Nikon D850 FX-Format Digital SLR Camera Body

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Price history for Nikon D850 FX-Format Digital SLR Camera Body
Latest updates:
  • $2,196.95 - October 29, 2024
  • $2,496.95 - October 27, 2024
  • $1,510.00 - October 12, 2024
Since: October 12, 2024
  • Highest Price: $2,496.95 - October 27, 2024
  • Lowest Price: $1,510.00 - October 12, 2024
Last Amazon price update was: January 7, 2025 20:36
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Nikon D850 FX-Format Digital SLR Camera Body
Nikon D850 FX-Format Digital SLR Camera Body

Original price was: $2,996.95.Current price is: $2,196.95.

Nikon D850 FX-Format Digital SLR Camera Body Price comparison

Nikon D850 FX-Format Digital SLR Camera Body Price History

Price History for Nikon D850 FX-Format Digital SLR Camera Body

Statistics

Current Price $2,196.95 January 7, 2025
Highest Price $2,496.95 October 27, 2024
Lowest Price $1,510.00 October 12, 2024
Since October 12, 2024

Last price changes

$2,196.95 October 29, 2024
$2,496.95 October 27, 2024
$1,510.00 October 12, 2024

Nikon D850 FX-Format Digital SLR Camera Body Description

  • Nikon designed back side illuminated (BSI) full frame image sensor with no optical low pass filter
  • 45.7 megapixels of extraordinary resolution, outstanding dynamic range and virtually no risk of moirรฉ
  • Up to 9 fps1 continuous shooting at full resolution with full AF performance
  • 8k6 and 4k time lapse movies with new levels of sharpness and detail; file system : DCF 2.0, exif 2.31, Pict bridge
  • Tilting touchscreen, focus shift shooting mode, outstanding battery performance and much more; total pixels: 46.89 million
  • 4K Ultra HD video recording, slow motion up to 120 FPS at 1080p

Nikon D850 FX-Format Digital SLR Camera Body Specification

Specification: Nikon D850 FX-Format Digital SLR Camera Body

Display Fixture Type

tilting

Has Color Screen

Yes

Display Resolution Maximum

2359K dots

Display Type

LCD

Dots Per Screen (m)

2.36

Screen Size (Inches)

3.2

Bit Depth (Bit)

14

Effective Still Resolution (MP)

45.7

JPEG Quality Level

Basic, Fine, Normal

Supported Image Format

JPEG, RAW, TIFF

Aspect Ratio

1.50:1

File Format

JPEG, Raw, TIFF

Zoom

Digital Zoom, Optical Zoom

Optical Zoom (x)

1

Lens Type

Fisheye

Recording Capacity (minutes)

30

Flash Memory Type

Slot 1: SD/SDHC/SDXC (UHS-II)Slot 2: CFexpress Type B, XQD

Memory Slots Available

2

Global Trade Identification Number

00018208015856

ASIN

B07524LHMT

UPC

018208954117,018208015856

Are Batteries Included

Yes

Model Number

1585

Remote Included

No

Brand

Nikon

Model Name

Nikon D850

Age Range Description

Adult

Built-In Media

Battery

Image Capture Type

Stills & Video

Movie Mode

Yes

Digital-Still

Yes

Shooting Modes

Fotograma a fotograma, continuo a baja velocidad, continuo a alta velocidad),Obturador silencioso, Obturador silencioso continuo,Disparador automรกtico, Espejo arriba.

Self Timer

2 seconds, 20 seconds, 10 seconds, 5 seconds

White Balance Settings

Auto, Incandescent, Daylight, Color Temperature, Fluorescent, Cloudy, Flash torch, Shade

Exposure Control

aperture-priority

Metering Methods

Center Weighted

Total USB 2.0 Ports

1

Total USB Ports

1

Total USB 3.0 Ports

1

Video Output

Mini-HDMI

Connectivity Technology

Bluetooth, USB, HDMI, NFC

Wireless Technology

Bluetooth, Wi-Fi

Mount Type

Bayonet

Item Dimensions D x W x H

3.1"D x 5.7"W x 4.9"H

Viewfinder Coverage Percentage

1

Eye Relief (Millimeters)

17

MicrophoneTechnology

Stereo

Shutter Type

Focal Plane Shutter, Electronic

Mounting Thread Type

1/4-20

Audio Recording

Yes

Is Electric

Yes

Number of Batteries

1 Lithium Ion batteries required. (included)

Enclosure Material

Magnesium Alloy

Has Image Stabilization

Yes

Analog Video Format

NTSC/PAL

Lens Mount

Nikon F

Continuous Shooting (fps)

9

Viewfinder Magnification (x)

