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Nikon Z50II initial review: A fun APS-C camera on a budget

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Nikon Z50II initial review: A fun APS-C camera on a budget


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The Nikon Z50II is the company’s latest entry-level APS-C mirrorless camera, built around a 21MP CMOS sensor. As with the original Z50, it’s expressly aimed at stills and video creators looking for a small camera that makes it easy to upload.

It brings updated burst modes and AF functions to its predecessor, but most of the advancements are on the video side of the camera.

Key specifications

  • 20.9MP APS-C sensor
  • Twin control dials
  • Full-width 4K video up to 30p (60p with crop)
  • 3D-tracking autofocus and subject recognition for nine subject types
  • Up to 11fps mechanical, with up to 1 second pre-release capture
  • Fully articulated 3.2″ touchscreen
  • Single UHS-II SD card slot in battery compartment
  • 2.36M dot EVF with brightness up to 1000nits

The Z50II will retail for $909 body-only and $1,049 as a kit with Nikon’s DX 16-50 F3.5-6.3 lens. The company says it’ll be available in “late November.”


What’s new

Nikon Z50II model badge

The Z50II is, as the name suggests, an updated version of the company’s original APS-C Z-mount camera. Much of what it gains comes from the use of a newer, more powerful Expeed 7 processor, but there are some subtle yet potentially significant additions beyond that.

Flexible Color Picture Control and Picture Control Button

Nikon Z50II picture control button
The new Picture Control button is right above the rear control dial.

It’s a change unrelated to processing power that helps signpost what the Z50II is and who it’s intended for: the addition of a dedicated ‘Picture Control’ button to let you select the camera’s color mode.

The changes go deeper than the labeling of a button, though. The Z50II becomes the first model to offer ‘flexible’ Picture Control profiles that let you adjust or download additional profiles. The camera comes with 31 but you can add more, and limit which ones appear when you hit the Picture Control button, so that it doesn’t become overwhelming.

Nikon has, at least as far back as 2008, been one of the few brands to offer software to let you edit its in-camera profiles. The company’s NX Studio software lets you adjust the existing Picture Controls, applying your own custom tone curve or changing the sharpening and saturation of the profile. However, you only get limited control over the color response, with a global hue adjustment, rather than the ability to re-map colors that a LUT would give.

It’s the ability to download Creator Recipe profiles from Nikon’s Imaging Cloud that we suspect most users will experiment with.

Brighter viewfinder

Nikon Z50II viewfinder

The Z50II also gains a brighter viewfinder, now capable of displaying up to 1000 nits, double the maximum brightness of the one in the existing model. The display isn’t bright enough to fully preview HLG high dynamic range capture though, and is still the same 2.36M dot resolution.

Subject recognition / 3D Tracking

One of the most significant improvements that does come from the new processor is the Z50II’s autofocus system. It gains the subject recognition modes from other recent Nikon cameras, boosting the number of recognized subjects from three to nine.

Nikon Z50II Nikon Z50 / Zfc
Subjects recognized
  • Humans (Eye, Face, Upper Body)
  • Birds
  • Cats
  • Dogs
  • Cars
  • Motorcycles
  • Bicycles
  • Trains
  • Airplanes
  • Humans (Eye, Face, Upper Body)
  • Cats
  • Dogs

It also adds the 3D Tracking AF mode, that makes it quicker to track subjects, regardless of whether the camera has been specifically trained to recognize them.

C30 and pre-burst

Another Expeed 7 feature to arrive on the Z50II is its ability to shoot at high speeds in e-shutter mode, with the option to start buffering images when the shutter is half-pressed and saving images captured up to one second before the shutter button is fully depressed.

The Z50II’s C30 and C15 modes can shoot with autofocus at up to 30fps or 15fps, respectively, though it only records JPEGs.

Nikon Imaging Cloud

The Z50II is also compatible with Nikon’s Imaging Cloud service, which debuted with the Z6III. That means that, when connected to a Wi-Fi network, it can automatically upload your photos to Nikon’s servers, which shuffle them off to your choice of third-party cloud storage services, such as Dropbox, Google Drive, or Lightroom. You can also have your camera automatically download firmware updates, and have it sync Picture Control presets that you’ve selected on your computer or phone. While many cameras have similar features, they have to be paired with a smartphone or camera to use them – the Z50II can do it on its own connected to your router.

What’s new for video:

Despite using the same sensor as the Z50, Nikon has managed to squeeze significantly better video out of it. The Z50II can now encode video in 10-bit precision, allowing internal N-Log capture to maximize color and tone grading potential, or HLG high dynamic range capture for playback on HDR displays and TVs.

