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Leica SL S Mirrorless

{"review": "Cet hybride plein format embarque un capteur 24MP CMOS-BSI capable de 25 i/s en obturation électronique et d'une sensibilité ISO 100 000. Son viseur électronique de 5,8 millions de points et son boîtier tropicalisé assurent une visée détaillée et une durabilité dans des conditions difficiles. Il convient particulièrement aux photographes de sport et de faune sauvage recherchant une cadence élevée et un autofocus réactif avec détection des yeux et des sujets."}

type Mirrorless
Sensor 24MP full-frame
af points 225
burst fps 25
Video 4K @60fps
ibis false
weather sealed true
weight g 160

À propos de ce Camera

Leica SL2-S Mirrorless Digital Camera

  • SL2-S Mirrorless Full-Frame System Camera - Battery (BP-SCL4) - Charger (BC-SCL4) - Body Cap - Camera Strap - Screen Protection Film - Leica 2 Year Limited Warranty
  • New 24MP CMOS-BSI full-frame sensor
  • 25 fps electronical shutter (DNG), 9 fps mechanical shutter
  • 4GB internal buffer memory
  • Up to ISO 100,000

The 30-Second Version

The SL2-S rocks a 97th percentile EVF and a fast 25fps burst, but it totally skips in-body stabilization, which drops it into the bottom third of all mirrorless cameras we've tested. It's a beautifully built camera that asks too much money for a feature set most competitors deliver at half the price.

Overview

The Leica SL2-S is a camera that's all about extremes. Its electronic viewfinder lands in the 97th percentile of our database, meaning you're getting the absolute best viewfinder experience on the market right now. The 5.8-million-dot panel is big, bright, and genuinely impressive. Battery life is another high point at 510 shots per charge, a 94th percentile result that's a standout for a full-frame mirrorless. But then you hit the weak spots: no in-body image stabilization whatsoever. That's a 32nd percentile ranking, well below average, and it makes handheld video or low-light stills a serious challenge. At these prices, many shooters will find that omission hard to swallow.

Performance

With 25fps burst shooting in electronic mode, the SL2-S is no slouch. That places it among the top 11% of mirrorless cameras for speed, though the 9fps mechanical rate is more pedestrian. A 4GB internal buffer helps you ride those bursty moments a bit longer. Autofocus comes via 225 points with Eye AF and subject detection, ranking well above average in our tests. It's reliable for tracking wildlife and athletes, though it won't match the stickiest systems from Sony. Video is where things get complex. You get 4K at 60fps, 10-bit internal, and RAW output over HDMI. That's a solid set of codecs, but the video percentile score sits right in the middle of the pack, dragged down by that missing stabilization. Handheld 4K footage is jittery without a gimbal, and the fixed touchscreen doesn't help. The 24MP full-frame sensor is fine but unremarkable, placing right around the median for resolution. So you're not getting cutting-edge detail, just capable performance. Still, for sports and wildlife, the combination of quick bursts and decent autofocus netted a 75.4 out of 100, making it a strong option if you can live without IBIS.

Performance Percentiles

AF 80.1
EVF 97.1
Build 88.6
Burst 89.2
Video 64.3
Sensor 44.9
Battery 93.8
Display 56.5
Connectivity 77.3
Social Proof 54.3
Stabilization 32.4

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Best-in-class EVF (97th percentile) 97th
  • Long battery life at 510 shots 94th
  • Blistering 25fps electronic burst 89th
  • Weather-sealed magnesium build 89th
  • Excellent color rendering and M-mount lens compatibility

Cons

  • No in-body stabilization (32nd percentile) 32th
  • Fixed LCD screen cripples vlogging
  • 24MP sensor is merely average
  • Price swings wildly from $3,490 to $5,600
  • Social proof score sits at just the 54th percentile

The Word on the Street

3.6/5 (48 reviews)
👍 Many owners rave about the gorgeous color science and how well the camera handles vintage Leica M-mount lenses, often calling it the best digital body they've used for adapted glass.
👎 A wave of reliability complaints, with some buyers receiving dead units right out of the box, contribute to a customer rating that sits at just a 3.6 out of 5.
🤔 Build quality and the EVF get universal praise, but a common sentiment is that the feature list feels dated and misses modern staples like stabilization and a tilting screen.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Sensor

Type CMOS
Size full-frame
Megapixels 24
ISO Range 50
Processor Maestro III

Autofocus

AF Points 225
Eye AF Yes
Subject Detection Yes

Shooting

Burst (Mechanical) 25
Burst (Electronic) 25
Electronic Shutter Yes

Video

Max Resolution 4K
4K FPS 60
1080p FPS 180
10-bit Yes
Log Profile Yes
RAW Video Yes

Display & EVF

Screen Size 3.2
Touchscreen Yes
EVF Resolution 5760000

Build

Weather Sealed Yes
Weight 0.2 kg / 0.4 lbs
Battery Life 510

Connectivity

Wi-Fi Yes
Bluetooth Yes
USB USB Type-C

Value & Pricing

Value is tricky when you're talking about a Leica, but the numbers don't lie. Pricing swings from $3,490 to $5,600 across vendors, with Amazon currently offering the low end of that spread. For $3,500, you're getting a magnesium body, a sublime viewfinder, and the red dot prestige. But you're also giving up stabilization, a flippy screen, and a class-leading sensor. A Panasonic LUMIX S5IIX, which shares the L-mount, packs in 6.5-stop IBIS and better video tools for hundreds less. If the Leica experience and EVF matter more to you than dollar-for-dollar specs, the entry price might feel justifiable. For anyone else, that gap is tough to bridge.

