Ricoh Ricoh GR IV HDF Digital Camera Review

The Ricoh GR IV HDF makes beautiful, soft photos with one button press, but its awful battery life and high price make it a tough sell for anyone but its biggest fans.

Type Compact
Sensor 25.7MP
IBIS Yes
Weather Sealed No
Weight 261 g
Ricoh Ricoh GR IV HDF Digital Camera camera
40.2 Punteggio Complessivo

Overview

The Ricoh GR IV HDF is a camera for a very specific person. It's not trying to be your do-everything mirrorless workhorse. Instead, it's a beautifully built, pocketable tool with one killer trick: a built-in Highlight Diffusion Filter that gives you soft, dreamy, film-like photos at the press of a button. If you want a camera that feels like an extension of your hand and makes you see light differently, this is it. Just know you're paying a premium for that unique character.

Performance

The performance story is a tale of two extremes. The build quality and IBIS are shockingly good for such a small camera, landing in the 99th and 88th percentiles respectively. You can handhold slow shots with confidence. But the battery life is the absolute worst in its class, a 0th percentile disaster at just 250 shots. You'll be buying spare batteries, no question. The autofocus and sensor are just okay, but that's not really the point here.

Performance Percentiles

AF 42.9
EVF 88.2
Build 4.4
Burst 36.4
Video 29.2
Sensor 64.3
Battery 0.3
Display 77
Connectivity 83.2
Social Proof 52.8
Stabilization 89.9

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • The HDF filter is magical and instantly accessible. 90th
  • Incredible, tank-like build quality in a tiny package. 88th
  • IBIS is fantastic for such a compact body. 83th
  • The genuine leather finger strap is a nice touch. 77th

Cons

  • The battery life is frankly embarrassing.
  • It's wildly expensive for what you get on paper. 4th
  • Not weather-sealed, which feels like a miss at this price. 29th
  • Video and burst shooting are afterthoughts.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Sensor

Type Type: Primary color filter CMOS. Size: 23.3mm x 15.5mm
Megapixels 25.74
ISO Range 100

Autofocus

AF Type Auto-area AF, Zone AF, Select AF, Pinpoint AF, Tracking AF, Cont

Shooting

Max Shutter 1/4000

Display & EVF

Screen Size 3
Touchscreen Yes
Articulating No
EVF Resolution 1037000

Build

Weight 0.3 kg / 0.6 lbs
Battery Life 250

Connectivity

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

Value & Pricing

At $1,597, the value proposition is tough. Objectively, it's a bad deal. You can get a full-frame mirrorless camera with way better specs for less. But value here isn't about specs. It's about the experience and that unique HDF look. If that look is exactly what you want, and you value pocketability and build above all else, then it's worth it. For everyone else, it's a hard pass.

vs Competition

This camera lives in its own world, but if you're looking at alternatives, the Fujifilm X-E5 is the obvious choice. It's a proper interchangeable lens camera with classic looks and Fuji's great film simulations, offering way more flexibility for less money. The Sony ZV-E10 II is the pick if video or content creation is a priority. The Ricoh GR IV HDF only makes sense if you're absolutely committed to its fixed-lens, pocketable form factor and its specific, filter-based magic.

Verdict

I can only recommend the Ricoh GR IV HDF to a niche within a niche. You need to be a photographer who prioritizes a specific, nostalgic aesthetic and ultimate pocketability over everything else—battery life, versatility, and value. For that person, it's a perfect, if expensive, tool. For 99% of shooters, even enthusiasts, a Fujifilm or Sony will be a smarter, more capable choice. This is a luxury item for a very specific taste.