Canon EOS R8 — Editorial Review
The Canon EOS R8 packs much of the more expensive EOS R6 Mark II — its 24-megapixel full-frame sensor and autofocus system — into a smaller, lighter, cheaper body. Reviewers call it an exemplary entry point to modern full-frame, with one glaring compromise.
Featured Video Review
R6 Mark II performance in an entry-grade body
Dustin Abbott and Run N Gun highlight that the R8 inherits the R6 II's excellent image quality, Dual Pixel CMOS AF II with subject detection, and even 10-bit 4K/60 internal recording — capabilities rivals in this class can't match. In DPReview TV's review — featured above — it's framed as a remarkably capable, beginner-friendly full-frame camera.
Honest cons
- Worst-in-class battery life. The small battery yields roughly 200 shots or about 60 minutes of video per charge.
- No in-body stabilization. Unlike the R6 II, the R8 has no IBIS, leaning on lens IS or higher shutter speeds.
- Pared-back body. Lower-resolution EVF, no AF joystick, a single card slot, and a less substantial build.
- Thermal/record limits. 4K/60p and 1080/120 are capped at 30 minutes per clip (20 minutes for 1080/180).
Where this camera fits
- First-time full-frame buyers who want flagship-level autofocus and image quality affordably.
- Hybrid creators who value 10-bit 4K/60 in a light body and can manage spare batteries.
- Canon RF shooters wanting a compact second body that shares the R6 II's core performance.
- Not those who need IBIS, all-day battery life, dual card slots, or a pro-grade body.
Sources & Citations
- Dustin Abbott, "Canon EOS R8 Review," dustinabbott.net (accessed 2026-05-26)
- Run N Gun, "Canon EOS R8 Review: A Low-Light Monster!," therunngun.com (accessed 2026-05-26)
Last verified: 2026-05-26
