Fujifilm GFX 50S Fujifilm GFX 50S 51.4MP Mirrorless Medium Format Review
The GFX 50S delivers breathtaking image quality from its huge sensor, but its slow autofocus and lack of features make it a tool for very specific photographers.
Overview
The GFX 50S is a medium format monster in a surprisingly compact body. It's built around a massive 51.4MP sensor that's nearly twice the size of a standard full-frame chip. That means insane detail and image quality, especially for stills. But this camera is built for a very specific job. It's not your do-everything travel buddy. It's a specialized tool.
Performance
Image quality is the main event here, and it's stunning. The sensor lands in the 99th percentile, so your photos will have a depth and clarity that's hard to match. But you pay for it in other areas. The autofocus is just okay, landing in the 44th percentile, and it's not built for speed with a burst rate in the 38th. There's no in-body stabilization either, and video is a clear afterthought. This is a slow, deliberate camera.
Pros & Cons
Pros
- Image quality is absolutely top-tier. 99th
- Medium format sensor in a relatively portable body. 91th
- The tilting touchscreen is high-res and useful.
- Build quality feels solid and rigid.
Cons
- Autofocus is slow and can't keep up with action. 31th
- No in-body image stabilization at all.
- Video features are basically non-existent.
- Battery life and connectivity are just average.
Specifications
Full Specifications
Sensor
| Type | CMOS |
| Size | Full Frame |
| Megapixels | 51.400001525878906 |
Display & EVF
| Touchscreen | Yes |
Value & Pricing
At nearly $2800 for just the body, this is a huge investment. You're not buying a camera, you're buying that sensor. If you're a landscape, studio, or product photographer who needs ultimate resolution and can work around its slow speed, it might be worth it. For anyone else, it's a tough sell.
vs Competition
Compared to high-res full-frame cameras like the Sony A7R IV, the GFX 50S wins on pure image quality but loses badly on autofocus, speed, and features. The Sony is a much more complete package. Next to something like the Fujifilm X-S20, it's not even a contest. The X-S20 runs circles around it for video and general use, but its smaller sensor can't touch the GFX's files. The Pentax K-3 Mark III is a DSLR with a great viewfinder, but it's in a different, lower-resolution league.
Verdict
Buy this if you're a stills-focused photographer who values ultimate image quality above all else. Think studio work, landscapes, or fine art. Don't buy this if you shoot anything that moves fast, need great video, or want a versatile all-rounder. It's a brilliant specialist, but a frustrating generalist.