Tamron Tamron 28-75mm F/2.8 for Sony Mirrorless Full Review

The Tamron 28-75mm F2.8 packs a useful zoom range and constant aperture into a light, stabilized package. It's a great all-rounder, as long as you don't need the absolute best optics.

Focal Length 28-75mm
Max Aperture f/2.8
Mount Sony E
Stabilization Yes
Weather Sealed No
Weight 549 g
AF Type RXD
Tamron Tamron 28-75mm F/2.8 for Sony Mirrorless Full lens
68.5 Score global

Overview

The Tamron 28-75mm F/2.8 is a classic workhorse zoom for Sony shooters. It gives you that versatile f/2.8 aperture in a package that's surprisingly light and compact.

This lens is all about balance. You get solid optical performance and good close-focusing ability, but you're not paying a premium for top-tier build quality or the absolute sharpest optics. It's a practical choice.

Performance

Performance is a mixed bag, but the highs are useful. Its close-focusing is excellent, landing in the 91st percentile for macro work. The stabilization is also top-tier at the 91st percentile, which is a huge help for handheld video. The trade-off is in the optics and autofocus, which are just okay, sitting in the 33rd and 48th percentiles respectively. So it's sharp enough for most jobs, and the AF is quiet and fine for video, but don't expect it to match a Sony G Master lens.

Performance Percentiles

AF 46.2
Bokeh 48.8
Build 20.1
Macro 86.3
Optical 35.8
Aperture 55
Versatility 81.9
Social Proof 91.9
Stabilization 87.6

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Strong stabilization (91th percentile) 92th
  • Strong macro (91th percentile) 88th
  • Strong versatility (82th percentile) 86th

Cons

  • Below average build (18th percentile) 20th
  • Below average optical (33th percentile)

Specifications

Full Specifications

Optics

Focal Length Min 28
Focal Length Max 75

Aperture

Max Aperture f/2.8
Constant Yes

Build

Mount Sony E
Weight 0.5 kg / 1.2 lbs

AF & Stabilization

AF Type RXD
Stabilization Yes

Focus

Min Focus Distance 73

Value & Pricing

At $799, it's a solid value if your priorities align. You're paying for the f/2.8 aperture, the zoom range, the light weight, and that great stabilization. You're not paying for luxury build or benchmark-setting optics. For a photographer or hybrid shooter who needs a reliable, lightweight standard zoom, it's money well spent. If you demand the absolute best image quality or ruggedness, you'll need to spend more.

Price History

600 $MX 800 $MX 1 000 $MX 1 200 $MX 1 400 $MX 1 600 $MX 1 800 $MX 5 mars22 mars29 mars29 mars 1 578 $MX

vs Competition

Compared to Sony's own 24-70mm GM II, the Tamron is lighter and cheaper, but you give up some optical brilliance and build quality. Against a prime like the Viltrox 35mm f/1.7, you lose that fast aperture and potentially better bokeh, but you gain versatility and stabilization with the zoom. The Panasonic 14-140mm offers way more zoom range for travel, but its variable aperture is a big step down in low-light performance. This Tamron sits in a sweet spot for the do-it-all shooter who values portability.

Verdict

Buy this lens if you're a Sony shooter who wants a lightweight, stabilized, f/2.8 standard zoom and you're okay with very good instead of perfect optics. It's perfect for travel, events, or hybrid photo/video work where carrying a lighter kit matters. Skip it if you pixel-peep for ultimate sharpness, need pro-grade weather sealing, or mostly shoot in studios where weight doesn't matter.