Meike Meike 25mm f0.95 Manual Focus APS-C Lens for Review

The Panasonic Meike 25mm f/0.95 delivers stunning bokeh and exceptional low-light performance for an almost unbelievable $100, but you have to be okay with manual focus.

Focal Length 25mm
Max Aperture f/0.95
Mount Panasonic Lumix M43
Stabilization Yes
Weather Sealed No
Weight 699 g
Meike Meike 25mm f0.95 Manual Focus APS-C Lens for lens
59.6 Overall Score

Overview

So you're looking at the Panasonic Meike 25mm f/0.95, a manual focus lens for Micro Four Thirds cameras. This thing is all about one feature: that massive f/0.95 aperture. It's a 25mm prime, which gives you a standard 50mm equivalent field of view on M43 bodies, making it a solid choice for portraits, street photography, and low-light work. At around $100, it's an incredibly cheap way to get into ultra-fast glass. Just know what you're signing up for: it's big, heavy at 699g, and fully manual. If you're coming from autofocus lenses, it'll be a different experience, but for the price of a nice dinner, you get access to some serious creative potential.

Performance

Let's talk about what that f/0.95 aperture actually does. In low light, it's a game-saver. You can shoot in dim conditions at much lower ISO settings than with a kit lens, which means cleaner images. The bokeh, or background blur, is where this lens really shines, scoring in the 93rd percentile. Out-of-focus areas get that creamy, smooth look that makes your subject pop. The built-in stabilization (89th percentile) is a nice bonus, especially for video or handheld shooting in low light. Just don't expect tack-sharp corners wide open—optical quality is decent (72nd percentile) but it's soft at f/0.95. Stop it down to f/2 or f/2.8 and it sharpens up nicely.

Performance Percentiles

AF 46.1
Bokeh 93.4
Build 14.4
Macro 18
Optical 73.3
Aperture 98.9
Versatility 38.6
Social Proof 54.8
Stabilization 87.3

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Insanely cheap for an f/0.95 lens. 99th
  • Creates beautiful, creamy bokeh for great subject separation. 93th
  • Excellent in low-light situations. 87th
  • Built-in image stabilization helps with handheld shots. 73th
  • Solid metal build feels durable.

Cons

  • Fully manual focus only—no autofocus. 14th
  • Very heavy and bulky for a prime lens. 18th
  • Soft image quality when shot wide open at f/0.95.
  • Not weather-sealed.
  • Manual aperture ring can feel a bit stiff.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Optics

Focal Length Min 25
Focal Length Max 25
Elements 11
Groups 9

Aperture

Max Aperture f/0.95

Build

Mount Panasonic Lumix M43
Weight 0.7 kg / 1.5 lbs

AF & Stabilization

Stabilization Yes

Value & Pricing

For $100, the value proposition is almost absurd. You simply cannot find another lens with this aperture for anywhere near this price. The closest competitors with autofocus, like the Panasonic 25mm f/1.7, cost more and are two stops slower. You're trading autofocus convenience for pure light-gathering power and bokeh at a bargain-bin price. If you're on a tight budget but want to experiment with professional-looking shallow depth of field, this is your ticket.

$100

vs Competition

The obvious comparison is the Panasonic Lumix 25mm f/1.7. It's autofocus, much smaller and lighter, and sharper wide open, but it costs a bit more and you lose that magical f/0.95 look. For manual focus fans, the Meike 35mm f/1.8 is another option—it's a bit wider and has a slightly different character. If you're using a Fujifilm X-mount camera, the Viltrox 25mm f/1.7 is a direct autofocus alternative, but again, it's not as fast. The Meike 25mm f/0.95 sits in its own niche: it's the budget king for extreme aperture on M43.

Verdict

Should you buy this? It depends on your patience and what you shoot. If you're a beginner who relies on autofocus for everything, this lens will frustrate you. The manual focus takes practice. But if you're willing to slow down, or if you shoot a lot of portraits, video, or low-light scenes where you can manually focus, this lens is a no-brainer for the price. It's a fun, creative tool that lets you achieve looks normally reserved for much more expensive glass. Just be ready for its size and weight on your camera.