0.75

Flash Sync Speed

1/250 Second

Video Capture Format (k)

4

Expanded ISO Maximum

102400

Battery Weight (Grams)

10

Battery Cell Type

Lithium Ion

Battery Type

Lithium Ion

Processor Description

expeed 5

Water Resistance Level

Water Resistant

Compatible Mountings

Nikon DX, Nikon FX

Sensor Type

CMOS

Image stabilization

Optical

Maximum Aperture (Millimeters)

5.6

Expanded ISO Minimum

32

Photo Sensor Resolution (MP)

45.7

Focus Mode

Automatic AF (AF-A), Continuous-Servo AF (AF-C), Manual Focus (MF), Single-Servo AF (AF-S)

Autofocus

Yes

Phase Detection Sensor Points

99

Autofocus Points

153

Focus Type

manual-and-auto

Auto Focus Technology

Phase Detection

Focus Features

autofocus self-illumination light

Nikon D850 FX-Format Digital SLR Camera Body Reviews (8)

8 reviews for Nikon D850 FX-Format Digital SLR Camera Body

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  1. Dean R.

    Estava com medo de comprar uma cรขmera tรฃo cara em uma loja que nรฃo conhecia, resolvi comprar na Amazon pela seguranรงa na entrega e sabia q se desse algum problema eu seria reembolsado. Mas deu tudo certo, o vendedor foi muito atencioso e despachou a cรขmera no mesmo dia, foi sรณ esperar o Sedex chegar.

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  2. Itacir

    Excelente cรกmara.
    Tecnolรณgicamente tiene lo mejor. Pero lo principal en cuanto a calidad de imagen es excelente, tiene un rango dinรกmico muy alto, el manejo de ISO lo puedes llevar a los 6400 sin que se note mucho. La calidad de la imagen tambiรฉn estรก ligado a los lentes que le pongas, en general cualquier lente prime te va a dar muy buenos resultados, yo uso un 85mm 1.8 G, el 50mm 1.4D y el 135mm AF DC con excelentes resultados. Entre las prestaciones que me gustan es reducciรณn de ruido al tomar fotos, para no molestar a las perdonar al hacer los disparos, sobre todo en iglesias. Tambiรฉn la pantalla tรกctil, con la vista previa en la pantalla puedes enfocar y hacer la toma.
    Tiene un buffer de memoria muy grande haces varias fotos en rรกfaga y es muy raro que tengas que esperar a hacer la siguiente toma porque este grabando.
    Tambiรฉn tiene sus cosas que no me gustan: en cuanto a video, le batalla para enfocar personas o cosas en movimiento. Lo otro que no me gusta es que tenga un slot para memorias xqd, son excelentes memorias pero muy muy caras, y como una foto en Raw puede pesar hasta 98mb, pronto te das cuenta que la memoria de 32gb xqd que compraste no es suficiente para un sesiรณn.
    Tiene muchas mรกs prestaciones algunas no las he utilizado como:
    El fotostacking.
    Tomรกs remotas con dispositivos mรณviles con la aplicaciรณn de nikon.
    Hacer tomas en 24mb en lugar de 48 en Raw.

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  3. J. York

    I do freelance sports photography for the local newspaper, and I was using a Nikon D750, and it worked pretty well. It worked well in low light, it shot 6.5 fps and it is a 24 megapixel camera. But, I knew that I could do better. For sports I needed a lot of fps and the shots focus had to be crisp. I use the Nikon 300mm f/2.8 super prime most of the time for outdoor events. The picture of the goalkeeper diving for the ball was taken from the other end of the field. I’ll tell you, at 9 fps (I have a grip on it with the bigger battery) and 46 megapixels, my shots have gotten so much better. I shoot softball and baseball through cyclone fencing, and you can’t even tell. I think that I don’t have to push the ISO up as far on those evening soccer games. I have done a little bit of portrait work and some landscape shots with this camera and it can put your talents to the test. I would recommend using a tripod when you can. With that many megapixels, you have to be careful if you are shooting at lower speeds…all of your little movement mistakes show up. Just be sure to have a big enough XQD card in this camera, because you are going to be taking a lot of pictures (7 fps out of the box). Also, you have a lot more keepers with this camera because the focussing system is pretty darn good (same as the D5). Oh, and the silent shooting, is really silent….like no sound silent.
    So, whatever your style of photography is, sports, landscapes, portrait, product, wildlife, etc., you will probably really enjoy this camera. Good luck.

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  4. J. York

    I’ve had this camera for a couple of months now and am really pleased with my decision to upgrade from the Nikon D810.

    Image quality is really not that different from my D810 but this camera does nail the white balance far more frequently than the D810 did. This saves me a lot of time in post processing.

