Canon Canon RF600/11 is STM(N) Review

The Canon RF 600mm f/11 IS STM packs serious reach into a tiny package, but its fixed f/11 aperture demands bright light and compromises versatility. It's a specialist tool, not a do-it-all lens.

Max Aperture f/600
Mount Canon RF
Stabilization Yes
Weather Sealed No
Weight 930 g
Lens Type Zoom
Canon Canon RF600/11 is STM(N) lens
32.8 Score global

Overview

So, you're looking for a super telephoto lens that won't break your back or your bank? The Canon RF600mm f/11 IS STM is a weird and wonderful answer to that question. It's a 600mm prime lens that's shockingly small and light, thanks to a collapsible barrel and some fancy diffractive optics. The big catch? That fixed f/11 aperture. This isn't a lens for low light or creamy background blur; it's a tool for getting you close to distant subjects in bright daylight. If you're a wildlife or sports shooter on a budget who's okay with some serious limitations, this thing is worth a long, hard look.

Performance

Let's talk about that aperture first, because it's everything. At f/11, you're letting in very little light. This means you'll be cranking your ISO way up unless you're shooting in full sun, and your autofocus will hunt more in dim conditions. The AF performance lands in the 49th percentile, which is just okay. It's not lightning-fast, but for static or slow-moving subjects in good light, it gets the job done. The image stabilization is rated in the 42nd percentile, so it helps a bit with handholding, but you'll still want to use a fast shutter speed to freeze action. Optical quality is in the 34th percentile, so expect some compromises in sharpness and contrast, especially wide open. It's decent, not great.

Performance Percentiles

AF 46.3
Bokeh 0.1
Build 6.8
Macro 51.2
Optical 35.7
Aperture 0.2
Versatility 37.5
Social Proof 84.6
Stabilization 87.7

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Incredibly compact and lightweight for a 600mm lens. 88th
  • The collapsible design makes it easy to pack. 85th
  • Surprisingly affordable for this focal length.
  • Diffractive optics help keep size and weight down.
  • Good enough autofocus for its intended use case.

Cons

  • Fixed f/11 aperture severely limits low-light use.
  • Bokeh quality is basically non-existent (0th percentile).
  • Not weather-sealed, so keep it away from the elements. 7th
  • Optical performance is just average.
  • Completely useless for portraits or close-up work.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Optics

Type Zoom

Aperture

Max Aperture f/600

Build

Mount Canon RF
Weight 0.9 kg / 2.1 lbs

AF & Stabilization

Stabilization Yes

Focus

Min Focus Distance 600

Value & Pricing

Priced between $740 and $829, the RF600mm f/11 is a value play, but only in a very specific context. You simply cannot get a native 600mm lens for a full-frame Canon RF camera at this price any other way. The value is entirely in the portability and reach. You're trading aperture, optical perfection, and versatility for a lightweight ticket to the far end of the zoom range. If those trade-offs make sense for your bag and your budget, it's a unique deal.

Price History

0 $MX 500 $MX 1 000 $MX 1 500 $MX 2 000 $MX 28 févr.5 mars28 mars29 mars30 mars 637 $MX

vs Competition

This lens doesn't really compete with the listed primes like the Viltrox 35mm f/1.7; those are for entirely different jobs. A more direct competitor would be a superzoom like the Sony FE 24-240mm. That lens gives you massive versatility but tops out at 240mm, nowhere near the 600mm reach here. The real question is: do you want one lens that does a lot of things okay (the superzoom), or a specialist tool that does one weird thing—being a tiny 600mm—and nothing else? For wildlife, the Canon wins on reach. For travel where you need one lens, the superzoom is the better pick. Also, consider used DSLR telephotos with adapters; they'll be bigger and heavier, but you might find a faster aperture for similar money.

Verdict

Should you buy the Canon RF600mm f/11 IS STM? It's a hard yes for a very specific person: the budget-conscious photographer who needs a lightweight 600mm for daytime wildlife, aviation, or some sports, and who understands the major limitations of an f/11 aperture. It's a gateway to super telephoto photography. But if you shoot in anything but bright sun, need background separation, or want a do-it-all travel lens, look elsewhere. This isn't a versatile workhorse; it's a clever, compromised specialist.