Olympus OM SYSTEM OLYMPUS PEN E-PL1 12.3MP Live MOS Micro Review

The Olympus PEN E-PL1 is built like a tiny tank, but its 2009-era autofocus and video features make it more of a charming paperweight than a useful camera today.

Type Mirrorless
Sensor ?MP Micro Four Thirds
IBIS Yes
Weather Sealed No
Weight 336 g
Olympus OM SYSTEM OLYMPUS PEN E-PL1 12.3MP Live MOS Micro camera
34.2 Overall Score

Overview

The Olympus PEN E-PL1 is a weird little camera that's somehow still kicking around. The one thing you need to know? It's built like a tiny, beautiful tank, scoring in the 99th percentile for build quality, but it's trying to run a 2024 race with 2009 specs. It's a charming relic, not a modern tool.

Performance

Honestly, nothing about the performance surprised me in a good way. The autofocus is in the 45th percentile, which feels about right—it's slow. The burst shooting is even worse at the 39th percentile. The only pleasant surprise is the in-body stabilization, which is genuinely good at the 90th percentile. It helps you get sharp shots, even if the camera takes its sweet time to focus.

Performance Percentiles

AF 43.5
EVF 39.2
Build 88.4
Burst 33.6
Video 27.6
Sensor 72.3
Battery 49.6
Display 35.1
Connectivity 33.4
Social Proof 72.8
Stabilization 87.7

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Feels indestructible. The build quality is genuinely fantastic. 88th
  • In-body image stabilization is excellent and saves a lot of shaky shots. 88th
  • It's incredibly small and light, perfect for tossing in a bag. 73th
  • The Live Guide interface is simple and great for beginners. 72th

Cons

  • The autofocus is painfully slow by today's standards. 28th
  • Video features are basically non-existent. Don't buy this for video. 33th
  • The 2.7-inch fixed screen is tiny and low-res. 34th
  • It comes with a basic kit lens that doesn't do the sensor any favors.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Sensor

Type CMOS
Size Micro Four Thirds

Build

Weight 0.3 kg / 0.7 lbs

Value & Pricing

At $170, it's a tough sell. You're paying for that legendary Olympus build and IBIS, but you're getting a sensor and autofocus system that feels ancient. If you find it for under $100 as a first camera for a kid, maybe. At this price, you're better off with a used smartphone or a slightly older compact camera.

$170

vs Competition

Forget comparing it to modern beasts like the Canon R7 or Sony a6400—they're in a different universe. A more relevant, if still lopsided, comparison is against a used original Sony a6000. For a similar price, the a6000 gives you a bigger APS-C sensor, vastly better autofocus, and 1080p video that doesn't embarrass itself. The Olympus wins on charm and portability, but the a6000 wins on everything that matters for actually taking pictures.

Spec Olympus OM SYSTEM OLYMPUS PEN E-PL1 12.3MP Live MOS Micro Sony a6700 Sony a6700 Mirrorless Camera with 16-50mm Canon EOS R6 Canon EOS R6 Mark II Body OM System OM-3 OM SYSTEM OM-3 Mirrorless Camera Fujifilm X-T5 FUJIFILM X-T5 Mirrorless Camera with 16-55mm f/2.8 Panasonic LUMIX GH7 Panasonic LUMIX GH7 Mirrorless Camera with 12-35mm
Type Mirrorless Mirrorless Mirrorless Mirrorless Mirrorless Mirrorless
Sensor ?MP Micro Four Thirds 26MP APS-C 24.2MP Full Frame 22.9MP Micro Four Thirds 40.2MP APS-C 26.5MP Micro Four Thirds
AF Points 759 1000 1053 425 315
Burst FPS 11 40 120 15 75
Video 4K 4K 4K 6K 5K
IBIS true true true true true true
Weather Sealed false false false false false false
Weight (g) 336 408 590 408 476 726

Verdict

Skip it. The Olympus PEN E-PL1 is a museum piece with a cult following, not a practical camera for 2024. Its terrible autofocus and ancient video capabilities make it a frustration machine for anyone used to modern gear. That fantastic build quality is the only reason it's not in a landfill, but it's not enough of a reason to put it in your bag.