Amazon.com: Customer reviews: Nikon D7500 20.9MP DSLR Camera with AF-S DX NIKKOR 18-140mm f/3.5-5.6G ED VR Lens, Black
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  • Nikon D7500 20.9MP DSLR Camera with AF-S DX NIKKOR 18-140mm f/3.5-5.6G...
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Customer reviews

4.7 out of 5 stars
4.7 out of 5
1,315 global ratings
5 star
85%
4 star
8%
3 star
4%
2 star
2%
1 star
3%
Nikon D7500 20.9MP DSLR Camera with AF-S DX NIKKOR 18-140mm f/3.5-5.6G ED VR Lens, Black

Nikon D7500 20.9MP DSLR Camera with AF-S DX NIKKOR 18-140mm f/3.5-5.6G ED VR Lens, Black

byNikon
Color: BlackStyle: w/ 18-140mm VR LensSet: BaseChange
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Top positive review

Positive reviews›
D. Bank
5.0 out of 5 starsFar improved over the D7100
Reviewed in the United States on July 13, 2017
Just a short review, more of a user experience. I bought the D7500 for a month long trip to Europe. I was replacing a D7100 that had some nagging problems that often left me less than satisfied (It had been dropped - and repaired - early in its life, but was never as good as I expected). Anyway, I filled 4-5 64 Gig memory cards on the trip, and I have to say that this camera is far better than my old one. The low light abilities are awesome, and on the few instances where I needed to take a picture hand held in low light with some depth of field, ISO 16000 was a very viable option. Not noise free, but better than ISO 6400 on the older camera. Other features that made the user experience better: I could easily transfer pictures to my phone - very important to my wife and convenient for sharing or posting to Facebook when traveling without a computer. The connection to the phone also meant that I could share the phone's GPS with the camera and therefore get location tags on every photo. This worked very well, though it is possible that it negatively affects the phone's battery - but my phone is old and it is hard to really tell. (I think the automatic download was more detrimental to the phone battery, and it took a little searching to figure out how to turn off automatic downloads for every photo). As for the camera battery, it was also good, though again, the automatic download seemed to affect it a lot, as did a lot of activity on the display. The tilting screen was useful to have, but not as useful as a fully articulating screen (like the D5300). The touch screen was awesome, and made it VERY easy to check critical focus and work with the menu - even with gloves on. I was in a cold weather environment, so I had gloves on much of the time. These gloves had something on each finger that would let it work with an iPhone, and therefore it worked just as well with he camera. I liked the feature where you could use the live preview and touch the screen where you wanted it to be in focus, and it would refocus and take the shot.

I understand why people complain about the missing second SD slot, but as long as I carried a second card around, it was fine. I never made automatic backups anyway, and I can live without putting RAW on one card and JPG on the other. It would have been nice, but the other features are more important to me. The depth of field preview seems to be gone, and that is disappointing, but it is usually easy enough to take a shot and check depth of field and then take another. The exposure settings were a little more confusing to me, and I could not reliably determine if the camera tended to over or underexpose. I think I ended up using plus or minus 1/3 of a stop a lot of the time, and sometimes a lot more than that.

Overall, I am very happy with the purchase. I might change my mind after reviewing the thousands of photos I took on the trip, but based on what I have seen, it is a definite upgrade!!
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62 people found this helpful

Top critical review

Critical reviews›
William D. Funk
3.0 out of 5 starsA nice camera for small hands.
Reviewed in the United States on March 24, 2024
I replaced a D7100 which was larger and took a battery pack. There is no battery pack available for the D7500. It has upgraded electronics. With the same bird action settings as the D7100, the D7500 is faster. Auto focusing is working well, but haven't found pin point focus yet. It is mated to an 18-300mm Nikor, so a bit front heavy. So far photos are crisp and clear.
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From the United States