The Z50II also gains the ability to capture 4K/60 footage from a cropped region of the sensor.

On top of this, Nikon says the electronic image stabilization (eVR) in video mode is improved. The Z50II also gets a “product review” autofocus mode, that knows to override its face detection AF if an object is held up in front of the camera: a feature that can be useful for vloggers discussing a specific product they want to show.


How it compares

The Z50II arrives into what was previously a competitive point in the market but one that fewer and fewer manufactuers seem to be catering to. Fujifilm offers the similarly beginner-friendly X-M5 for around $200 less, but with no viewfinder, or the high-resolution, image stabilized X-T50 for a whopping $400 more. Meanwhile, Sony offers the now rather elderly a6400 at a comparable price. It makes fewer accommodations to people new to ILCs and its age means its video spec lags way behind.

It’s only really Canon, with its EOS R10 that offers an approximately like-for-like competitor to the Z50II. The other camera we feel it makes sense to compare is Nikon’s own Zfc. It has near identical spec to the original Z50, other than it has a fully articulated rear screen. By including another Nikon entry-level camera, we can see what’s changed over the past five years.

Nikon Z50II Canon EOS R10 Sony a6400 Nikon Zfc
MSRP (With kit zoom) $909 ($1049 w/ 16-50 F3.5-6.3) $979 $900 $960
Pixel count 20MP 24MP 24MP 20MP
Image stabilization No No No No
Max frame rate 11fps (mech)

30fps (e-shutter, JPEG)

15fps (mech)

23fps (e-shutter)

11fps (mech)

8fps (e-shutter)

11 fps (12-bit Raw)

9 fps (14-bit)

Viewfinder res. / mag. 2.36M dot 0.68x 2.36M dot
0.59x
2.36M dot 0.71x 2.36M-dot 0.68x
Rear screen res. / type 3.2″ / 1.04M dot fully-articulated 3.0″ / 1.04M dot fully-articulated 3.0″ / 921k dot tilting touchscreen 3.0″ / 1.04M-dot fully-articulating
AF selection Touchscreen / D-pad Touchscreen / joystick Touchscreen / D-pad Touchscreen / D-pad
Video UHD 30p full-width

UHD 60p with 1.5x crop

UHD 30p full-width

UHD 60p from 1.56x crop

UHD 24p full width

30p with 1.22x crop

UHD 30p/24p full-width
10-bit options N-Log, HLG HDR PQ No No
Mic / headphone sockets? Yes / Yes Yes / No Yes / No Yes / No
CIPA Battery rating (LCD/EVF) 250 / 230 350 / 210 410 / 360 360 / 310
Weight 520g (18.3 oz) 426g (15oz) 403 g (14.2oz) 445g (15.7oz)
Dimensions 127 x 97 x 67mm (5.0 x 3.8 x 2.6″) 126 x 88 x 83 mm (5.0 x 3.5 x 3.3″) 120 x 67 x 60 mm (4.7 x 2.6 x 2.4″) 135 x 94 x 44 mm (5.3 x 3.7 x 1.7″)

As well as advances in technology, another change since we reviewed the Z50 is that both Nikon and Canon have allowed some third-party lenses into their respective APS-C systems. In the case of Nikon, that includes three of Sigma’s DC DN prime lenses, which add relatively affordable ways to boost the camera’s capabilities. Canon, meanwhile, has allowed Sigma to offer its two DC DN zooms, with four prime lenses to follow.

This still leaves both systems well short of the variety of APS-C focused lenses offered for Fujifilm’s X mount, or of the selection available for Sony, but means you’re not solely dependent on the camera maker’s development priorities for either camera anymore.


Body and handling

Nikon Z50II-top-plate

The body of the Z50II is very much like that of its predecessor, which is to say it’s like a slightly shrunk-down version of Nikon’s original Z-series full-frame models. Despite the size reduction, the Z50II retains a fairly substantial hand grip.

The body is primarily made from fiber-reinforced plastic, which gives it a fairly solid feel without becoming overly heavy. There’s a textured coating around the handgrip and the back corner of the camera that gives a comfortable and reassuring amount of grip on the camera. The front and rear command dials are well positioned for forefinger and thumb operation without any need to shift your hand position on the camera.

Nikon z50ii rear with screen displaying menu

It gains four extra buttons along the back of the camera, compared with its predecessor, which means its controls much more closely mimic those of the full-frame Z models, with dedicated +/– zoom buttons, a drive mode button and a ‘DISP’ button being added. There’s an additional button on the top of the camera, too: just behind the existing [REC], ISO and Exposure Comp buttons is a dedicated ‘Picture Control’ button.

