
Nikon
The Nikon Z f is a full‑frame mirrorless camera that blends a retro heritage design with modern performance, featuring a 24.5 MP BSI‑CMOS sensor, EXPEED 7 processor, up to 30 fps burst, deep‑learning AF, 4K 60p video, and 8‑stop in‑body VR.
Pros
Current
$3,496.95
Average
$3,723.77
Lowest
$3,396.95
Highest
$4,952.15
Lower = better sales rank
Please sign in to leave a review
No reviews yet. Be the first to review!
Get notified when the price drops. Track this product on BigBangPrice, our price tracking partner.
Cons
From Expert Reviews
Praised by Experts
Criticized by Experts
From User Reviews
Users Love
Users Complain About
Expert Opinion
Professional reviewers commend the Z f for its fast EXPEED 7 processor, 273‑point deep‑learning AF, 8‑stop VR and 4K 60p video, noting the heritage design adds tactile appeal, but they point out its lower 24.5 MP resolution and lack of 6K video and CFexpress support make it less suitable for resolution‑critical or high‑speed video work compared to the Z7II/Z8 and Z6III.
What Users Say
Everyday users praise the camera's retro styling, dedicated B&W mode, vari‑angle screen, and effective in‑body stabilization, while recurring concerns focus on the limited 24.5 MP sensor for cropping, video cropping at high frame rates, and the absence of a CFexpress slot, with some noting microSD reliability issues.
Common Complaints
Limited 24.5 MP resolution, video cropping at high frame rates, lack of 6K video, no CFexpress slot, and concerns about microSD slot reliability.
What People Are Saying
“273-point AF and 12/9fps are solid but outpaced by higher‑resolution Z7II/Z8”
How It Compares
vs. Nikon Z6III
Advantages
Disadvantages
Choose Z6III for advanced video and high‑speed RAW shooting; choose Z f for retro styling and balanced hybrid performance.
vs. Nikon Z7II/Z8
Advantages
Disadvantages
Select Z7II/Z8 for maximum resolution needs; select Z f for style, portability, and hybrid creator focus.
Sony a7 III vs Nikon Z 8
pairwise