D. Bank
5.0 out of 5 stars Far improved over the D7100
Reviewed in the United States on July 13, 2017
Color: BlackStyle: BodySet: BaseVerified Purchase
Just a short review, more of a user experience. I bought the D7500 for a month long trip to Europe. I was replacing a D7100 that had some nagging problems that often left me less than satisfied (It had been dropped - and repaired - early in its life, but was never as good as I expected). Anyway, I filled 4-5 64 Gig memory cards on the trip, and I have to say that this camera is far better than my old one. The low light abilities are awesome, and on the few instances where I needed to take a picture hand held in low light with some depth of field, ISO 16000 was a very viable option. Not noise free, but better than ISO 6400 on the older camera. Other features that made the user experience better: I could easily transfer pictures to my phone - very important to my wife and convenient for sharing or posting to Facebook when traveling without a computer. The connection to the phone also meant that I could share the phone's GPS with the camera and therefore get location tags on every photo. This worked very well, though it is possible that it negatively affects the phone's battery - but my phone is old and it is hard to really tell. (I think the automatic download was more detrimental to the phone battery, and it took a little searching to figure out how to turn off automatic downloads for every photo). As for the camera battery, it was also good, though again, the automatic download seemed to affect it a lot, as did a lot of activity on the display. The tilting screen was useful to have, but not as useful as a fully articulating screen (like the D5300). The touch screen was awesome, and made it VERY easy to check critical focus and work with the menu - even with gloves on. I was in a cold weather environment, so I had gloves on much of the time. These gloves had something on each finger that would let it work with an iPhone, and therefore it worked just as well with he camera. I liked the feature where you could use the live preview and touch the screen where you wanted it to be in focus, and it would refocus and take the shot.

I understand why people complain about the missing second SD slot, but as long as I carried a second card around, it was fine. I never made automatic backups anyway, and I can live without putting RAW on one card and JPG on the other. It would have been nice, but the other features are more important to me. The depth of field preview seems to be gone, and that is disappointing, but it is usually easy enough to take a shot and check depth of field and then take another. The exposure settings were a little more confusing to me, and I could not reliably determine if the camera tended to over or underexpose. I think I ended up using plus or minus 1/3 of a stop a lot of the time, and sometimes a lot more than that.

Overall, I am very happy with the purchase. I might change my mind after reviewing the thousands of photos I took on the trip, but based on what I have seen, it is a definite upgrade!!
62 people found this helpful
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Doogie
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent camera, easy to use.
Reviewed in the United States on January 31, 2024
Color: BlackStyle: w/ 18-140mm VR LensSet: BaseVerified Purchase
I purchased this camera used from the seller, it's a great camera. it came on time and was well packed. The cameras was as described and works great. The only downside was it came with an aftermarket charger that didn't actually fit the camera battery, a minor detail. I purchased the correct Nikon charger and a spare battery for short money.
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ecforman
5.0 out of 5 stars Meets my needs
Reviewed in the United States on July 3, 2017
Color: BlackStyle: BodySet: BaseVerified Purchase
Before I start, these are simply my own impressions. I was once a professional photographer way back in the days of film and photographed over 600 weddings, as well as sports teams and schools. Nowadays I am just an amateur who sells prints once in awhile. I am also a recently retired economics teacher and in my quest to upgrade from my excellent, but outdated D7000, I applied the principles of wants vs needs, trade-offs, opportunity costs, and cost benefits.

Realizing the no camera will give one exactly what they want, I narrowed the requirements down. My two main criteria were higher ISO performance and more accurate focus. I do a lot of bird in flight, and both are essential. It came down to the D7200, the D7500, and the D500. The D7200 already being two years out, I ruled it out. The D500 fit my needs, and a few wants, but the price tag was a bit steep. The D7500 seemed the best fit, and after trying it for a couple of days I believe I made the right choice.

ISO- While the D7000 had an upper limit of ISO 1600 before degrading, I now feel quite comfortable at 3200 which helps with the 180 f/2.8 for birds. I will test at higher when I do some Milky Way shots next week.

Focus- Spot on, fast and accurate. I can track a bird quite easily.

Exposure- Amazing. The color rendition and exposure are so good I don’t have to do any tweaking. Even shooting a bird against a bright blue sky the metering handle it.

Eight frames per second is fast. The shutter is quite sensitive and I will easily shoot a sequence when only one is needed, but they delete.

The shutter is much quite quieter than the D7000 and makes a sweet sound like my old Contax.

The negatives that people are sounding off on don’t bother me. One card slot is okay, I never utilized the second slot before, and I am not doing anything that a card failure would cause a catastrophic loss. No battery grip is okay too. I have one for the older camera, but never used it. I am so old that reaching over with my finger feels natural. Not being able to meter with old lenses is okay too, I don’t have any.

