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Sony A7R VI: Two-minute review
Highly-detailed images or blazing-fast performance — historically, you’d have to pick one or the other when choosing a camera. However, Sony has now given us both in one model — the A7R VI — and for me, it’s the perfect mirrorless camera.
Its new 66.8MP stacked full-frame sensor resolves more detail than the sensor in the 50MP A1 II — Sony’s previous flagship camera for quality and performance — and most of that camera’s speed in terms of sensor readout.
I say ‘most’, because its readout speed is half that of the A1 II, and able to support autofocus up to 60fps, but it has certainly been sufficiently speedy for just about every scenario I’ve used it in. And rolling shutter distortion is minimized compared to the A7R VI’s predecessor, the A7R V — I shot with both cameras at the same time in order to make direct performance comparisons.
Even better, the A7R VI costs £4,500, which seriously undercuts the pricier A1 II. Considering what the A7R VI can do, the A1 II feels somewhat redundant, especially when the speed-specialist A9 III is also on the scene for the likes of pro sports photographers who demand the absolute fastest performance.
Of course, that’s still a decent chunk of anyone’s money, and the A7R VI costs a lot more than the still-incredible A7R V, which has fallen in price since its launch in 2022, and is probably the better value pick if detail is all that matters to you.
However, given the upgrades here, which also include a new and higher-capacity battery type, the A7R VI’s starting price feels justified. I’ve been reviewing cameras for 15 years, and I think Sony just made the first one that’s perfect. I could happily dine out on its skills for many years to come.
Sony A7R VI: price and release date
- Announced on May 13 2026
- The body-only price is £4,500
Yes, the A7R VI’S £4,500 launch price is higher than that of the A7R V, which cost £4,000 on its announcement late in 2022, and which can now be had for around £3,000. That said, the A7R VI is more camera — it’s not just a resolution king, but a speed demon too.
When you consider what the A7R VI is capable of versus the Sony A1 II, which costs more than £6,000, it feels like excellent value.
Sony A7R VI specs
|
Type: |
Mirrorless camera |
|
Sensor: |
66.8MP full-frame (36 x24mm) fully stacked BSI CMOS |
|
LCD: |
3.2-inch, multi-articulated, 2.1m dots |
|
Memory: |
2x SDXC, 2x CFexpress Type A |
|
Video: |
8K 30fps / 4K 120p |
|
ISO range: |
ISO 50-204,800 |
|
Mechanical Shutter speeds: |
30-1/8000 sec |
|
Electronic Shutter speeds: |
30-1/16000 sec |
|
Viewfinder: |
9.44m-dot, OLED EVF, 0.78x |
|
Processor: |
Bionz XR 2 |
|
Connectivity: |
AX WiFi (WiFi 6), Bluetooth, 2x USB-C, audio |
|
Weight: |
659g |
Sony A7R VI: Design
- Still lightweight and small versus rival high-resolution full-frame cameras
- Rugged design and excellent ergonomics
- Touchscreen features a 4-way axis, the detailed EVF detail packs 9.44m dots
For recent models, Sony has made great strides in improving how its cameras handle, and how easy the menus and controls are to navigate. It’s no longer the case that rival Canon and Nikon cameras are simply easier and more intuitive to use.
For starters, Sony has improved the design of the grip — on the A7R VI it’s even bigger and more pronounced than before, no doubt to house the upgraded and physically larger new battery type which debuts here (more on this in the performance section).
The new bulb button on the camera’s top plate illuminates key buttons in low light, making them easier to find in the dark, and there’s a tally lamp for video recording. Each port sits behind its own rigid door, which when in use sits neatly out of the way. These are all lovely additions to what is otherwise a very similar design to the A7R V.
Like before, we get three control wheels for exposure adjustments (one of which is lockable), four custom buttons (though not one on the front of the camera, sadly), a grippy AF joystick and a four-way control dial which also includes drive mode and ISO shortcuts.
There’s a neat 3.2-inch touchscreen with 4-way articulation, meaning the screen can be flipped out to the side and viewed at awkward angles, whether you’re shooting in vertical or horizontal format. There’s a highly detailed 9.44m-dot EVF, too, but this time it’s a HDR DCI PW display which Sony says is 3x brighter than the one in the A7R V.