    Where this camera really blows away the D810 is with the focus engine. Whether it’s up to D5 levels or not, it is light years ahead of the D810. I set the D850 to AF-C with dynamic-area (25) focus and simply spray-shot as my two dogs ran around the yard near dusk. The results were shockingly good as the D850 continued to nail shot after shot. With my D810, a play session with the dogs might yield 5-10 usable shots out of several hundred taken. With the D850, I had well over 100 perfectly-focused shots of the frenetic dogs; this was without the benefit of direct sunlight. I shot those with my 85mm F1.4G at F1.4, ISO 1250, and 1/2000 shutter speed. Noise was really low (though visible when you zoom in to 100% view). Fortunately, the noise is fairly easy to clean up in post processing.

    The touchscreen is nice and I use it more than I thought I would. Scrolling/zooming an image is not as fast as a smartphone, but it’s very good and not painfully laggy. The tilt screen (which tilts both upwards and downwards) is a great addition that lets you set the camera on the floor to capture a crawling baby without having to lay on your stomach.

    45MP is a lot of data. I shoot RAW and I learned this weekend that I can fill a 32GB card in a matter of minutes when doing action photography. For that reason, I moved to a 128GB card. I went with the Sony G UHS-II SD card and performance is magnificent. I considered a 128GB XQD, but I already had a good SD reader and at the time I needed them, XQD cards and readers were in short supply. Due to the extremely good performance of the Sony G UHS-II SD cards, I’m content to stick with SD even though I know XQD can be faster. Either way, 32GB (~300 shots) is not enough storage for this camera if you shoot RAW so plan on a large card.

    As a former owner of a D700 and then the D810, I can tell you that as an owner of either of those, you’ll be thrilled with this camera. If you’re still using the magnificent D700, be prepared for image handling to be drastically slower unless you’ve recently upgraded your computer. If you’ve already jumped to 36MP, then going to 45MP is not really a noticeable difference.

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  5. John W.

    This camera is possibly my favorite thing I’ve ever purchased. It’s an absolute beast. My wife and I are both photographers of different types. She does portrait photography (newborn, family, etc) and I do landscape/astrophotography. For years we’ve been on the very-mid-range D5200. We bought it while we were still both working part time in school, so we had to go for the best one we could on the extremely limited budget we had. While it has served us well, it’s obviously a cropped sensor body and it was time to upgrade to full frame, and many years later we’re in a far better place financially. (READ: No more school tuition and full time job yay) We figured if we’re going to spend the money on full frame, we might as well get the “dream camera”, so to speak, and not feel like we need to upgrade again soon.

    And so we come to the D850. Lots of research went into the decision to go with the D850, there is no shortage of videos and reading material about it, it’s a landmark camera body for many reasons. Sure it’s pricey, but this sucker is going to last us for years and years. I’ll try to touch on all my personal favorite points, but there are literally so many that I’ll probably forget some, but here we go.

    Body:
    Super well designed, comfortable, if not a tad on the heavy side. It’s a beast of a camera though, so I can absolutely forgive the weight, and it’s by no means uncomfortably heavy. Just a tad heavier than I would have thought. The weatherproofing is excellent. You can watch tons of review videos where you’ll see them leaving the camera on a tripod in rainy weather to do a timelapse, and then they simply dry it off with a towel later. As a result of the weather proofing there is no built-in popup flash to make it far more sealed off. This doesn’t bother me at all because I never use that flash, if I need flash I’ll use an external one.

    Autofocus:
    If you know anything about the D850, you’ll know that the autofocus in the body is industry leading. (the same autofocus as the D5) A huge number of autofocus points, incredible focus speed, it’s absolutely incredible. I will simply leave this at what I’ve said so far since that’s really all that needs to be said. It’s awesome.

    Controls:
    Having come from the D5200 I feel like the controls are much more intuitive and better placed so as to be more ergonomic. They feel much higher quality than the D5200 which just helps with the overall premium nature of this camera. As a person who loves to do astrophotography, one of my favorite tiny improvements is the illuminated buttons! I don’t know how I survived without that before this. It’s one of those quality of life improvements that just makes so much sense when you finally have it.

