Nikon NIKKOR Z 14-30mm f/4 S — Editorial Review
The NIKKOR Z 14-30mm f/4 S is the compact ultra-wide zoom that ends up on more Nikon Z bodies than almost any other. A retractable design keeps it small and light while covering a genuinely useful 14-30mm range — and years after launch reviewers still call it the go-to Nikon wide zoom.
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Small, light, and a value champion
Dustin Abbott notes it's 40mm shorter and 165g lighter than the 14-24mm f/2.8 S, with center sharpness that's strong across the zoom and improves nicely stopped down. Photography Life highlights the front filter thread (rare for an ultra-wide) and travel-friendly size. In Dustin Abbott's 2026 re-review — featured above — he weighs it against the pricier f/2.8 and finds the value compelling.
Honest cons
- Retractable barrel. You must extend the lens to 14mm before shooting, which can cost you a quick grab shot.
- Distortion and vignetting. Significant in the uncorrected file at the wide end; corrections are baked in automatically in Adobe software.
- f/4 maximum aperture. Slower than the f/2.8 S for astro and low light.
- Weakest at 30mm wide open. Contrast is softest at the long end until you stop down.
Where this lens fits
- Landscape and travel photographers who want a light, sharp ultra-wide with standard filters.
- Nikon Z owners on a budget who don't need the f/2.8's speed or bulk.
- Hybrid shooters who value compact size for video and run-and-gun.
- Not astrophotographers needing f/2.8, or anyone who can't live with the extend-to-shoot barrel.
Sources & Citations
- Dustin Abbott, "Nikkor Z 14-30mm F4 S Review," dustinabbott.net (accessed 2026-05-26)
- Photography Life, "Nikon Z 14-30mm f/4 S Review," photographylife.com (accessed 2026-05-26)
Last verified: 2026-05-26
