Are We Witnessing the Slow Death of the Nifty Fifty?

Are We Witnessing the Slow Death of the Nifty Fifty?

When I moved from Canon to my Sony a7 III late last year, the first lens I ordered was a nifty fifty: a cheap, incredibly lightweight, relatively fast 50mm prime lens that’s good for portraits, landscapes, and pretty much everything in between. Given that this affordable lens is so universally loved and has such an important role, why does its future look so bleak?

Sony’s full-frame nifty fifty is not brilliant: autofocus is nowhere near as snappy as more expensive counterparts such as the Sonnar T* 55mm f/1.8, not as sharp, and the spherochromatism (blue and pink fringes) can be quite intense. However, this is a ludicrously affordable and lightweight lens. Even at its regular price of $249 it’s cheap, and this is a lens that frequently sees generous discounts. Any complaints regarding performance have to keep this in mind, and I’ve been pleased with the results I’ve achieved from it over the last 11 months.

Capital concrete: Belgrade on the left, Paris on the right. Sony FE 50mm f/1.8.

The nifty fifty has a special place in the world of photography, offering a standard field of view in, thanks to a quirk of physics, a very small form factor. In the past, manufacturers have taken advantage of the ease of design, swapping out metal for plastic and producing budget, autofocus lenses that have deliciously wide apertures while retaining decent sharpness. For those learning photography, it’s an excellent choice when upgrading from a kit lens for something that gives you succulent subject separation and much-vaunted bokeh.

As well as the wallet-friendly price, a nifty fifty can typically deliver acceptably sharp results, and the size and weight makes it wonderfully convenient. A lighter lens is more likely to get thrown in your bag, is more suited as a walk-around option, doesn’t make your camera feel like it’s trying to twist your hand from off the end of your arm, and is less intrusive when shoved into someone’s face. I travel fast and light, and having so much bokeh in such a friendly format is a godsend.

Shooting in Belgrade with skochypstiks.com on the Sony FE 50mm f/1.8

I’d argue that no other lenses offer such solid performance for so little money. There’s good reason that Fstoppers’ Evan Kane described his Canon nifty fifty as the lens that never lets him down, and the results speak for themselves.

A Veritable Array of DSLR Options

Nikon and Canon DSLR shooters are spoilt for choice when it comes to nifty fifties. Both have OEM 50mm primes that are alarmingly cheap: the Canon 50mm f/1.8 STM is a mere $125, and Nikon offers a choice of two nifties, both at very low prices. And if f/1.8 isn’t fast enough, Rokinon/Samyang has an f/1.4 for each mount that’s available for a lot less than $400 if you don’t mind foregoing autofocus, and that's without mentioning the plethora of other manual focus nifties available.

The Canon 50mm f/1.8 STM on the left, and the Nikon AF-S NIKKOR 50mm f/1.8G on the right.

As affordable lenses go, the size, price, and results seem a little ridiculous when compared to bigger, meatier lenses with their weather sealing, ultra-fast focusing, and endless elements. A few years ago, Yongnuo decided to make things even more nonsensical by introducing Canon and Nikon mount nifties that chopped the price of the OEM versions in half. Inspired by the Canon 50mm f/1.8 STM, the compromises are plentiful: the metal bayonet was ditched in place of plastic, and sharpness was largely ignored to the point that you wondered if you’d forgotten to peel the protective film from the rear element after taking it out of the box.

The Yongnuo YN 50mm f/1.8 is a fun lens, however. At a paltry $53 for the Canon version, your expectations should be low, and be assured: you are getting what you pay for. However, if you have a cheap, entry-level Canon DSLR and need bokeh-tastic images for use on social media, you’d be hard pushed to find a cheaper option (unless you already own an expensive phone with multiple cameras, of course). This is not a serious tool, but fortunately, when it comes to images, Instagram is not a serious platform. Go nuts.

The Yongnuo YN 50mm f/1.8 lens. Gloriously soft, beautifully cheap.

So, Sony?