The bottom line is that this camera meets my needs, and then some, giving me a good return on investment.

Update 7/17- After spending a couple of weeks with the camera I am even more pleased. I found the group autofocus and af-c to work the best for tracking birds. I have gone up to ISO 6400 with satisfactory results, in fact I have yet to use the flash.

Update 7/21- I have been using the camera at the beach for surfer photos and it performs impeccably. Battery life is a bit short, but that may be affected by the use of a screw drive lens. The sunrise photo was shot with the 10.5 fisheye.
Customer image
ecforman
5.0 out of 5 stars Meets my needs
Reviewed in the United States on July 3, 2017
Before I start, these are simply my own impressions. I was once a professional photographer way back in the days of film and photographed over 600 weddings, as well as sports teams and schools. Nowadays I am just an amateur who sells prints once in awhile. I am also a recently retired economics teacher and in my quest to upgrade from my excellent, but outdated D7000, I applied the principles of wants vs needs, trade-offs, opportunity costs, and cost benefits.

Realizing the no camera will give one exactly what they want, I narrowed the requirements down. My two main criteria were higher ISO performance and more accurate focus. I do a lot of bird in flight, and both are essential. It came down to the D7200, the D7500, and the D500. The D7200 already being two years out, I ruled it out. The D500 fit my needs, and a few wants, but the price tag was a bit steep. The D7500 seemed the best fit, and after trying it for a couple of days I believe I made the right choice.

ISO- While the D7000 had an upper limit of ISO 1600 before degrading, I now feel quite comfortable at 3200 which helps with the 180 f/2.8 for birds. I will test at higher when I do some Milky Way shots next week.

Focus- Spot on, fast and accurate. I can track a bird quite easily.

Exposure- Amazing. The color rendition and exposure are so good I don’t have to do any tweaking. Even shooting a bird against a bright blue sky the metering handle it.

Eight frames per second is fast. The shutter is quite sensitive and I will easily shoot a sequence when only one is needed, but they delete.

The shutter is much quite quieter than the D7000 and makes a sweet sound like my old Contax.

The negatives that people are sounding off on don’t bother me. One card slot is okay, I never utilized the second slot before, and I am not doing anything that a card failure would cause a catastrophic loss. No battery grip is okay too. I have one for the older camera, but never used it. I am so old that reaching over with my finger feels natural. Not being able to meter with old lenses is okay too, I don’t have any.

The bottom line is that this camera meets my needs, and then some, giving me a good return on investment.

Update 7/17- After spending a couple of weeks with the camera I am even more pleased. I found the group autofocus and af-c to work the best for tracking birds. I have gone up to ISO 6400 with satisfactory results, in fact I have yet to use the flash.