We get twin card slots again, and each slot accepts either an SD card or one of Sony’s CFexpress Type A cards. Per gigabyte, CFexpress Type A cards are among the most expensive, more so than CFexpress Type B used in rival cameras. Of course you can use cheaper SD cards, but you’ll want a CFexpress card to get the A7R VI’s speediest performance for burst shooting and so on.
Naturally, with this being a pro body, the A7R VI is weather-resistant. I’m not in the habit of wrecking cameras, and certainly not review samples that I have to send back, but you can feel that the A7R VI is rugged too. The back-right control dial has a tiny bit of give, and could be a weak point, but it performed fine during my review.
If I was to have one criticism, it’s that the camera body still feels a little cramped — many of the controls are small and tightly packed together. You’ll also want a vertical grip when pairing the A7R VI with big lenses for better balance, such is its compact design. But overall, the A7R VI is as good a camera body as Sony has ever made.
Sony A7R VI: Performance
- The sensor is stacked with rapid readout speed, minimizing rolling shutter distortion
- A new higher-capacity NP-SA100 battery makes its debut
- Subject tracking autofocus performance further boosted with new chip
While the A7R VI’s design is a minor upgrade, its performance reaches new levels thanks to a new 66.8MP stacked sensor, new Bionz XR 2 processor, combined processing and AI chip (as in the Sony A7 V), and an entirely new battery. Let’s look at each of these in more detail, starting with the sensor.
Not only is the sensor the highest-resolution for the full-frame format at 66.8MP, it’s a stacked sensor, which means a faster readout speeds, and a half-stop boost in image stabilization performance, now up to 8.5 stops.
Stacked sensors power everything from rapid autofocus speed to minimizing rolling shutter distortion. The A7R VI’s is faster than the A7R V’s regular 61MP sensor, but not quite as quick as the A1 II’s 50MP stacked sensor, nor the A9 III’s 24MP global shutter.
We also get a next-gen processor, the Bionz XR 2. Top features include 10fps burst shooting (mechanical shutter) for up to 535 frames in compressed RAW, and up to 30fps blackout-free (electronic shutter) for up to 150 shots — the latter is a three-second burst.
One of the buttons can be assigned as a burst-shooting boost, meaning you can tick over at, say, 10fps in using the electronic shutter and up this to 30fps when a key moment occurs.
Burst shooting is also supported by the pre-capture feature, where up to one second of shots can be buffered with the shutter half-pressed, before you fully press the shutter to engage a sequence.
Like in the A7 V, the A7R V combines the processing chip with the dedicated AI chip — the setup found in previous-generation cameras like the A7R V — into a single chip, for greater efficiency and power conservation, and for smarter autofocus and accurate auto white balance and color rendition.
In addition to a boost in the maximum possible length of burst shooting sequences before the camera slows up, there’s an auto subject-detection mode this time around, which is very handy if you regularly switch between subject types, plus dedicated subject-tracking modes for as humans, birds, animals and vehicles, with the camera able to recognize head, eyes and even body shape (human pose), to intelligently understand where exactly to focus on, with a super impressive hit ratio of sharp shots.
I photographed a lot of birdlife, and found the bird detection autofocus super reliable, and even able to pick out subjects when they only took up a small portion of the frame. Those who like to use spot focusing will enjoy seeing the size options expanded, with new XL and XS options for wider or even more precise focusing.
And then there’s the new battery, a NP-SA100 unit with 2,670mAh capacity. For Sony photographers, this one is a big deal — the first new battery for Sony mirrorless cameras in nine years, since the legendary NP-FZ100.
The new battery is physically larger and has a 17% bigger capacity than the NP-FZ100’s 2,280mAh, which already delivered rival-beating power, so that’s the good news.
The bad news is that the batteries are not forwards / backwards compatible. You can’t use your stock of NP-FZ100 batteries in the A7R VI, nor can you use the new NP-SA100 in an older Sony camera.
Batteries, along with the continued use of Sony’s own CFexpress Type A cards, are another potential costly extra, which will no doubt irritate some Sony fans keen on the A7R VI. I certainly enjoyed having two NP-SA100 batteries and a charging dock for long weekends of heavy shooting, and would personally factor that into a purchase. The bottom line, though, is that the new battery’s life is better — and who wouldn’t want that?
