Sony RX10 V: Nine Years Later, a Quiet Meaningful Refresh

Sony RX10 V: Nine Years Later, a Quiet Meaningful Refresh

 

After nearly nine years of silence, Sony is finally bringing back its beloved RX10 series. The new RX10 V is set to be announced on July 9, 2026, at 10 PM JST under the tagline "Classics shine in new light".

But here's the catch — this isn't a ground-up redesign. It's a targeted internal refresh.

Sony is keeping the core imaging hardware unchanged: the same 20.1MP 1-inch stacked Exmor RS CMOS sensor and the legendary Zeiss Vario-Sonnar T* 24-600mm f/2.4-4 lens that made the RX10 IV a cult favorite. What is changing is what's under the hood — and that matters more than you might think.

What's New, What's Not

Component RX10 V (2026) RX10 IV (2017)
Sensor 20.1MP 1" Exmor RS stacked CMOS (unchanged) 20.1MP 1" Exmor RS stacked CMOS
Lens Zeiss Vario-Sonnar T* 24-600mm f/2.4-4, 25x optical zoom (unchanged) Zeiss Vario-Sonnar T* 24-600mm f/2.4-4, 25x optical zoom
Macro 3cm minimum focus distance (unchanged) 3cm minimum focus distance
Image Processor BIONZ XR (likely XR2) with dedicated AI unit BIONZ X
Autofocus AI-powered real-time tracking for humans, animals, birds 315-point phase detection (basic tracking)
Burst Shooting 24 fps with blackout-free view 24 fps
Video 4K at 60fps (rumored, possibly 120fps) 4K at 30fps
Battery NP-FZ100 (high capacity, shared with Alpha series) NP-FW50
Port USB-C 3.2 Micro-USB
Card Slot UHS-II compatible UHS-I
Viewfinder 2.36M-dot XGA OLED (expected) 2.36M-dot XGA OLED
Weight ~1095g (estimated) 1050g
Estimated Price ~$1,899 – $1,999 / ~¥11,999 – ¥12,999 ~$1,700 (launch price)

The Real Upgrades That Matter

Smarter AF: The new BIONZ XR processor with an integrated AI unit brings Sony's latest real-time subject recognition — eyes for humans, animals, and birds, plus vehicle tracking. For wildlife and bird photographers, this is the biggest selling point.

Better battery life: The switch to NP-FZ100 (the same battery used in Sony's mirrorless cameras) more than doubles capacity compared to the old NP-FW50. No more carrying five spare batteries for a day of birding.

Modern connectivity: USB-C replaces the outdated Micro-USB, and the card slot now supports faster UHS-II cards.

Smoother video: 4K/60fps is expected (some sources even hint at 4K/120fps), making it far more capable for action and wildlife footage.

Who Is This For?

If you already own an RX10 IV, is this worth the upgrade? That depends. If you're frustrated by the old battery life, clunky Micro-USB port, or dated autofocus, the RX10 V addresses all three. If you're happy with your current setup, the image quality hasn't changed — so you might want to wait.

For newcomers, though, this is the ultimate all-in-one: a 25x zoom (24-600mm equivalent) that covers everything from wide landscapes to distant birds, in a single package. No lens changes, no heavy gear bag. Just grab and go.

Bottom Line

The RX10 V isn't a revolution. It's a thoughtful evolution — keeping what worked (that incredible lens and sensor) while finally bringing the internals into 2026. For birders, travelers, and anyone who values convenience without compromising reach, it remains in a league of its own.

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