So DSLR users have a veritable smorgasbord of nifties, and Sony released its FE nifty in 2016, three years after the appearance of its first full-frame mirrorless camera. As a means of drawing new users to its camera bodies, Sony probably knew that an affordable 50mm lens would make its a7 cameras much more appealing. Sony’s marketing sang about mirrorless being smaller, and this was a lens that actually made this song make sense. Sure, those ditching Canon could adapt their old glass, but the MC-11 on its own is actually almost twice heavier than the Sony 50mm f/1.8, undermining the concept that the nifty is supposed to be tiny and weigh next to nothing.

All of this makes Nikon and Canon’s lack of nifty fifties for their mirrorless cameras a mystery — the gaping void in RF glass in particular. Nikon’s approach for pushing out its new mirrorless cameras has been to produce relatively affordable prosumer glass and balancing that somewhat lackluster lineup with one laughably expensive lens that is the exact opposite of what people want. While the nifty fifty is typically lightweight, affordable, includes autofocus, and can be found in every high street store, the NIKKOR Z 58mm f/0.95 S is unwieldy, manual focus, unfeasibly priced, and seemingly unavailable.

The NIKKOR Z 58mm f/0.95 S Noct and the NIKKOR Z 50mm f/1.8 S. A folly, a fifty, and neither of them nifty.

Despite this, Nikon does come close with its NIKKOR Z 50mm f/1.8 S, a lens that was $600 when launched and has now dropped to less than $500. This is not quite nifty fifty territory, however, and given that third party glass takes its time to reach Nikon cameras, it might still be a couple of years before a budget 50mm emerges.

For Canon, an RF nifty fifty is not even on the radar. In contrast to Nikon’s mirrorless glass, Canon has opted for premium lenses at premium prices, making its less-than-premium bodies feel a bit underwhelming at this stage. Given that the RP is now less than a grand, wouldn’t it make sense to have $250 50mm walk-around lens that ties in with the camera’s affordability and makes the most of its diminutive size? Again, of course, you can adapt the EF nifty, but when nifties are about lightweight convenience, adding size and weight with an adapter seems incongruous. Maybe I love nifty fifties too much but if I were in Canon’s marketing department, I’d want a sharp, fast, affordable 50mm to give R and RP shooters something fun to use as an everyday lens, and give budget-conscious first-time full-frame buyers a piece of kit that makes the Canon line feel slightly more accessible.

As it stands, that lens does not exist and nor will it any time soon. I’m sure the 50mm RF f/1.2L is a truly astonishing piece of glass, but at two grand, few will ever find out. Hopefully this is where third party manufacturers will come to the fore, and while Sigma has signaled its intentions (it's said to be announcing its plans for RF glass early next year), I doubt it has any intention of creating something small and lightweight, given its propensity for producing doorstops.

Sigma 50mm f/1.4 DG HSM Art Lens for Canon EF. Banana for scale.

There’s a much stronger possibility that Rokinon/Samyang has something up its sleeve. The South Korean company launched the first third party RF lenses, cranking out the 14mm f/2.8 and 85mm f/1.4 earlier this year (also available for Nikon Z), and followed that up recently with the announcement of the first third party RF autofocus lens: the AF 14mm f/2.8 RF.

Canon’s mirrorless autofocus is currently undergoing some rapid changes thanks to firmware updates and it’s now down to third party manufacturers to keep up. It will be fascinating to see some tests of eye autofocus on the EOS R using Rokinon/Samyang’s forthcoming lens. If Rokinon/Samyang has the technology dialed in, then the manufacturer definitely seems like the best candidate for producing a nifty fifty, and the AF 45mm f/1.8 for Sony might be an indication of its intentions. Until then, a manual focus version from dark horse Meike is available: the MK-50mm f/1.7.

Regardless of who gets there first, the days of the truly budget nifty fifty might be over for Canon and Nikon mirrorless owners. Z and RF glass comes at a premium — the latter particularly — and customers might have to be very patient before an OEM nifty becomes viable for either of the Japanese heavyweights to the point that it may never happen. Panasonic S1 owners probably shouldn't hold their breath either: Leica is more likely to release a smoothie maker than a lightweight lens, and as for Sigma, see the banana above. The closest you can get is a 45mm f/2.8 for more than $500.