It doesn’t gain the joystick that the full-frame models have, though, and the Stills/Movie switch they feature around their DISP buttons is instead on the Z50II’s top plate. The Play and Drive Mode buttons are transposed relative to the full-frame models, but we doubt enough people will be trying to shoot both side-by-side for this difference to matter).

The Z50II also moves from a tilt up/down screen to a fully articulated one, as featured on the Zfc and Z30. Nikon has described all four of its APS-C Z-mount models as being for ‘creators,’ so this change is no real surprise.

Viewfinder & screen

nikon z50ii rear with screen flipped out

The Z50II’s viewfinder can now go as bright as 1000 nits: twice as bright as the one in the older model, which should mean there’s less need for your eye to adapt when you’re using the camera in bright sunshine. It’s not bright enough to fully preview HLG images, though.

It remains a relatively low resolution 2.36M dot display, in keeping with the Z50II’s lowly position in the lineup. It offers 0.68x magnification, in equivalent terms, which is pretty large for a camera at this price.

Ports & slots

Nikon Z50II ports

The Z50II’s specs tell the story of how far we’ve come in the five years since the launch of the original model. Its SD card slot can now make full use of the faster UHS-II cards, while its USB socket has been upgraded to the Type C standard and 5Gbit/s transfer rates. It’s also been made compatible with the UVC/UAC USB video and audio standards, so it can be used as a webcam without the need for any specialist drivers or software.

The camera also gains a headphone socket to allow audio monitoring, something that really boosts its usefulness as a video camera.

Battery

Nikon Z50II battery

The Z50II uses a new EN-EL25a battery, which sees the capacity increase from 8.5Wh to 9.4Wh. Despite this 10% increase, the CIPA battery ratings for the Z50II are 250 shots per charge using the rear screen and 230 using the viewfinder. These are around 20% lower than on its predecessor, presumably as a consequence of the more powerful processor.

CIPA figures tend to assume extensive use of flash and rather more looking at image review than most people actually do, so we wouldn’t be at all surprised to get twice as many shots as this in our own usage, more if we were shooting bursts. You can also gain around 9 percent more shots if you engage power-saving mode, but these aren’t great figures for a camera you might want to use a lot.

As you’d expect, the camera can be charged over its USB-C socket, so there are ways to top the battery up fairly easily. However, it does not come with a battery charger in the box.


Initial impressions

By Mitchell Clark

Nikon Z50II Quarter view kit lens

From a certain angle, the Z50II is a minor update to its predecessor. It has the same sensor housed in a similar body and doesn’t add anything revolutionary – there are no features that are unheard of for its category or that make us rethink what’s possible with photography.

That’s not a bad thing. The Z50II’s main audience is first-time camera buyers, and when I think back to when I was getting into photography, the Z50II would’ve been exactly what I was looking for – something that gets the basics right without costing an arm and a leg.

I only got to spend a day shooting with the Z50II, but during that time nothing about it felt budget. The ergonomics and build quality felt just right for its size, and its performance was snappy; I never felt like I was waiting around for the camera or that it couldn’t shoot fast enough to capture whatever I pointed it at.

The autofocus, in particular, was a standout. We’ve praised Nikon’s 3D Tracking system and subject recognition before, and it’s just as capable in the Z50II. In the past, the autofocus situation on beginner-focused cameras has been awkward: people who aren’t experienced need the most help, but the most capable systems are also the most expensive ones, so they don’t make it into lower-end cameras. That’s not the case with the Z50II.

DSC 0198
The Z50II’s autofocus system was confidence-inspiring, even in automatic subject detect mode.

ISO 100 | 1/400 sec | F4 | Nikon Z 70-200mm f2.8 VR S w/ 1.4x teleconverter

Photo: Mitchell Clark

It even features automatic subject detection, giving you one less thing to think about when you’re scrambling to get the shot. That’d be great for parents looking to get great shots of their kids playing sports – or pet owners looking to show off their fast-moving dogs and cats – without breaking the bank.

The video features are also robust, to the point where it feels like Nikon’s targeting not just content creators but first-year film students, too. Beginner photographers who also want to capture video will be happy with its standard 4K capabilities, but they won’t have any use for features like N-Log and waveforms.

Then there’s the Picture Control button. I’m not entirely convinced color profiles are the thing to draw new people into photography, but camera manufacturers seem to disagree – this year we saw Panasonic debut its LUT button, and Fujifilm release two cameras with film simulation dials.

