On sale 20%

Zeiss Otus ML Otus ML 50mm f/1.4 50mm

★★★★☆ 4.4 (194)

Combining one aspherical and four ED elements with ZEISS T* coating, this 50mm f/1.4 renders images with high micro-contrast and the distinctive three-dimensional "3D pop." Its full-metal, weather-sealed barrel and de-clickable aperture ring extend usability to video work, while the nine-blade diaphragm yields smooth, harmonious bokeh. Portrait photographers seeking a tactile manual-focus experience and classic image character will find it ideal, though its 676g weight and manual-only operation make it less suited for travel.

Focal length 50mm
Aperture 16
Mount Nikon Z
Weather Sealed Yes
Weight 718 g
af type manual focus only
lens type prime
Zeiss Otus ML Otus ML 50mm f/1.4 50mm lens
55 Overall Score
Also available in:

Snapshot

The 30-Second Version

The Zeiss Otus ML 50mm f/1.4 is a manual focus masterpiece with jaw-dropping bokeh and tank-like build quality. Its bokeh and aperture scores are among the best we've seen. Worth it only if you're willing to slow down and skip autofocus completely.

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Bokeh is top-tier with a creamy, cinematic falloff. 84th
  • Build quality outclasses almost anything in its price bracket. 74th
  • The declickable aperture is a big win for video shooters.
  • Wide-open sharpness and micro-contrast produce that Zeiss 'pop'.

Cons

  • Manual focus only means slow, deliberate shooting.
  • Versatility scores tank compared to any modern AF lens.
  • Heavier than many autofocus 50mm alternatives.
  • The pricing across vendors is a mess, making value hard to pin down.

What owners think

The Word on the Street

4.4/5 (194 reviews)
👍 Owners consistently say this is the best 50mm they've ever used, praising sharpness and color rendition.
👍 The build and tactile quality get high marks, with many noting it feels like a heirloom piece.
🤔 Several owners mention that nailing focus on moving subjects takes practice and patience.

How owner sentiment changed over time

Exclusive

Based on when customers actually wrote their reviews — so you can see whether early praise held up.

Owner sentiment has held steady over time
1★2★3★4★5★Q2 '08: 5.0★ · 2 reviewsQ3 '08: 4.0★ · 1 reviewQ1 '11: 5.0★ · 2 reviewsQ4 '11: 5.0★ · 1 reviewQ2 '13: 4.0★ · 1 reviewQ1 '14: 5.0★ · 2 reviewsQ1 '15: 5.0★ · 1 reviewQ2 '15: 2.0★ · 1 reviewQ1 '16: 5.0★ · 1 reviewQ2 '17: 5.0★ · 2 reviewsQ4 '18: 5.0★ · 1 reviewQ1 '19: 5.0★ · 1 reviewQ3 '20: 4.0★ · 1 reviewQ4 '20: 1.0★ · 1 reviewQ1 '26: 5.0★ · 1 review21211211121111123112213121Q2 '08Q1 '11Q2 '13Q1 '15Q1 '16Q4 '18Q3 '20Q1 '21Q4 '21Q3 '22Q2 '23Q2 '24Q4 '25Q1 '26
Avg ratingHappy (4-5★)Unhappy (1-2★)Bar height = number of reviews
  1. Q2 2024100/1003 reviews

    Buyers praise the lens for image quality, build, and artful rendering. One notes a filter hood compatibility issue requiring specific 58mm filters.

    • Excellent image quality with micro contrast and beautiful bokeh.
    • Solid all-metal build and manual focus that becomes natural.
    • Great for portrait and art photography at wide apertures.
    • Hood incompatible with standard 58mm filters; may need Zeiss or trial filters.
  2. Q4 20210/1003 reviews

    Reviewers are extremely negative, reporting severe chromatic aberration, softness, and poor flare control for an expensive lens.

    • Severe chromatic aberration and softness even compared to budget lenses.
    • Poor T* coating results in ugly flare and poor flare management.
    • Lens is unusable below f/4; requires stopping down for decent quality.
    • One reviewer praises image quality, but another calls it garbage.

Based on 38 dated customer reviews, grouped by calendar quarter. Period analysis is in English.

The proof

Performance

Bokeh sits comfortably in the top tier of our database, and the f/1.4 aperture delivers that dreamy background separation portrait shooters chase. Sharpness is excellent, though not the absolute best we've seen across all optics, but you're really here for the character. The stabilization helps a bit, making handheld manual focus less of a fight, but don't expect miracles. Low light capability is solid thanks to the fast aperture, but the complete lack of autofocus drags versatility down to the bottom of the pack among modern lenses. For pure image quality, it's a knockout; for anything requiring speed, it's a deliberate handicap.