Update 7/21- I have been using the camera at the beach for surfer photos and it performs impeccably. Battery life is a bit short, but that may be affected by the use of a screw drive lens. The sunrise photo was shot with the 10.5 fisheye.
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675 people found this helpful
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Maurice S.
5.0 out of 5 stars Great camera
Reviewed in the United States on February 27, 2024
Color: BlackStyle: BodySet: BaseVerified Purchase
I had. A Nikon 7100. This camera is so much better. It is excellent in low light situations. It’s just so much better
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impetusera
5.0 out of 5 stars It's a good upgrade from D7000
Reviewed in the United States on July 7, 2019
Color: BlackStyle: BodySet: BaseVerified Purchase
I've had the D7000 since 2011 and always found it hit or miss as far as focus goes. Spent a lot of time taking pictures of brick walls, angled rulers and focus charts trying to dial in AF fine tune. I got it as good as I could and could get sharp photos out of it but at times regardless of all that I'd get some images that were off or just overall seemed soft. At the time the D7000 was considered a good low light camera but I found this is where it struggled with focus the most. I was a bit disappointed to see the D7500 dropped to a single SD card slot and no longer incorporated magnesium in the frame construction. For those reasons I tried to pickup a new D7200 but apparently missed the boat and none were to be had (aside from refurb or import). Ultimately I caved in and went with the D7500 as the D500 is a good chunk of extra money and would require an external flash. I don't abuse things I own so magnesium frame components aren't a necessity to me and though dual card slots would be nice also aren't a necessity. I haven't had a card go bad ever and I'm not a professional photographer so I don't require the redundancy. If I were making profit from my photos I would be paying more for the body with dual card slots. I don't agree with the statements that the D7500 is a step back from the D7200, it's more like a diagonal step forward. There are improvements that have been made that make it better than a D7200 but it has moved in a different direction than the D7000, 7100 and 7200 previous models. It is now the advanced consumer camera the D7xxx line was meant to be rather than the lite version of a professional model. Overall I'm very pleased with it and glad I got it instead of a D7200. I don't have the focus issues I saw with the D7000 and the low light performance is vastly superior to that of the D7000. It also has full support for the new AF-P lenses which I picked up a refurb 18-55 vr for a very low price. The focus speed of the AF-P lenses is near instant and for video has no detectable noise unlike the AF-S that make ridiculously loud noise while slowly dialing in to focus that is picked up by the built-in camera microphone. I also found the AF-P lens to take incredibly sharp photos which kind of surprised me since it's a "cheap" plastic mount kit lens.
9 people found this helpful
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Lupe Carlos III
4.0 out of 5 stars Amazing photos even at low light
Reviewed in the United States on August 2, 2019
Color: BlackStyle: BodySet: BaseVerified Purchase
I love this camera. The only thing I don't love about it is the size of the photos. My D3400 gave me larger photos to work with. Other than that... this camera does what I want it to, rich photos, instant focus, fast bursts, full manual or vivid auto. I find that I use the auto to shoot where I'll be moving in and out of variable light. I don't want to miss a shot monkeying with the settings. But when I have a more stationary subject, manual gives me the control I want. The screen on the back is reasonably accurate so I can trust the settings. I shoot everything from wildlife to events to landscape and portraiture. What I'm most impressed with is that I can shoot better shots at low light than I could with the entry level Nikon. I love this camera. People are blown away by the photos. Oh, one last thing. The selector ring on the back of the camera is abrasive on my face. Weird, I know, but it forces me to be sure my face isn't pressed against the camera. A small issue but it can be annoying to have a sore nose after a day of shooting.
Customer image
Lupe Carlos III
4.0 out of 5 stars Amazing photos even at low light
Reviewed in the United States on August 2, 2019
I love this camera. The only thing I don't love about it is the size of the photos. My D3400 gave me larger photos to work with. Other than that... this camera does what I want it to, rich photos, instant focus, fast bursts, full manual or vivid auto. I find that I use the auto to shoot where I'll be moving in and out of variable light. I don't want to miss a shot monkeying with the settings. But when I have a more stationary subject, manual gives me the control I want. The screen on the back is reasonably accurate so I can trust the settings. I shoot everything from wildlife to events to landscape and portraiture. What I'm most impressed with is that I can shoot better shots at low light than I could with the entry level Nikon. I love this camera. People are blown away by the photos. Oh, one last thing. The selector ring on the back of the camera is abrasive on my face. Weird, I know, but it forces me to be sure my face isn't pressed against the camera. A small issue but it can be annoying to have a sore nose after a day of shooting.
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7 people found this helpful
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David W. Ranck
5.0 out of 5 stars D7500 - A great step up from D3400, D5600
Reviewed in the United States on August 26, 2018
Color: BlackStyle: BodySet: BaseVerified Purchase
I've only had this camera for less than a day and have taken about a dozen keepers. The build quality is outstanding compared to the D3400. The D7500 I believe, will fill the role as an enthusiast camera. Not quite up to its big brother the D500, but at least in the ways that really matter to me it is spot on. BTW, I gave 4 stars for battery life but that is based on what I've read. I haven't had enough experience with the camera to have my own opinion. Also keep in mind that picture quality is a function of the photographer and the lens even more than the camera IMHO.

The first big difference to me over the D3400 is the focusing system. I haven't had a chance to use it track birds but the 51 focus points and the 3D and group modes seem to work well in simple tests. We'll see how they perform for me in real world scenarios like tracking a bird. Regardless the focusing system is much better than the D3400. Another important feature for me is the ability to shoot at 8 frames / second and up to 50 RAW photos before the buffer fills up.

I love the touchscreen display and the fact that it articulates up and down. I do wish it moved further down for taking overhead shots, but it will work fine. Being able to use the touch screen for menus and photo review is a real plus. "My Menu" is a great time saver. You can add your most often accessed menu items to My Menu so you can get to them quickly without scrolling through gobs of menus.

