Sony a6700 — Editorial Review
The a6700 is Sony's flagship APS-C mirrorless and the long-awaited successor to the a6600. Its biggest leap is intelligence: a dedicated AI processing unit drives subject recognition that, per PetaPixel, tracks human eyes exceptionally well and extends to animals, birds, and certain vehicles. Paired with a 26MP sensor, in-body stabilization, and 4K oversampled video, it sits at the top of Sony's crop-sensor lineup for hybrid shooters.
Featured Video Review
Featured Video Review
AI autofocus and a much faster sensor
The headline practical upgrade over the a6600 is readout speed. Tom's Guide and PetaPixel both note the a6700's roughly 15.8ms sensor readout in 4K is a massive improvement over the a6600's ~40ms, which sharply reduces rolling-shutter skew in everyday shooting. Engadget calls it Sony's best APS-C camera yet, crediting the AI autofocus and the move to the newer menu system and fully articulating screen for video work.
Hybrid photo/video workhorse
For creators who shoot both stills and video, the a6700 is a compact all-rounder: 4K/60 (with a crop), 10-bit color, S-Log3, and reliable tracking that makes solo shooting practical. In Gerald Undone's rigorous review — featured above — he frames it as a value champion in the APS-C class, while being characteristically precise about the limits below.
Honest cons
- Rolling shutter isn't gone. Despite the faster readout, PetaPixel and others note the electronic shutter still shows distortion on fast-moving subjects and quick pans.
- Overheating in demanding video. Reviewers recorded overheating after roughly half an hour of 4K at 50/60p without active cooling — a constraint for long-form video.
- No joystick. The omission remains a tactile-control frustration for photographers moving AF points manually.
- Single UHS-II card slot. A single slot limits in-camera backup for professional use.
Where this camera fits
- Hybrid creators who want one compact body for stills and 4K video with class-leading AI autofocus.
- Wildlife and pet shooters who benefit from the animal/bird subject-recognition on a lighter, cheaper-than-full-frame system.
- Solo vloggers and run-and-gun shooters wanting reliable tracking and an articulating screen.
- Not shooters needing dual card slots, marathon 4K/60 record times, or the cleanest electronic-shutter results for fast action.
Sources & Citations
- PetaPixel, "Sony a6700 Review: Definitely Worth the Wait," petapixel.com (accessed 2026-05-25)
- Tom's Guide, "Sony a6700 review," tomsguide.com (accessed 2026-05-25)
- Engadget, "Sony A6700 review: The company's best APS-C camera yet," engadget.com (accessed 2026-05-25)
Last verified: 2026-05-25