I wonder whether — unless you own a Sony — the OEM nifty fifty might truly be a thing of the past. What are your thoughts? Are Canon, Nikon, and Panasonic missing a trick here by not making their mirrorless bodies more appealing to enthusiasts with limited funds? Or is my love of the nifty fifty coloring my opinion on what manufacturers should be giving us? Let me know in the comments.

Andy Day's picture

Andy Day is a British photographer and writer living in France. He began photographing parkour in 2003 and has been doing weird things in the city and elsewhere ever since. He's addicted to climbing and owns a fairly useless dog. He has an MA in Sociology & Photography which often makes him ponder what all of this really means.

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73 Comments
Previous comments

Reasonable thoughts, Ankur!
It's been a while since Canon showed the prosumers some love, so I hope they're part of the next few years. At least I hope Sigma will take a break from the huge glass and produce some lighter versions at f/2 or f/2.8 - like the latest 45mm.

50mm is a boring focal length.85 or 35 seems far more interesting.

I bought the 85mm, looking forward to giving it a try soon. I have no interest in the 35mm though.

Focal length has nothing to do with how interesting or boring something is. If what you are shooting is boring, shooting it with another lens won't help you?

I haven't owned a 50 in 30+ years, but the Nikon Z 50mm 1.8 has one has become one of my favorite lenses.

While I own a 50mm 1.8, my go to 'walk around' lens is a f2.8 macro-40 -60mm depending on format. Just a little bit bigger and slower but the added benefit of close focus.

Given that camera & lens makers are struggling, currently, then yes, a specific focal length may be less interesting to a shrinking market. I like them and will use them frequently.

I recently switched to mirrorless, and to sony for that matter. I wanted to have the ability to go super small and lightweight when the situation called for it. I too purchased the Sony nifty fifty and I'm really happy with that set up as a walk-around.

When I had to carry my infant son on a hike, this was perfect. I wouldn't have carried my older, heavier dslr in that situation.

Maybe people are offended to put a $250 lens on a $3500 camera, but I stopped down a bit, and images turned out great.

I also purchased the much bigger and heavier 70-200, but I use that in different situations.

I agree with the author, if you don't offer a lightweight and small nifty fifty, you're missing out on a nice lightweight setup.

if the fstopper article title ends with a question mark it's usually click-bait. Truth?

Yongnuo to the rescue! They will save the nifty fifty.

Most of the time, I use 4 lenses, all of them are pretty cheap compared to the mirrorless glass, I have an old nikkor 50 1.8 E manual focus (around 50€), an other nikkor 50 1.8, the G version, the 85 1.8 G and the samyang 14mm 2.8 manual focus.
all of these lenses are pretty good, I think, for their value.
As long as the mirrorless lens offering would not be as cheap as the dslr one, I won't switch, photography is a hobby for me, I won't spend a month pay in a lens or a body...

Pull crap from hat, write about it. Done. Repeat.

The 50mm lens was the standard lens delivered on 35mm cameras since forever. It was the kit lens of the 60's, 70's and early 80's.
In the ILC world it was supplanted by kit zooms that offered more versatility for enthusiasts and limited budget beginners in an increasingly competitive world.
When I got my first SLR in 1970 (Pentax H3V with 50mm f1.8 Takumar) I could not afford the 35mm lens I dearly wanted. Fortunately the ubiquitous Pentax screw thread mount meant I could borrow from my friend with a Miranda and a larger budget.
The 50 is neither fish nor fowl. Too short for a lot of portraiture and too long for street, candid or landscape. Sure, there are times when it is just the right length but more often than not it isn't.
The whole reason we still see cheap 50's is the legacy of the sea of old 50's. Doesn't make it good or bad but more than likely basic kit zooms are killing it. Sharpness and shallow DOF are not the universal grail one is led believe. The average consumer (the legions of them) wants a zoom.

Gotta say (at least with the canon version) will still have it's place for a long time. sure, might not be tack at 1.8 but as soon as you step it down a tiny bit it gets really sharp, to the point where it would be hard to tell it apart from say, a "pro" 50. Comparing $125 to $2.299 (rf 1.2) is just mad. Unless you really need it, most would be better of getting the nifty and spending the remainder of 2.299 in a 85, 35, 18-35 or whatever other focal length where you dont get a budget friendly option

You mean like the death of film?