Auto-bracketing is an important feature for me too. I often shoot real estate (my wife and I are real estate agents and though we hire pro photographers, I often shoot additional shots). Bracketing allows me to create HDR photos that don't have windows that are all blown out, etc.

There are a ton more options on the D7500 over the D3400 or other entry-level DSLRs so if you are moving up or if this is your first DSLR, do yourself a favor and get a companion book. I bought "Nikon D7500 Experience - The Photography Guide to Operation and Image Creation with the Nikon D7500" by Douglas Klostermann. Very, very helpful.

The shots are from the National Cemetery in Sarasota Florida.
Customer image
David W. Ranck
5.0 out of 5 stars D7500 - A great step up from D3400, D5600
Reviewed in the United States on August 26, 2018
I've only had this camera for less than a day and have taken about a dozen keepers. The build quality is outstanding compared to the D3400. The D7500 I believe, will fill the role as an enthusiast camera. Not quite up to its big brother the D500, but at least in the ways that really matter to me it is spot on. BTW, I gave 4 stars for battery life but that is based on what I've read. I haven't had enough experience with the camera to have my own opinion. Also keep in mind that picture quality is a function of the photographer and the lens even more than the camera IMHO.

The first big difference to me over the D3400 is the focusing system. I haven't had a chance to use it track birds but the 51 focus points and the 3D and group modes seem to work well in simple tests. We'll see how they perform for me in real world scenarios like tracking a bird. Regardless the focusing system is much better than the D3400. Another important feature for me is the ability to shoot at 8 frames / second and up to 50 RAW photos before the buffer fills up.

I love the touchscreen display and the fact that it articulates up and down. I do wish it moved further down for taking overhead shots, but it will work fine. Being able to use the touch screen for menus and photo review is a real plus. "My Menu" is a great time saver. You can add your most often accessed menu items to My Menu so you can get to them quickly without scrolling through gobs of menus.

Auto-bracketing is an important feature for me too. I often shoot real estate (my wife and I are real estate agents and though we hire pro photographers, I often shoot additional shots). Bracketing allows me to create HDR photos that don't have windows that are all blown out, etc.

There are a ton more options on the D7500 over the D3400 or other entry-level DSLRs so if you are moving up or if this is your first DSLR, do yourself a favor and get a companion book. I bought "Nikon D7500 Experience - The Photography Guide to Operation and Image Creation with the Nikon D7500" by Douglas Klostermann. Very, very helpful.

The shots are from the National Cemetery in Sarasota Florida.
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24 people found this helpful
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D. Thayer
4.0 out of 5 stars Great camera but...
Reviewed in the United States on February 10, 2024
Color: BlackStyle: BodySet: BaseVerified Purchase
I bought this camera as an upgrade to my D7000 and while the images excellent on all my new and very old lens, the D7500 has some lacking features.
1) Neither the raw (.NEF) or JPG images list the lens model in the property details.
2) There is no provisions for listing the older AI lens in the menus.
Note: Amazon listed as "Body Only" and some reviews said there was no Battery or Battery Charger included, so I also ordered batteries with chargers along with a camera strap. The camera I received included a battery, a battery charger and camera strap.
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William D. Funk
3.0 out of 5 stars A nice camera for small hands.
Reviewed in the United States on March 24, 2024
Color: BlackStyle: BodySet: BaseVerified Purchase
I replaced a D7100 which was larger and took a battery pack. There is no battery pack available for the D7500. It has upgraded electronics. With the same bird action settings as the D7100, the D7500 is faster. Auto focusing is working well, but haven't found pin point focus yet. It is mated to an 18-300mm Nikor, so a bit front heavy. So far photos are crisp and clear.
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Robert
5.0 out of 5 stars Well I dropped my old D7500 in the parking lot of Fort Desoto North Beach
Reviewed in the United States on December 18, 2023
Color: BlackStyle: BodySet: BaseVerified Purchase
and after a day of using my old D5300 (which is a fine camera) I bought another D7500, once you get used to a better camera it's hard to go back. The auto focus is the selling point for me. I only do hand-held because the hiking exercise is the rational for spending money on camera equipment (helps keep my lower back healthy) and it is so much better than the D5300. Thought about spending more money and upgrading but I like this one.
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