Nikon Z24 Nikon Z 7II Mirrorless Camera with NIKKOR Z Review

The Nikon Z7 II is a powerhouse for detail-obsessed photographers, but its missing features make it a tough sell for anyone else.

Type Mirrorless
Sensor 45.7MP
Af Points
Burst Fps
Video 4K
Ibis
Weather Sealed true
Weight G
Nikon Z24 Nikon Z 7II Mirrorless Camera with NIKKOR Z camera
58 Overall Score

Overview

The Nikon Z7 II is a specialist's camera, and you need to know that going in. It's built for photographers who demand extreme resolution and professional-grade build quality above all else. If you're shooting landscapes, studio portraits, or anything where detail is king, this is your tool. But if you're looking for an all-rounder that's great at video or fast action, you're in the wrong aisle.

Performance

The autofocus and build quality are the real stars here, both sitting in the 96th percentile. The eye-detect AF is incredibly sticky and reliable, which is a huge deal for a 45.7MP camera where focus needs to be perfect. The sensor's detail is stunning, but its overall ranking is a bit lower than you'd expect because it trades some low-light performance for that resolution. The biggest surprise, honestly, is the lack of in-body stabilization. For a camera at this price, that's a tough pill to swallow if you shoot a lot of handheld or in tricky light.

Performance Percentiles

Af 96.2
Evf 50
Build 95.7
Burst 38.9
Video 70.4
Sensor 73.7
Battery 49.9
Display 44.3
Connectivity 43.4
Stabilization 40.3

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Autofocus is top-tier and incredibly confident 96th
  • Build quality and weather sealing are absolutely professional-grade 96th
  • Image detail from the 45.7MP sensor is breathtaking 74th
  • Dual card slots offer essential backup for critical work 70th

Cons

  • No in-body stabilization is a glaring omission at this price
  • The fixed rear screen is a pain for video or creative angles
  • Burst shooting is sluggish compared to rivals
  • It's a resolution monster first, and everything else feels secondary

Specifications

Full Specifications

Sensor

Type CMOS
Megapixels 45.70000076293945

Autofocus

Eye AF Yes

Video

Max Resolution 4K

Build

Weather Sealed Yes

Value & Pricing

At over $3,000, the value proposition is narrow. It's worth every penny if you're a landscape, architecture, or studio photographer who lives and dies by megapixels. For anyone else, it's a hard sell because you're paying a premium for a feature most people don't fully need.

$3,044

vs Competition

You're really choosing between flavors of high resolution. The Sony a7R IV gives you even more pixels (61MP) and has in-body stabilization, but its handling isn't as robust as the Nikon's. The Canon EOS R6 Mark II is the opposite approach: fewer megapixels (24MP) but way better video features, stabilization, and burst speed. If you need the ultimate detail, the Nikon or Sony are your picks. If you need a more versatile camera that can do it all well, the Canon runs circles around the Z7 II.

Verdict

Buy the Nikon Z7 II if your primary goal is to capture the most detailed still images possible and you need a tank-like camera body. It's a brilliant tool for a specific job. For everyone else—especially hybrid shooters, vloggers, or sports photographers—look at the Canon R6 Mark II or even a high-res Sony. This camera doesn't try to be everything, and that's its greatest strength and biggest weakness.

Deal Tracker

$3,044