Canon EOS R Canon EOS R Mirrorless Camera Review

The Canon EOS R takes great photos with its 30MP sensor, but its lack of stabilization and dated video features make it hard to recommend for most creators today.

Type Mirrorless
Sensor 30.3MP
AF Points 5655
Burst FPS 8 fps
Video 4K
IBIS No
Weather Sealed No
Weight 658 g
Canon EOS R Canon EOS R Mirrorless Camera camera
67.6 Punteggio Complessivo

Overview

If you're looking at full-frame mirrorless cameras, the Canon EOS R is probably on your radar, especially if you're coming from an older Canon DSLR. It's a 30.3MP camera that launched Canon's RF mount system, and it's often found around the $1,500 mark these days. The big question is whether this older model still holds up for things like vlogging or shooting sports. It packs a full-frame sensor and Canon's Dual Pixel autofocus, which is great for photos, but its video features are starting to show their age compared to newer rivals. For creators, the big things to know are that it lacks in-body stabilization and its video specs aren't as strong as some newer cameras in this price range.

Performance

For still photography, the EOS R is solid. That 30MP sensor lands in the 66th percentile, so it delivers plenty of detail for most work. The burst shooting is actually a highlight at 12fps, putting it in the 86th percentile, which is great for action. The autofocus system, while not the latest generation, is still very capable with its 5,655 selectable points. In practice, it locks focus quickly and tracks subjects well for photos. Where performance dips is in video. It scores in the 31st percentile for video features, lacking things like 4K 60fps and having a heavy crop in 4K mode. For vloggers, the lack of stabilization means you'll need a gimbal or a lens with IS for smooth handheld shots.

Performance Percentiles

AF 99.5
EVF 42.6
Build 80
Burst 73.7
Video 80
Sensor 65.7
Battery 48.5
Display 95.7
Connectivity 88
Social Proof 90
Stabilization 40.8

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Excellent 30.3MP full-frame sensor for detailed photos 100th
  • Very fast 12fps burst shooting for action 96th
  • Great Dual Pixel CMOS AF system for stills 90th
  • Superb vari-angle touchscreen display (98th percentile) 88th
  • RF mount compatibility with a huge future lens lineup

Cons

  • No in-body image stabilization (IBIS)
  • Video features are dated (4K crop, no 4K 60fps)
  • Not weather-sealed
  • Battery life is just average
  • Autofocus for video isn't as advanced as newer models

Specifications

Full Specifications

Sensor

Type 36 x 24 mm (Full-Frame) CMOS
Megapixels 30.3
ISO Range 100
Processor DIGIC 8

Autofocus

AF Points 5655
AF Type Phase Detection: 5655

Shooting

Burst (Mechanical) 8
Max Shutter 1/8000
Electronic Shutter Yes

Video

Max Resolution 4K
10-bit Yes

Display & EVF

Touchscreen Yes
Articulating Yes

Build

Weight 0.7 kg / 1.5 lbs

Connectivity

Wi-Fi Yes
Bluetooth Yes
USB USB-C
HDMI Mini-HDMI

Value & Pricing

At around $1,450, the EOS R sits in a tricky spot. It's a full-frame camera, which is a plus, but you're paying for tech that's a few years old now. You're getting a great sensor and a capable stills camera, but you're missing out on a lot of modern video and stabilization features that other cameras at this price offer. If your main focus is photography, especially if you already have Canon EF lenses, it could be a good value. But if video or vlogging is a priority, your money goes further elsewhere.

Price History

New Refurbished
800 USD 1.000 USD 1.200 USD 1.400 USD 1.600 USD 22 feb1 apr 1.450 USD

vs Competition

Let's talk competitors. The Sony a7 III, often found at a similar price, has better autofocus, much better video features including full-frame 4K, and in-body stabilization. It's a more well-rounded choice for hybrid shooters. The Canon EOS R7 is an APS-C camera, but it's newer, has incredible autofocus and burst shooting, and has IBIS. It's a much better choice for sports, wildlife, or video. The Fujifilm X-S20 is another APS-C option that absolutely crushes the EOS R for video and vlogging, with 6.2K video and great stabilization, all for less money. So, is the EOS R good for vlogging? Compared to these, not really. It's a photo-first camera in a world of hybrids.

Verdict

Should you buy the Canon EOS R? Only in a few specific cases. If you're a photographer who wants to move to full-frame mirrorless and you're deeply invested in Canon glass, it's a decent entry point into the RF system. The photos it takes are still excellent. But for almost everyone else, especially content creators, vloggers, or hybrid shooters, there are better options. The lack of stabilization and older video specs are real drawbacks today. Look at the Sony a7 III for a better all-rounder, or the Canon R7 or Fuji X-S20 if you want modern video features and stabilization. The EOS R is a good camera that's been passed by in key areas.