Fujifilm X-T5 — Editorial Review
The Fujifilm X-T5 pairs a 40-megapixel BSI APS-C sensor with the classic dial-driven X-T body, aimed squarely at stills photographers. Reviewers consistently rank it among the most capable and enjoyable APS-C cameras you can buy.
Featured Video Review
Class-leading APS-C detail in a photographer's body
Dustin Abbott and Fstoppers highlight the 40MP sensor's class-leading resolution — capturing more detail than 33MP and 24MP rivals while holding noise in check at base ISO — alongside in-body stabilization and Fujifilm's beloved tactile controls and film simulations. In DPReview TV's final review — featured above — they affirm it as a fast, well-designed, image-quality-first APS-C camera.
Honest cons
- Autofocus trails the leaders. Tracking is improved but still a step behind Sony and Canon; obstructions like glasses or fringes can cause front-focused shots.
- Video is secondary. It's a capable hybrid but lags its X-H2 sibling for video work.
- Demanding files. 40MP raws need more storage and processing headroom than lower-resolution cameras.
- Stills-first design. The retro dial layout suits photographers more than run-and-gun video shooters.
Where this camera fits
- Stills photographers who want maximum APS-C resolution and tactile, dial-driven controls.
- Fujifilm shooters invested in X-mount glass and the film-simulation workflow.
- Travel and landscape photographers who value IBIS and detail in a compact body.
- Not video-first hybrid shooters or those who need best-in-class subject-tracking autofocus.
Sources & Citations
- Dustin Abbott, "Fujifilm X-T5 Review," dustinabbott.net (accessed 2026-05-26)
- Fstoppers, "Ten Months and Thousands of Images Later: We Review the Fujifilm X-T5," fstoppers.com (accessed 2026-05-26)
Last verified: 2026-05-26
