Canon EOS R5 Mark II — Editorial Review
The EOS R5 Mark II is Canon's high-end hybrid full-frame mirrorless, and the upgrade that matters most is the move to a 45MP stacked CMOS sensor — borrowing autofocus intelligence from Canon's flagship R1. As Tom's Guide frames it, it's a pro-grade body that performs straight out of the box for both stills and video.
Featured Video Review
Stacked-sensor speed and smarter autofocus
The stacked sensor reads out far faster than the original R5's chip, enabling up to 30fps electronic bursts and 8K/60 video. Fstoppers highlights the R1-derived autofocus: Auto subject detection that locks onto human and animal faces/eyes and vehicles, plus Eye Control AF that places the focus point where you look — faster than a joystick once calibrated. PhotographyTalk calls it a genuine powerhouse for hybrid shooters. In Gerald Undone's review — featured above — the rigorous reviewer is impressed overall while being precise about the heat and dynamic-range nuances below.
A true hybrid flagship-lite
For wedding, wildlife, sports, and commercial hybrid shooters, the R5 II hits the sweet spot: 45MP detail for big crops and prints, 30fps for action, and 8K/60 plus oversampled 4K for video — much of the R1's capability at a lower price and weight.
Honest cons
- Occasional overheating in heavy video. Better than the original R5, but extended high-res video can still warm up; cooling grips are available for marathon recording.
- Underwhelming battery life. Reviewers note endurance is modest for the camera's capability — carry spares for long shoots.
- Eye Control AF isn't foolproof. It's a standout when it works, but reviewers report it doesn't calibrate or track reliably for everyone.
- Slightly more electronic noise from the stacked sensor. Dynamic range clips a touch earlier at base ISO, more noticeably in electronic-shutter mode.
Where this camera fits
- Professional hybrid shooters (weddings, events, commercial) who need 45MP stills and 8K/60 video in one body.
- Wildlife and sports photographers wanting 30fps bursts with R1-class subject-tracking autofocus.
- R5 owners for whom the stacked sensor, faster readout, and improved AF justify the upgrade.
- Not budget buyers (an R6-series or used R5 makes more sense) or those needing the longest uninterrupted video record times without a cooling accessory.
Sources & Citations
- Tom's Guide, "Canon EOS R5 Mark II review: Pro shooter straight out of the box," tomsguide.com (accessed 2026-05-25)
- Fstoppers, "Canon EOS R5 Mark II: Worth the Upgrade?," fstoppers.com (accessed 2026-05-25)
- PhotographyTalk, "Canon EOS R5 Mark II Review: A Powerhouse for Photographers and Videographers," photographytalk.com (accessed 2026-05-25)
Last verified: 2026-05-25