Sony A7R VI: Image and video quality
- The highest-resolution full-frame sensor in a mirrorless camera, and it’s a stacked type
- 66.8MP equates to 28MP with a 1.5x (APS-C) crop
- Dynamic range boosted by one stop to a class-leading 16 stops
The ‘R’ series of A7 cameras have always been about detail — delivering the highest-resolution stills that Sony cameras are capable of. And the A7R VI boosts the series further, from 61MP to 66.8MP, and this is achieved with a substantial boost in performance thanks to the stacked sensor.
There are some who would have preferred an even bigger boost in resolution over a boost in speed — there was a time when the A7R VI was rumored to come with a (regular) 100MP sensor. For me, however, as someone who photographs everything from landscapes to portraits and wildlife, I prefer the versatility of the A7R VI’s sensor. It’s basically perfect for my needs.
With a stacked sensor, there’s a risk of some compromises in image quality, especially in low light. Thankfully, in the case of the A7R VI, the opposite is true, and dynamic range is further boosted from 15 stops to 16 stops.
I don’t usually need 66.8MP stills, but being able to crop into such large files can be super handy. For example, I took a lot of bird photos, and even with Sony’s 400-800mm lens, which is its longest telephoto lens, the tiny, distant subjects at times appeared small in the frame.
No problem: I could crop right in and still enjoy super-sharp detail. To give you an idea, the 1.5x (APS-C) crop mode is still 28MP, which is a huge file size. Employing that crop with the 400-800mm lens is effectively like having a 1200mm lens! This is where high-resolution cameras can be particularly helpful.
Color is also improved, with the subject-detection AI chip analyzing the scene for better auto white balance (AWB). For example, where older AWB systems might look at a lush green woodland scene and compensate with the opposing tone, resulting in an overly magenta hue, the A7R VI knows it’s a woodland, or a person in the shade, and will select the right tone for the scene.
Video recording looks similar to the A7R V’s going by the numbers: 8K up to 30fps and 4K up to 120fps, and still no open-gate recording, but the new stacked sensor minimizes rolling shutter distortion, making the A7R VI a better option for video than its predecessor. It’s also equipped with more filmic color profiles.
- Image and video quality score: 5/5
Sony A7R VI: testing scorecard
|
Attributes |
Notes |
Rating |
|---|---|---|
|
Price |
Pricier than its predecessor, but much cheaper than the A1 II, which it outperforms in many ways |
4.5/5 |
|
Design |
It inherits Sony’s best design from the A7 V / A9 III and adds a few nice features, with superb ergonomics and rugged build |
5/5 |
|
Performance |
The 66.7MP stacked sensor and AI processor chip are a revelation |
5/5 |
|
Image and video quality |
66.8MP stills, 8K video, 16-stops dynamic range — show me a better full-frame camera |
5/5 |
Should I buy the Sony A7R VI?
Buy it if…
Don’t buy it if…
Sony A7R VI: also consider
How I tested the Sony A7R VI
- Sony loaned me the A7R VI four weeks before it was announced
- I had four lenses to use with it, plus twin batteries and a charging dock
- I’ve taken photos and videos of a wide range of subjects to test key feature
I had the chance to test the Sony A7R VI for four weeks ahead of its announcement, and used it with four lenses: a small 24mm f/2.8 prime, the 28-70mm F2 GM, 70-200mm F4 G OSS II Macro and 400-800mm F6.3-8 telephoto zoom. I was also supplied with two batteries and the twin charging dock.
Given the camera’s high-resolution stacked sensor and latest processor, which incorporates the previously separate AI chip, I wanted to test the camera’s image quality and performance in a wide range of scenarios, which included landscape photography, wildlife photography, portraiture and more.
I also tested its burst-shooting skills, shooting in both the mechanical and electronic shutter modes, and noting how many photos the camera could capture before slowing up.
Sony also loaned me the A7R VI’s predecessor, the A7R V, so I was able to make various performance comparisons, especially around high-speed photography.







