There will be third-party nitfy lenses. Samyang will make AF lenses for RF mount and I am sure others will follow suit.

While I loved my first nifty-fifty, that was when I was 14 years old and didn't know any better, now 19 years later I would never buy one. Actually I have not owned a cheap fifty for over a decade, or any fifty millimeter for that matter although I did own a Nikon 58mm f1.4G not long ago. That lens is certainly not a nifty fifty or a 50mm lens by any stretch of the imagination, it's an amazing professional masterpiece is more like it. However I don't do portraiture much anymore as I'm a photojournalist, but I do at times miss that 58mm lens. It has a unique character with modern autofocus and glass, and I only paid US $800 for it. If I was using the Z series, which I'm not I wouldn't buy the 50mm S lens, not because I don't believe it's not amazing, it probably is, but because I don't really like 50mm. My most used lenses are my 400mm f2.8 VR followed by my 70-200mm f2.8 FL. If I want wider I go to my 24mm f1.4G or 35mm f1.4G lenses and both are amazing and kinda expensive, but worth it for me, I got great deals on both $750 and $850! The main reason for me to skip the 50mm is honestly I think Nikon's versions all suck, the 50mm f1.8D is okay but it's old and built like crap and the newer 50mm f1.4G and 50mm f1.8G lenses suck in my subjective opinion. Both are only acceptably sharp and both have no character whatsoever! I don't see myself ever buying another cheap 50mm lens and therefor I should have just skipped reading this article and commenting lol.

This comment confuses me. On the one hand you say

"If I was using the Z series, which I'm not I wouldn't buy the 50mm S lens, not because I don't believe it's not amazing, it probably is, but because I don't really like 50mm.",

but then you go on to say

"The main reason for me to skip the 50mm is honestly I think Nikon's versions all suck"

which would seem to contradict your statement about why you wouldn't buy the 50mm f/1.8 S.

You're just looking for controversy it's a 2019 thing, outrage is all the rage these days. It makes perfect sense, I don't really like 50mm lenses and therefor would not buy the Nikon 50mm "S" lens, even though I bet it's amazing. I know the Z series are hated or loved by many people, but why are the Z series owners so quick to jump on anyone who says anything about Z or S products. I know the new f1.8 "S" lenses are stellar optically, trust me I have tested them. There is no true professional Z camera yet, so I don't own one, but even if I did I don't really like 50mm lenses anymore, mainly because Nikon's DSLR versions suck in my opinion. So even though the "S" lens is probably miles ahead of the F-mount lenses I'm just still not really about 50mm lenses, which is why sold my 58mm f1.4G lens too. The focal length was too close to my 70-200mm f2.8 FL, which performs like a prime lens and I prefer the 35mm f1.4G and 24mm f1.4G to say a 24-70mm f2.8 zoom. Nikon's 24-70mm f2.8 zooms are not bad, but there also not great unlike Nikon's truly amazing and awesome new 70-200mm f2.8 FL, which is stunningly great. So for now on the way work is primes for wider and zoom with my feet or switch over to my second or third camera body for longer focal lengths when the wides are too short. I have from 24mm to 400mm covered with four lenses and three camera's, one of which a DX crop sensor which I use to my advantage as a teleconverter replacement!

😂 ok

I have been using a 50 f/1.8 more often lately, it is small light weight, and can handle almost any situation, that is until it magically vaporizes and ceases to exist right in the middle of a photo session. =-)

Fuji had a 35mm lens early on and released a 50 a few years ago. Granted, some of the other systems are still building out their lens lineups, but to think that the 50mm has lost its nifty-ness may be a bit premature.

As other mentioned, the title of this article was somewhat misleading. I had to suffer through a bunch of information about current lens offerings. Then, toward the end of the article the author tried to articulate the demise of the inexpensive 50.

I know this sounds like fuji fanboy stuff, but I have been quite happy with my fuji APC system for the past 7 years. Fujifilm's lens lineup is just about complete, albeit there are 100 dollar lens offerings.

You realise that the nifty 50 on Fuji would be the 35mm... the 56mm Fuji is more like a 85 mm ... so yeah Fuji is doing it the right way. I wonder if “full frame“ makers will get their systems right. At the moment the best mirrorless full frame camera is a toy and the others a joke