Nikon_Z50ii_in_hand_top_plate

Even if the crowds are craving color control, the indirectness of Nikon’s system could make it a little tricky for beginners. You don’t beam them directly from your phone to your camera; you select which ones you want in Nikon’s app, and then your camera downloads them via Wi-Fi. My years in tech support tell me there will be some confusion based on the camera needing to be connected to the internet on its own.

The real elephant in the room is lenses. The company makes five ‘DX’ lenses for its APS-C systems: a single prime and four zooms with maximum apertures of 3.5 or higher. There are several third-party autofocus primes, including some of the very good Sigma DC DN Contemporaries, but if you want a zoom with a consistent or fast aperture, you’ll have to use a heavier, more expensive full-frame option from Nikon.

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Reader photos of the year: Show us your best image from 2024

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Panasonic S5IIX and Lumix S 28-200mm F4-7.1 | ISO 1600 | 1/200 sec | F4.5

Photo: Dale Baskin

The DPReview community is full of talented photographers, and we want to showcase your best photos of 2024 on DPReview.

What was your top shot this year? Share one image you captured in 2024 and tell us about it. Make sure to tell us the story behind the photo in the caption and why you chose it as your photo of the year. Pick carefully – you can only submit one photo!

Submissions will open on Sunday, December 3rd, and you have until Tuesday, December 9 (GMT) to submit entries. You can read the full rules on the ‘Your best photo of 2024’ challenge page.

Essential details: If you want your photo to be featured among our Editors’ picks on the DPReview homepage, you must include a title and a caption that tells us the story behind the picture and why you chose it (minimum of 25 words).

DPReview editors will review every photo you submit, and we’ll publish our favorites in a slideshow on the DPReview homepage later this month.

We’re using our challenge system to host submissions, so other readers can also vote for your photo. User voting will inform DPReview Editors’ picks but will not select them. They are one factor in our evaluation.

Click here to visit the contest page and read the full rules



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Do you want to shape and create content for one of the world’s largest audiences of photography and video enthusiasts? DPReview is hiring! We have two open positions: a News Editor and a Community Coordinator who will help support our online forums and user community. We can’t wait to hear from you.

Please note that these are US-based positions.


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Full-time (Seattle, WA or remote)

Role overview

DPReview is seeking a full-time News Editor to join our growing Editorial team.

The News Editor role at DPReview requires an experienced technical writer who thrives in a fast-paced environment and possesses a deep understanding of digital photography and the camera industry. The News Editor’s primary responsibility is to report on camera and photo industry news, industry trends, and photography culture, including context and analysis that reflect DPReview’s thought leadership in the industry.

Qualified candidates will be capable of independently researching news and information, writing, editing and delivering publication-ready content. They should be able to efficiently and effectively monitor industry news and trends to identify relevant stories from sources including manufacturers, PR representatives, online resources and social media. Additionally, they must be strong collaborators who can work closely with DPReview’s Editorial team to add a unique perspective to news and other short-form articles.

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Like all successful DPReview team members, candidates must be goal-focused self-starters who maintain an agile mindset, operate independently, lead by example, communicate effectively across all channels, and are productive in a remote work environment.
This role will report to the Managing Editor but will work closely with the entire DPReview team in a cross-functional environment.

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DPReview is seeking a part-time Community Coordinator to join our growing Editorial team.

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Qualified candidates will have experience working with or managing an online community or interest group, including community moderation, fostering clear communication between community members and moderators, and a passion for creating a positive and inclusive community environment. Candidates should have an interest in cameras and editorial experience, ideally for a technical publication. Knowledge about photography and related technology, familiarity with the camera market, and experience working with volunteers are strongly preferred.

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Like all successful DPReview team members, candidates must be able to lead by example, possess excellent communication skills, and be productive in a remote work environment.
This role will report to the Managing Editor.

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Nikon's limited edition Z fc is now slightly less limited

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The Heralbony Z fcs feature patterns designed by artists, rather than the solid color that the camera usually comes with.

Image: Nikon

Nikon has announced that its limited edition Z fc, designed in collaboration with Heralbony, will now be available in the US. The designs were announced in September but hadn’t been available in the States.

According to Nikon, Heralbony is a “Japanese-based creative company working with neurodiverse artists.” Each of the four Heralbony editions of the Z fc features a pattern from a different artist on the leatherette-inspired wrap across the front of the camera, as well as on the top of the viewfinder and rear grip.

Nikon z fc heralbony rear
Image: Nikon

The Heralbony versions don’t cost extra compared to the normal colors, though they are only available in a $1,199 kit with the DX 16-50 F3.5-6.3 lens; you can’t buy just the body with the design or have it retroactively applied to an existing Z fc.

$1,199 at Nikon



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