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Your price for this item is $1,149.95

Customer reviews

Rating 4.9 out of 5 stars with 7 reviews

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86%
would recommend
to a friend

Customers are saying

Customers frequently mention the good image quality of the Z50II Mirrorless Camera, including its noise performance. There are no cons mentioned for this product.

This summary was generated by AI based on customer reviews.

The vast majority of our reviews come from verified purchases. Reviews from customers may include My Best Buy members, employees, and Tech Insider Network members (as tagged). Select reviewers may receive discounted products, promotional considerations or entries into drawings for honest, helpful reviews.
Page 1 Showing 1-7 of 7 reviews
  • Pros mentioned:
    Image quality

    Rated 5 out of 5 stars

    GREAT NIKON - Z50II

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    Posted . Owned for 3 weeks when reviewed.
    This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.

    Feature Why It’s Beneficial Expeed 7 processor This is a big upgrade over the original Z50. It improves autofocus, burst performance, and video processing. Z System User +3 DPReview +3 TechRadar +3 Strong autofocus / subject detection The camera supports detection modes for people, animals, birds, vehicles, etc. DPReview +3 TechRadar +3 Nikon +3 Improved burst & buffer You get up to 11 fps with the mechanical shutter. The buffer is reported to handle up to ~200 RAW frames in favorable conditions. Photography Life +2 DPReview +2 Modern video capabilities You gain 10-bit N-Log recording, better video feature set (waveform, hi-res zoom, etc.), and 4K/60p (with 1.5× crop) in addition to 4K/30p uncropped. UW Photography Guide +3 Nikon +3 TechRadar +3 Articulating (fully vari-angle) touchscreen Helpful for video, vlogging, low-angle shots, or selfies. DPReview +2 Photography Life +2 Ergonomics & control layout improvements Reviewers note that the grip is more comfortable, button layout more refined, plus added “real” buttons versus virtual ones. Z System User +2 PetaPixel +2 UHS-II card slot and USB-C improvements Faster data handling and direct charging/USB connectivity. TechRadar +2 Nikon +2 Good image quality & noise performance In everyday use, the sensor (20.9 MP APS-C) produces clean, pleasing images, and noise control is solid for this class. UW Photography Guide +3 TechRadar +3 DPReview +3 So overall, it’s a very capable “hybrid” camera for both stills and video, with features that stretch beyond just entry-level. Limitations & Things to Be Aware Of No camera is perfect. Here are some of the caveats and potential drawbacks you might encounter: Limitation Impact / What to Watch For No in-body image stabilization (IBIS) You’ll rely on lens stabilization (VR on kit lens or VR in future lenses) or faster shutter speeds to avoid camera shake. TechRadar +3 Photography Life +3 DPReview +3 Battery life is modest The EN-EL25a battery is small. CIPA ratings are around 230 (EVF) / 250 (LCD) shots; in real-world use, you’ll want backups. Z System User +3 Amateur Photographer +3 Photography Life +3 Crop on 4K/60p mode To get 60 fps in 4K, the sensor is cropped (1.5×), which limits your field of view. TechRadar +2 UW Photography Guide +2 Viewfinder blackout in continuous shooting During fast bursts, the EVF can blackout, which makes following action a bit tricky. Photography Life +2 Z System User +2 Resolution is modest by modern standards 20.9 MP is plenty for many uses, but if you’re after extremely high resolution (for large prints or heavy cropping), higher-MP models may outperform it. TechRadar +2 Amateur Photographer +2 Some ergonomic trade-offs While improved, the body is somewhat heavier than ultra-compact mirrorless cameras. PetaPixel Single card slot There’s only one SD slot (UHS-II). For professional work with redundancy, that’s a limitation. DPReview +1 How Well It Serves in Practice (Your Use Case) To tailor the review a bit more: depending on how you use it (portraits, landscapes, sports, video, etc.), here’s where it shines or where you’ll want to adapt: Portraits, travel, general photography — Excellent choice. The autofocus, image quality, and flexible controls are very solid. Video / vlogging — Strong option. The vari-angle screen, 10-bit N-Log, and video-friendly features make it a competitive pick. Just watch for the crop in 4K60 and lack of stabilization. Action / sports / wildlife — It can perform respectably, but the viewfinder blackout and limited buffering might become constraints in very fast sequences. Low-light / hand-held shooting — Without IBIS, you’ll want to use lenses with VR or maintain good technique (steady hands, faster shutter speeds). Professional / mission-critical work — The single card slot and battery constraints mean you’ll want redundancy and backup gear. Tips & Recommendations for Getting the Most Out of It Have extra batteries and/or a power bank if you're doing extended shooting sessions. Use good quality UHS-II SD cards to maximize write speeds and buffer clearing. Pair it with VR (Vibration Reduction) lenses to compensate for no IBIS. When shooting video, test how much crop you’re comfortable with (especially in 4K/60 mode). Explore the subject-detection AF modes for people, animals, etc., to take advantage of the newer autofocus features. Keep firmware updated—Nikon may roll out fixes and improvements over time.

    I would recommend this to a friend
  • Pros mentioned:
    Image quality

    Rated 5 out of 5 stars

    LOVE IT...

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    Posted . Owned for 1 month when reviewed.
    This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.

    just the perfect size, excellent for traveling, great quality

    I would recommend this to a friend
  • Rated 5 out of 5 stars

    A rookie pro photographer

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    Posted . Owned for 3 weeks when reviewed.
    This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.

    It’s the first I had this compact mirror less camera. I find it easy to learn how to use it with simple instructions/suggestions to follow. Before I have point and shoot camera, at my age of 76 years old I thought I will have problem using it. I just came back on tour in Europe and to my surprise, all my pictures are sooo beautiful. I felt like a real pro photographer.

    I would recommend this to a friend
  • Pros mentioned:
    Image quality

    Rated 5 out of 5 stars

    best purchase ever

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    Posted . Owned for 3 weeks when reviewed.
    This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.

    Finally got to use this on July 5th for my BBQ Business promo Photo shoot man these pictures came out awesome best choice I made for this purchase

    I would recommend this to a friend
  • Pros mentioned:
    Image quality

    Rated 5 out of 5 stars

    Nikon

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    Posted . Owned for 1 month when reviewed.
    This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.

    I absolutely love this camera! It takes really good quality pictures. Still trying to figure out all the different settings.

    I would recommend this to a friend
  • Rated 4 out of 5 stars

    Buy the Z5ii. The Z50ii falls short IMO...

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    Posted . Owned for 2 months when reviewed.
    This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.

    So the Z50ii....although it's an improvement over the Z50...it failed in a few areas: 1) It should have dual SD card slots 2) The battery is basically the same battery and doesn't last long enough. 3) Lack of built-in image stabilization is a major flaw, as it forces you to buy lenses with VR, and there are very few options. For those reasons, this ended up being returned for the Z5ii, which has all of the above for only a couple hundred dollars more, and on top of that is a full frame camera with many more lens options, and pretty much better everything. Not to mention I got free one year Adobe Lightroom software thru Nikon's website by registering my Nikon Z5ii. Luckily, as a BestBuy Total member, I had 60 days to figure this all out before making the upgrade to the Z5ii...

    No, I would not recommend this to a friend
  • Rated 5 out of 5 stars

    Nikon

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    Posted .
    This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.

    I have always liked Nikon, it feels like a real old time camera. Sturdy.

    I would recommend this to a friend