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CameraCreatorsSonyTech

Sony launches the fifth-generation RX10 V superzoom

The RX10 V is Sony’s one-camera solution for shooters who want reach without swapping lenses.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
Shubham Sawarkar's avatar
ByShubham Sawarkar
Editor-in-Chief
I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Jul 10, 2026, 9:00 AM EDT
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Sony RX10 V front top view
Image: Sony
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Sony has just unveiled the RX10 V, the fifth generation of its cult-favorite superzoom camera, and it’s clear the company is doubling down on the “do-it-all” ethos that made the RX10 line such a hit among travelers, wildlife enthusiasts, and sports shooters. This isn’t a radical departure from the RX10 IV, but rather a thoughtful evolution—one that blends the convenience of an all-in-one body with features borrowed from Sony’s high-end Alpha mirrorless cameras.

At the heart of the RX10 V is a 24–600mm ZEISS Vario-Sonnar T* lens, offering a 25x optical zoom with a bright f/2.4–4.0 aperture. That’s a range wide enough to capture sweeping landscapes and tight enough to frame a bird perched hundreds of feet away. Sony has paired this with a 20.1-megapixel stacked Exmor RS CMOS sensor and its BIONZ XR processor, giving the camera the horsepower to shoot blackout-free bursts at up to 30 frames per second, while crunching 60 autofocus and auto-exposure calculations every second. In practice, this means you can lock onto fast-moving subjects—whether it’s a soccer player sprinting downfield or a falcon diving midair—and trust the camera to keep them sharp.

The big headline feature is Sony’s AI-powered Real-time Recognition autofocus. It doesn’t just track people and pets; it can identify birds, insects, cars, trains, and even airplanes. Human pose estimation helps the camera stay locked on a subject even if they turn away or wear sunglasses or helmets. For wildlife photographers, this could be a game-changer—no more fumbling with focus when a subject suddenly shifts.

  • Sony RX10 V front
  • Sony RX10 V left view
  • Sony RX10 V rear view
  • Sony RX10 V top view
  • Sony RX10 V lens

Video shooters aren’t left out either. The RX10 V records 4K at up to 120p, enabling buttery-smooth slow motion at up to 5x. It also brings over cinematic color profiles like S-Cinetone and S-Log3, plus support for importing LUTs—tools usually reserved for professional workflows. Add in Active Mode stabilization and Auto Framing powered by AI, and you’ve got a camera that’s equally comfortable shooting a family vacation vlog or a short film.

Sony has also addressed some practical pain points. The RX10 V uses the beefier NP-FZ100 battery, extending still shooting to around 630 shots per charge—about 50% more than its predecessor. The electronic viewfinder has been upgraded to a Quad-VGA OLED with 3.68 million dots, while the rear LCD now boasts 1.62 million dots. The body design borrows from the Alpha series, with a more ergonomic grip and intuitive button layout, plus dust- and moisture-resistance for those who shoot in unpredictable conditions.

Of course, all this comes at a price: $2,299.99 in the U.S. when it ships on August 6, 2026. That’s not cheap, but the RX10 series has always been about offering a professional-grade tool in a single package, without the hassle of swapping lenses. For many shooters—especially those who value portability and versatility—the RX10 V could be the one camera that truly does it all.

Sony’s Yang Cheng, VP of Imaging Solutions, summed it up best: the RX10 series became a cult classic because it was “a joy to shoot with in real-life scenarios, and its range is unparalleled in a compact camera body.” With the RX10 V, Sony seems intent on keeping that reputation intact, while nudging the line closer to its Alpha siblings.

In a market where smartphones have eaten much of the casual camera segment, the RX10 V stands as a reminder that dedicated cameras still have a place—especially when they can deliver reach, speed, and creative flexibility that no phone can match. For birders, sports parents, or anyone who wants one camera to cover nearly every scenario, Sony’s latest superzoom might just be the sweet spot.


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