Sony RX10 V Returns With AI Autofocus And A 24-600mm ZEISS Lens

Sony has revived one of its most versatile camera lines with the introduction of the Sony RX10 V. The fifth-generation model pairs the convenience of a fixed-lens camera with technology borrowed from the company’s Alpha mirrorless lineup.

Designed for travel, wildlife, sports and content creation, the Sony RX10 V is built around a 24-600mm ZEISS Vario-Sonnar T* lens. Its expansive focal range allows photographers to capture wide landscapes, portraits and distant subjects without stopping to change lenses or carry a separate collection of glass.
That all-in-one flexibility arrives alongside a new artificial intelligence processing unit, faster continuous shooting and significantly upgraded video capabilities. The result is a premium superzoom camera created for photographers who want substantial reach without committing to a full interchangeable-lens system.

A 24-600mm ZEISS Lens Covers Nearly Every Scenario
The centerpiece of the Sony RX10 V is its fixed ZEISS Vario-Sonnar T* F2.4-4.0 lens. It offers a 25x optical zoom range equivalent to 24-600mm, moving from wide-angle framing to extreme telephoto reach within the same body.
At the wide end, the camera can handle architecture, group photos, landscapes and everyday travel scenes. Zooming toward 600mm gives users the reach required for wildlife, bird photography, sporting events and subjects positioned far from the camera.

Optical image stabilization helps maintain sharper results throughout the zoom range. The lens also supports close focusing from approximately 1.18 inches at 24mm, adding food, product and detail photography to the camera’s lengthy list of potential uses.
By keeping the lens integrated, Sony eliminates the need to pack and repeatedly swap multiple lenses. That could make the Sony RX10 V particularly attractive to travelers who want greater capability than a smartphone can provide without turning every trip into a photography equipment haul.

AI Autofocus Brings Alpha Technology To The RX10 V
Sony equipped the camera with AI-powered Real-time Recognition Autofocus capable of identifying people, animals, birds, insects, cars, trains and airplanes. An Auto mode can determine the subject type, while human pose estimation helps the camera continue tracking people when their faces are partially obscured or turned away.
Users can also select a subject through the touchscreen and allow Real-time Tracking to follow it across the frame. This technology should prove especially useful when photographing unpredictable movement at a sporting event or attempting to keep wildlife in focus from a considerable distance.

The autofocus system works alongside blackout-free continuous shooting at up to 30 frames per second. Sony says the camera performs up to 60 autofocus and auto-exposure calculations each second, helping it adjust as the subject or lighting conditions change.
A Continuous Shooting Speed Boost function can also increase the burst rate during an active sequence, giving photographers another tool for capturing a decisive moment.

A Stacked Sensor Powers Stills And 4K Video
Inside the Sony RX10 V is a 20.1-megapixel 1-inch stacked Exmor RS CMOS sensor paired with the company’s BIONZ XR image-processing engine. The combination is designed to produce detailed images, accurate color and controlled noise across varied lighting conditions.
The larger sensor also helps create more natural background separation than is typically possible with a smartphone or a compact camera built around a smaller imaging sensor.
Video capabilities have received an equally meaningful upgrade. The RX10 V can record 4K footage at up to 120 frames per second, allowing creators to capture high-resolution slow-motion sequences. Active Mode stabilization helps reduce movement during handheld filming, while an AI-powered Auto Framing feature keeps a recognized subject positioned within the composition.
Sony also included S-Cinetone for cinematic color directly from the camera and S-Log3 for creators who prefer greater flexibility during post-production. Users can import as many as 16 custom LUTs and preview their graded appearance while recording in Log.

Built For Longer Days In The Field
The Sony RX10 V adopts a deeper grip and button arrangement influenced by Sony’s Alpha cameras. A 3.68-million-dot OLED electronic viewfinder supports detailed composition in bright outdoor conditions, while the three-inch rear display features approximately 1.62 million dots.
Sony has also replaced the battery used by the previous generation with its larger NP-FZ100 unit. The new battery is rated for approximately 630 still images when shooting with the LCD monitor, representing an increase of roughly 50 percent over the RX10 IV.
Dust- and moisture-resistant construction provides additional confidence when shooting outdoors. Wi-Fi connectivity supports wireless file transfers, while USB-C can be used for high-speed transfers and direct 4K 30p livestreaming. Sony’s Creators’ App adds remote camera control, smartphone transfers, cloud uploads and software updates.
Sony RX10 V Pricing And Availability
The Sony RX10 V will carry a suggested retail price of $2,299.99 in the United States when it becomes available in August 2026. That places it firmly within premium camera territory, but its appeal rests in how much equipment it could potentially replace. A single body delivers wide-angle coverage, a 600mm-equivalent telephoto reach, advanced subject recognition, rapid burst shooting and professional-minded video tools.
For travelers, parents, wildlife photographers and creators who prioritize flexibility over interchangeable lenses, the Sony RX10 V presents a compelling argument for carrying one camera that can handle almost everything.






