Tamron Tamron Di II Tamron SP AF10-24mm F/3.5-4.5 Di-II LD Aspherical Review

The Tamron 10-24mm is a capable, no-frills wide zoom for Canon crop-sensor cameras. It's sharp and light, but the autofocus shows its age.

Focal Length 10-24mm
Max Aperture f/3.5
Mount Canon EF-S
Stabilization Yes
Weather Sealed No
Weight 406 g
AF Type Autofocus
Lens Type Wide-Angle Zoom
Tamron Tamron Di II Tamron SP AF10-24mm F/3.5-4.5 Di-II LD Aspherical lens
67.7 Overall Score

Overview

If you're shooting on a Canon APS-C camera and need a wide-angle zoom that won't break your back or your bank, this Tamron 10-24mm is a solid pick. The one thing to know is it's a classic workhorse lens. It's not the fastest or the sharpest in the absolute sense, but it gives you a super useful 10-24mm range (16-37mm full-frame equivalent) in a compact, well-built package. For landscapes, real estate, and tight interiors, it gets the job done without fuss.

Performance

The optical performance is decent, landing in the 75th percentile, which means it's sharper than a lot of its peers. That's the good surprise. The bad surprise is the autofocus. It's in the 47th percentile, so it's just okay. It's not lightning fast or super quiet, but for static subjects, it's fine. Don't expect to track fast action with this thing.

Performance Percentiles

AF 46.1
Bokeh 34.9
Build 76.7
Macro 39.5
Optical 76.3
Aperture 40.9
Versatility 82
Social Proof 82.8
Stabilization 87.3

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Really useful and versatile focal range for APS-C 87th
  • Compact and relatively light at 406g 83th
  • Solid build quality feels good in hand 82th
  • Good optical sharpness for the price 77th

Cons

  • Autofocus is slow and noisy 35th
  • No image stabilization at all
  • Maximum aperture is dim, especially at the long end
  • Not weather-sealed, so keep it dry

Specifications

Full Specifications

Optics

Type Wide-Angle Zoom
Focal Length Min 10
Focal Length Max 24
Elements 12
Groups 9

Aperture

Max Aperture f/3.5
Constant Yes

Build

Mount Canon EF-S
Weight 0.4 kg / 0.9 lbs
Filter Thread 77

AF & Stabilization

AF Type Autofocus
Stabilization Yes

Focus

Min Focus Distance 240
Max Magnification 0.19x

Value & Pricing

At around $364, it's a good value. You're paying for the zoom range and decent optics, not for speed or fancy features. If you need that wide view and can live with the slower AF, it's worth it.

Price History

$350 $355 $360 $365 $370 Feb 19Mar 7 $354

vs Competition

The main competitors here are primes, not zooms, which is weird. The listed rivals like the Viltrox 35mm f/1.7 are completely different lenses—they're faster primes for different jobs. For a true zoom competitor, you'd look at the Canon EF-S 10-18mm. The Tamron gives you more reach (24mm vs 18mm) and slightly better build, but the Canon is often cheaper and has image stabilization. If you need that extra reach and don't care about stabilization, the Tamron is the better choice.

Verdict

This is a straightforward recommendation. If you're a Canon APS-C shooter who needs a wide zoom for landscapes, architecture, or interiors, and your budget is tight, get this Tamron. Just know you're trading autofocus speed and stabilization for that useful focal range and a lighter wallet. If you shoot a lot of video or in low light without a tripod, look elsewhere.