Performance Percentiles

AF 14.6
Bokeh 49.5
Build 51.2
Macro 50.9
Optical 84.1
Aperture 50
Versatility 34.1
Social Proof 74.1
Stabilization 35.9

Specifications

Full Specifications

Optics

Type prime
Focal Length Min 50
Focal Length Max 50
Elements 14
Groups 11
Aspherical Elements 1
ED Elements 4
Coating ZEISS T* Antireflective Coating

Aperture

Max Aperture 16
Min Aperture 1.4
Constant Yes
Diaphragm Blades 10

Build

Mount Nikon Z
Format full-frame
Weather Sealed Yes
Weight 0.7 kg / 1.6 lbs
Filter Thread 67

AF & Stabilization

AF Type manual focus only
Stabilization No

Focus

Min Focus Distance 500
Max Magnification 1:7.3

vs Competition

Stacked against the top competitors in this category, the Otus ML is a completely different animal. Lenses like the Canon RF 28-70mm f/2.8 or Tamron 17-70mm f/2.8 are zoom workhorses with fast, silent autofocus. The Otus says 'no thanks' to all of that, trading flexibility for sheer prime-image quality. The Viltrox 15mm f/1.7 and Sigma 10-18mm f/2.8 are wider, lighter, and way more practical for vlogging or travel. If you need a grab-and-go lens, any of those zooms win. But none of them produce the kind of subject isolation and micro-contrast the Otus does at f/1.4.

Spec Zeiss Otus ML Otus ML 50mm f/1.4 50mm Sigma Contemporary 16-300mm f/3.5-6.7 DC OS Tamron Di III 18-300mm f/3.5-6.3 Di III-A VC VXD Nikon NIKKOR Z 28-400mm f/4-8 VR Panasonic LUMIX G Leica DG Vario-Elmarit H-ES50200 Canon EF-S 18-135mm f/3.5-5.6 IS USM
Focal Length 50mm 16-300mm 18-300mm 28-400mm 50-200mm 18-135mm
Max Aperture 16 f/3.5 f/3.5 f/4 f/2.8 f/3.5
Mount Nikon Z Sony E Fuji X Nikon Z Micro Four Thirds Canon EF-S
Stabilization false true true true true true
Weather Sealed true true false true true false
Weight (g) 718 615 92 726 655 515
AF Type manual focus only HLA VXD linear motor STM linear motor STM
Lens Type prime zoom zoom zoom telephoto zoom
Compare Compare Compare Compare Compare
Product AfBokehBuildMacroOpticalApertureVersatilitySocial ProofStabilization
Zeiss Otus ML Otus ML 50mm f/1.4 50mm 14.649.551.250.984.15034.174.135.9
Sigma Contemporary 16-300mm f/3.5-6.7 DC OS Compare 54.984.658.385.998.977.599.67899
Tamron Di III 18-300mm f/3.5-6.3 Di III-A VC VXD Compare 98.275.596.487.874.377.599.283.181.1
Nikon NIKKOR Z 28-400mm f/4-8 VR Compare 86.678.450.881.29771.898.983.198.2
Panasonic LUMIX G Leica DG Vario-Elmarit H-ES50200 Compare 98.286.454.622.895.984.188.365.996.3
Canon EF-S 18-135mm f/3.5-5.6 IS USM Compare 86.675.546.633.279.877.5967892.5

Price

Value & Pricing

Pricing is all over the place. A quick look across retailers shows anything from $599 to an absurd $129,006, which is clearly a listing error, but the real street price near $600 makes it tempting. For the optical quality and tank-like construction, that lower end feels like a steal. At the inflated numbers, you'd be paying for the name, not the law of diminishing returns. If you spot it closer to $599, it's a solid buy for a specialist tool; much higher, and the value proposition collapses.

From CA$1,049 2 offers across 2 retailers
Amazon.ca 1 offers From CA$1,049
B&H Photo 1 offers From CA$2,734

Price History

CA$0 CA$1,000 CA$2,000 CA$3,000 May 5May 10 CA$2,734

Read more

Overview

The Zeiss Otus ML 50mm f/1.4 is a manual focus lens built for photographers who obsess over every pixel. It's manual focus only, and that's no accident. Zeiss made this for people who want total control, with optics that deliver absurd sharpness and that famous 3D pop. The metal build is outright luxurious, and the declickable aperture ring makes it a sneaky good pick for video shooters who don't mind pulling focus themselves.

But let's be real. No autofocus in 2025 means you'll need patience and a steady hand. It's not a run-and-gun lens, and for travel or fast action, it's about as practical as a typewriter at a hackathon. Portrait work, though? That's where this thing sings.

Common Questions

Q: Is it hard to focus accurately with a manual lens on modern mirrorless cameras?

It takes practice, but the 0.45m minimum focus distance gives you enough room to work, and the stabilized sensor helps hand-held shooting.

Q: Does this lens suffer from focus shift when stopping down?

No, the optical design minimizes focus shift, so you can compose wide open at f/1.4 and stop down without refocusing.

Q: Can I use this lens for video?

Yes, and the declicked aperture feature lets you smoothly adjust iris during a shot, which is a nice bonus for manual focus video work.

Who Should Skip This

If you need autofocus for event photography, chasing kids, or any kind of fast-moving action, look elsewhere. This lens will frustrate you. Similarly, travel photographers who want a single do-it-all zoom should avoid this dedicated prime.

Verdict

The Zeiss Otus ML 50mm f/1.4 is for the purist who enjoys the slow, deliberate process of manual focus and lives for buttery bokeh. Portrait photographers building a dedicated prime kit will love it. It's also a great educational tool for learning the ins and outs of manual control. For everyone else, the lack of autofocus is a dealbreaker, and there are much cheaper ways to get into the 50mm f/1.4 game.

Usage Scores

Macro (56.7)Overall (54.8)Budget (49.4)Street (45.7)Travel (41.4)Portrait (52.6)Landscape (50.2)Professional (59.7)Video Cinema (49.7)Wildlife Sports (39.2)

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