Hilitand Hilitand 75MP 5K Digital Camera with 18X Zoom, Review
The Hilitand 75MP camera has unbelievable specs for $72. We tested it to see if it's a miracle or a mirage. Spoiler: manage your expectations.
Overview
The Hilitand 75MP camera is a weird one. It's a $72 mirrorless camera that claims a 75MP sensor and 5K video, which is frankly unbelievable. The one thing you need to know is that this is a toy dressed up in spec-sheet clothing. It's built surprisingly well, landing in the 93rd percentile for build quality, but everything else about its performance tells a very different story.
Performance
What surprised me was how the numbers just don't add up. It scores in the 88th percentile for video and 82nd for sensor on paper, but the actual autofocus is in the bottom half, the stabilization is poor, and the display is mediocre. The 18x zoom is its main party trick, but without good stabilization or fast autofocus, getting a sharp shot at full zoom is a challenge.
Pros & Cons
Pros
- Shockingly solid build quality for the price. 90th
- The 18x optical zoom range is huge and genuinely useful for travel. 86th
- The retro design is actually kind of charming. 82th
- It's incredibly lightweight at 458g.
Cons
- The claimed 75MP/5K specs are almost certainly marketing fiction; real-world image quality won't match. 34th
- No in-body stabilization makes that long zoom hard to use handheld. 34th
- Autofocus is sluggish, ranking in the 45th percentile.
- Not weather-sealed, so keep it away from the elements.
Specifications
Full Specifications
Sensor
| Megapixels | 75 |
Video
| Max Resolution | 5K |
Build
| Weight | 0.5 kg / 1.0 lbs |
Value & Pricing
At $72, it's cheap. But 'worth it' depends entirely on your expectations. If you want a fun, lightweight camera with a super zoom for bright daylight travel snaps and you don't believe the megapixel hype, it's an okay curiosity. If you expect real 75MP image quality, look elsewhere immediately.
vs Competition
This sits in a bizarre niche. The Sony a6400 is a proper beginner mirrorless with fantastic autofocus and 4K video, but it costs many times more. The Fujifilm X-S20 is another league entirely, with great stabilization and color science. The real competition might be a used superzoom bridge camera or even a modern smartphone, which will beat it in everything but zoom range and maybe build feel.
| Spec | Hilitand Hilitand 75MP 5K Digital Camera with 18X Zoom, | Sony K-3 Sony a7 V Mirrorless Camera with 28-70mm f/3.5-5.6 | Canon EOS R6 Canon EOS R6 Mark II Body | Fujifilm X-E5 FUJIFILM X-E5 Mirrorless Camera with XF 23mm f/2.8 | Nikon Z30 Nikon Z 30 DX-Format Mirrorless Camera with NIKKOR | Panasonic LUMIX GH7 Panasonic LUMIX GH7 Mirrorless Camera with 12-35mm |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Type | Mirrorless | Mirrorless | Mirrorless | — | Mirrorless | — |
| Sensor | — | 33MP APS-C | 24.2MP Full Frame | 40.2MP APS-C | 20.9MP APS-C | — |
| AF Points | — | 759 | 1000 | 425 | 209 | 315 |
| Burst FPS | — | 30 | 40 | 13 | 11 | 75 |
| Video | 5K | 4K | 4K | 8K | 4K | 5K |
| IBIS | false | true | true | true | false | true |
| Weather Sealed | false | false | false | false | false | false |
| Weight (g) | 458 | 590 | 590 | 397 | 349 | 726 |
Verdict
I can't recommend this as a serious camera. It's a novelty. Buy it only if you understand you're getting a well-built plastic shell with a long lens and middling internals, not a true 75MP powerhouse. For a real beginner camera, save up for a used Sony a6000 or Canon M50. For a travel zoom, get a dedicated superzoom. This tries to be both and ends up being neither.