Nikon Nikon Z f with Zoom Lens | Full-Frame Mirrorless Review

The Nikon Z f is a video powerhouse with 6K recording and great stabilization, but its autofocus and lack of weather sealing hold it back from being perfect.

Type Mirrorless
Sensor 24.5MP Full Frame
Af Points
Burst Fps
Video 6K
Ibis true
Weather Sealed
Weight G
Nikon Nikon Z f with Zoom Lens | Full-Frame Mirrorless camera
78 Overall Score

Overview

The Nikon Z f is a full-frame mirrorless camera that's built for creators who want serious video chops and high-resolution stills in a retro-inspired body. It's packing a 24.5MP sensor, oversampled 6K video, and Nikon's latest subject-recognition tech, making it a powerhouse for filmmakers and product photographers.

Performance

This thing is a video beast. The oversampled 4K from 6K is sharp, and the 10-bit internal recording with N-Log is a huge deal for color grading. The IBIS is top-tier, sitting in the 91st percentile, so handheld shots look smooth. But the autofocus, while smart with its nine subject types, lands in the 45th percentile. It's good, but not class-leading for fast action. And the battery life is just average.

Performance Percentiles

Af 44.8
Evf 50
Build 49.4
Burst 39.7
Video 93.4
Sensor 96.5
Battery 49.9
Display 98
Connectivity 43.6
Stabilization 90.7

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Strong display (98th percentile) 98th
  • Strong sensor (97th percentile) 97th
  • Strong video (93th percentile) 93th
  • Strong stabilization (91th percentile) 91th

Cons

Specifications

Full Specifications

Sensor

Type CMOS
Size Full Frame
Megapixels 24.5

Video

Max Resolution 6K
10-bit Yes

Display & EVF

Touchscreen Yes
Articulating Yes

Value & Pricing

At $2,497, it's a premium camera. You're paying for that exceptional video pipeline and sensor tech. If you're a hybrid shooter who leans heavily into video or studio work, the value is absolutely there. If you just want a stills camera, there are better values.

$2,497

vs Competition

Compared to the Sony a7R IV, you're trading massive 61MP resolution for a much stronger video feature set. The Fujifilm X-S20 is way cheaper and also great for video, but it's an APS-C sensor, not full-frame. The Canon R7 is a speed demon for action with better AF, but its video specs, especially for color, aren't as robust as the Z f's. This Nikon carves its niche with pro video features in a stills-focused body.

Verdict

Buy this if you're a hybrid creator or filmmaker who needs pro video codecs and stabilization in a full-frame package. It's perfect for YouTube, product videos, and cinematic projects. Skip it if you shoot sports, need top-tier autofocus tracking, or require a weather-sealed body for outdoor adventures.

Deal Tracker

$2,497