Nikon D7500 Nikon D7500 DSLR Camera with 18-140mm Lens Review

The Nikon D7500 is a DSLR built for video creators, not photographers. It shoots fantastic 4K but feels dated for stills.

AF Points 51
Burst FPS 8 fps
Video 8K
IBIS No
Weather Sealed No
Weight 640 g
Nikon D7500 Nikon D7500 DSLR Camera with 18-140mm Lens camera
59.8 Overall Score

Overview

The Nikon D7500 is a weird one. It's a DSLR that absolutely crushes video and streaming, but it's just okay for photography. If you're looking for a hybrid camera to start a YouTube channel or stream with, this is a shockingly good pick. But if you want a camera primarily for still photos, you can do a lot better for the money. The one thing to know? This is a video-first camera trapped in a DSLR's body.

Performance

The video performance is the real story here. It's in the 99th percentile, which is wild for a DSLR. The 4K at 30fps looks great, and the autofocus (88th percentile) keeps up nicely. But that 31st percentile sensor score for photography tells you everything. The 20.9MP DX sensor is fine, but it's not going to wow you. It's fast enough with 8fps burst shooting, but the overall photo quality feels a generation behind its mirrorless competitors.

Performance Percentiles

AF 86.4
EVF 50
Build 9.3
Burst 68.3
Video 99.4
Sensor 67.2
Battery 49.6
Display 45.8
Connectivity 96.5
Social Proof 97.8
Stabilization 37.7

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Unbelievably good video quality for the price. 99th
  • Autofocus is fast and reliable, especially for video. 98th
  • Great connectivity options make it a streaming powerhouse. 97th
  • The tilting touchscreen is actually useful. 86th

Cons

  • The build quality feels cheap (9th percentile is bad). 9th
  • No in-body stabilization makes handheld video shaky.
  • The sensor is dated, so photo quality is just average.
  • It's a chunky DSLR in a world of compact mirrorless cameras.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Sensor

Megapixels 21.51

Autofocus

AF Points 51
AF Type Phase Detection: 51 (15 Cross-Type)

Shooting

Burst (Mechanical) 8
Max Shutter 1/8000

Video

Max Resolution 8K
10-bit No

Display & EVF

Screen Size 3.2

Build

Weight 0.6 kg / 1.4 lbs

Connectivity

Wi-Fi Yes
Bluetooth Yes
HDMI Mini-HDMI
Hot Shoe Yes

Value & Pricing

Prices swing from $697 to $1000. At the low end, it's a steal for a 4K video machine. At a grand, it's a harder sell. If you can find it for around $750, it's worth it for video creators. For anything over $900, you're better off looking at mirrorless options.

Price History

$600 $700 $800 $900 $1,000 $1,100 Feb 18Feb 18Feb 18Feb 22Mar 7 $697

vs Competition

The Sony a6400 is its direct mirrorless rival. The a6400 has better autofocus, a more modern sensor, and is way more portable, but the D7500's video output and connectivity can be better for pure streaming. The Fujifilm X-S20 is another great alternative with superior stabilization and a more fun shooting experience. The Canon EOS R6 Mark II blows it out of the water in every category, but it's also in a completely different price league.

Verdict

Buy the Nikon D7500 for one reason: you need a budget-friendly, high-quality video camera for streaming or YouTube, and you don't mind the DSLR bulk. It's that simple. For hybrid shooters or photographers, the aging sensor and lack of stabilization make it hard to recommend over newer mirrorless cameras.