-T50 or Panasonic LUMIX G7, the ZHAOHUIXIN is in a completely different weight class, it's like comparing a go-kart to a sedan. The Pentax K-3 Mark III might appear as a competitor in our database, but that's a rugged APS-C DSLR costing many times more and built for serious stills work. This camera's real rivals are other no-name budget cams like the LIYTIFOR LR1 and Gavonde W05, all fighting over the same slice of the beginner vlogging pie. Among those, the ZHAOHUIXIN holds its own thanks to the included accessories and usable flip screen, though none of them will impress anyone who's used even an entry-level Canon or Sony mirrorless.

Spec ZHAOHUIXIN Pentax K-3 K-3 Mark III Fujifilm X-T50 X-T50 Panasonic LUMIX G7 G7KS LIYTIFOR LR1 Gavonde W05
Type mirrorless DSLR mirrorless mirrorless mirrorless compact
Sensor 48MP 25.7MP aps-c 40.2MP aps-c 16MP micro-four-thirds 80MP 1/2.3-inch 64MP
AF Points - 101 117 49 - -
Burst FPS 30 12 13 - 30 5
Video 4K @30fps 4K @30fps 6K @60fps 4K 4K 8K @60fps
IBIS false true true true false false
Weather Sealed false true false false false false
Weight (g) - 712 389 730 290 848
Compare Compare Compare Compare Compare
Product AfEvfBuildBurstVideoSensorBatteryDisplayUser SentimentConnectivitySocial ProofStabilization
ZHAOHUIXIN 33.93635.985.466.566.844.964.427.565.72632.3
Pentax K-3 K-3 Mark III Compare 74.775.897.27259.190.198.856.409394.684.7
Fujifilm X-T50 X-T50 Compare 77.574.61779.992.197.144.984.341.89394.693.5
Panasonic LUMIX G7 G7KS Compare 65.63652.82959.19.844.984.393.466.778.972.1
LIYTIFOR LR1 Compare 33.93611.285.476.681.444.925.9066.794.632.3
Gavonde W05 Compare 33.936542991.37544.956.4078.67132.3

Common Questions

Q: Is the 48MP sensor any good?

It's a 48MP CMOS chip, but the processing squishes the detail so final images look more like upscaled 12MP shots, fine for casual social posts but not for cropping or printing large.

Q: Can I use this as a webcam for streaming?

The camera doesn't have a clean HDMI out and the USB port is mainly for charging and file transfer, so using it as a live webcam isn't straightforward without capture card trickery that may not work well.

Q: Does the Wi-Fi transfer raw files or just JPEGs?

The app transfers JPEG photos and compressed video to your phone quickly, but it won't handle raw files because this camera likely doesn't shoot raw at all, only standard compressed formats.

Who Should Skip This

If you need reliable autofocus for moving subjects or any kind of low-light performance, give this a pass and save up for a used Panasonic G7 or Sony a6000. Smartphone photographers with a recent iPhone or Pixel should also skip, because your phone already takes better pictures and video and the ZHAOHUIXIN won't be an upgrade.

Verdict

This is the camera you buy when you want to see if you even enjoy photography or vlogging without dropping real money. The ZHAOHUIXIN removes the barrier of entry completely, and its flip screen, Wi-Fi sharing, and bundled kit make the first steps painless. Just keep your expectations grounded, the image quality is fine for social media in daylight, but you'll outgrow this thing fast if you catch the upgrade bug. Beginners on a strict budget will find enough to play with here, provided they understand it's a stepping stone, not a keeper.

Usage Scores

Overall (42.9)Video (44.3)Travel (27.3)Youtube (54)Beginner (45)Vlogging (38.7)Streaming (39.2)Photography (34.2)Wedding Events (33)Sports Wildlife (38.8)Product Photography (44)