Price History

3 000 $US 3 500 $US 4 000 $US 4 500 $US 9 mai20 mai29 mai 3 490 $US

vs Competition

Stacked against its peers, the SL2-S shows both polish and gaps. The Panasonic S5IIX is the most direct rival, delivering IBIS and a flip-out screen at a lower cost, though its EVF doesn't come close to the Leica's. The Sony Alpha a1 II is in another league for autofocus and outright speed, but you'll pay nearly twice as much. Canon's EOS R6 Mark III brings superior stabilization and a higher-res sensor, while the Nikon Z9 outclasses the Leica in almost every performance metric. And then there's the Fujifilm X-H2S, a smaller sensor but with a stacked design that rivals the SL2-S's burst and video chops for less money. In every head-to-head, the Leica only wins on viewfinder quality and brand cachet. If IBIS and fast, reliable AF matter, the competition leaves it behind.

Spec Leica SL S Mirrorless Fujifilm X-H2 X-H2 Canon EOS R EOS R6 Mark III Sony a7 a7 V Nikon Z9 Z9 Panasonic LUMIX GH7 GH7
Type Mirrorless mirrorless mirrorless mirrorless mirrorless mirrorless
Sensor 24MP full-frame 40.2MP aps-c 32.5MP full-frame 33MP full-frame 45.7MP full-frame 25.2MP micro-four-thirds
AF Points 225 425 1053 759 1053 315
Burst FPS 25 20 40 30 30 75
Video 4K @60fps 8K @60fps 6K @120fps 4K @120fps 8K @120fps 5K @120fps
IBIS false true true true true true
Weather Sealed true true true true true true
Weight (g) 160 579 609 610 1160 721
Compare Compare Compare Compare Compare
Product AfEvfBuildBurstVideoSensorBatteryDisplayConnectivitySocial ProofStabilization
Leica SL S Mirrorless 80.197.188.689.264.344.993.856.577.354.332.4
Fujifilm X-H2 X-H2 Compare 88.195.589.585.599.997.19784.393.394.693.5
Canon EOS R EOS R6 Mark III Compare 98.48894.993.189.658.896.699.293.394.699.5
Sony a7 a7 V Compare 95.788.7959189.660.196.699.693.394.696.1
Nikon Z9 Z9 Compare 98.489.599.496.197.96597.384.393.384.884.7
Panasonic LUMIX GH7 GH7 Compare 84.78897.495.297.556.189.284.393.394.696.1

Common Questions

Q: Does the Leica SL2-S have in-body image stabilization?

No, it doesn't. That puts it at the 32nd percentile among mirrorless cameras—a serious weak spot. Handheld video and low-light stills will show shake, so you'll want stabilized lenses or a tripod.

Q: How well does it work with vintage Leica M lenses?

Based on early feedback, it's one of the best digital bodies for M-mount glass. Users consistently highlight excellent color fidelity and sharpness with older manual lenses, often preferring it over other adapters.

Q: Is the autofocus good enough for fast wildlife?

It's well above average with 225 AF points, Eye AF, and subject detection. You'll get a solid hit rate, and the 25fps burst helps freeze action. But systems like the Sony a1 II are noticeably stickier and faster to lock on.

Who Should Skip This

Vloggers and run-and-gun shooters should look elsewhere. The fixed 3.2" touchscreen and total lack of IBIS combine to give the SL2-S a 47.4 vlogging score, our lowest sub-score for this camera. If you need smooth handheld footage or a selfie screen, this body will frustrate you daily. It's also a poor choice for anyone who prioritizes high-resolution stills—the 24MP full-frame sensor is simply middle of the pack, and you can find 33MP or 45MP rivals for less.

Verdict

The Leica SL2-S is a niche masterpiece for a specific buyer. Our data puts its viewfinder and build quality near the top, but it also lands its stabilization in the exact wrong quadrant. The 24MP sensor and 25fps bursts are plenty capable, yet you can get those specs with IBIS from rivals costing half as much. We'd only recommend it to Leica loyalists who already own M glass and value that stunning EVF above all else. For anyone who shoots video handheld or wants the best overall package, there are far smarter buys.

Usage Scores

Overall (67.5)Video (50.9)Travel (65.2)Youtube (49.6)Beginner (67.7)Vlogging (47.6)Streaming (62.8)Photography (53.6)Wedding Events (58.3)Sports Wildlife (76.3)Product Photography (50.7)

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