    Memory Card Slots:
    So as I’m sure you’re aware by now, this camera has two slots. One SD slot and one XQD slot. I originally thought I wouldn’t get an XQD card, they’re so much more expensive than their SD card equivalents, and I hadn’t done much research into them, so I thought they were basically a chunkier SD card. I have since done the research and bought a 240 GB capacity card. The read/write speed is seriously blazing fast. Basically it can keep up with the D850, whereas an SD card by itself will start slowing you down during continuous shooting because it can’t clear the buffer fast enough. Transfer speeds to my computer are so much faster than my SD card. (note that you do need to buy a card reader for it) It’s also incredibly durable which is a great thing to not worry about when you’re in more rugged environments. My only complaint about the D850 now that I’ve bought into the XQD vision is that they only have one XQD slot and one SD card slot. I understand that XQD isn’t widely adopted right now, and that increases the barrier to entry for this camera, but I do wish that there were two XQD card slots in this camera rather than one of each. I have a large enough card, however, that I haven’t had a big enough session that I started writing to the SD card yet, so that’s not that big of a deal. (I usually remove everything off the card when I import right after my session, so I always start at empty)

    Touchscreen/Live View:
    I was skeptical that I would ever use the touchscreen aspect of the screen but I must say I was wrong. I use it very often. The screen itself is large, bright, and great resolution. You can pinch to zoom on your pictures and zoom in to see some incredible detail this camera takes. (something I couldn’t really do before until I was on my computer) It tilts up and down, a really handy feature that I forget about too often. (as I stand on my tiptoes to see when the camera is up high, I suddenly realize I don’t need to do that, the screen tilts) Live View is also incredible on this camera, again I use it far more than I thought I would. You can even autofocus on specific areas/objects by simply tapping the screen. It’s incredibly useful, and the screen is high enough quality that it really does your pictures justice. Very impressed with it.

    Timelapse:
    You can create a 4k timelapse video right in-camera. You can even create an 8k timelapse using the interval mode and the full resolution photos able to be taken by the D850, although this is not stitched together in-camera, so you’ll need to do that yourself. There are some incredible timelapses out there produced by the D850 that you can watch, the image quality is exceptional. You can also use Silent Live View mode, and that’ll not use any mechanical shutter. As stated in the camera’s product description, this is great for saving on shutter cycles and improving battery performance.

    Video:
    In addition to the photography I enjoy, I love shooting video. As everyone knows, Nikon doesn’t do as well as Canon in this regard. Of all Nikon’s cameras, the D850 appears to be the best when it comes to shooting video. The autofocus while shooting video is not good, so you’d better settle on using manual focus. None of this means that the D850 will produce bad video. If you know how to work around some of the annoyances and less-than-stellar features, you’ll get video that is just fine. Most of us, however, aren’t getting the D850 for shooting video, so let’s talk about the true purpose of this camera.

    Image Quality:
    Thus we arrive to the most important aspect of any camera review, the image quality. This is actually a section where I have very little to say, partly because I covered a lot of supporting info, and the other part because it’s quite simple. This camera is a beast. It’s got a whopping 45.7 megapixels. This was a major upgrade for me, coming from the 24.1 megapixels in my D5200. I’m incredibly impressed with the sheer amount of data collected in the RAW images especially coming from my D5200. The amount of detail I can bring out in post is impressive. As such, the RAW files are very large, so hopefully you have plenty of storage space. It has great low-light capabilities, and the autofocus works surprisingly well even in low light. I can’t think of a single complaint about this category, which speaks to the incredible images this camera produces.

    If you can afford it, I can’t recommend this camera enough. It’s an incredible piece of technology, one of the best cameras you can buy. If you are looking for an incredible full frame DSLR with no compromises (minus video of course) then look no further than the Nikon D850.

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  6. Amazon Customer

    An incredible piece of technology. Image quality is just spectacular, auto focus is fast and accurate, the screen and touch capabilities look and work fantastically. 7FPS is good but I have got the grip for 9FPS functionality. Expensive but worth the investment if you’re looking for a serious camera for years to come. The weather sealing also seems durable, I’ve had this drenched in rain with one of my Sigma lenses and I mean drenched and both the weather sealed lense and camera worked as they should minus the touch screen being a bit fiddly due to the water on it which was easily sorted with my jumper sleeve. If I had to pick a few flaws in it. The screen would have been nice to fully swivel however I understand why this is not the case as buttons sit both sides of the display. It’s definitely not easy for beginners however I doubt you’d be shelling out this sort of money for a starter camera. It does have some automatic abilities but they’re not as easy and intuitive to setup and use. I also feel battery life could be better but to be fair with 1 Nikon EN-EL15A battery, I shot 1500 photos over 8 hours with the camera permanently turned on, lots of reviewing photos and the camera literally just showed the battery warning as I got to my car. A couple spare batteries in my bag is easy to carry and allows for at least 2-3 days of heavy shooting.

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  7. Dean R.

    I’m still getting to know it, but this is leaps and bounds ahead of my old D5000. I am loving it! The sky is the limit with this camera.

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  8. Itacir

    It will probably take me a while to really get used to it and take a maximum out of its capabilities, but even right now after a few days, I’m just amazed!!!

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