Amateur Photographer verdict
The D7500 is a solid all-round DSLR that combines ruggedness, speed and image quality. Launched in 2017, we think it has plenty of life in it yet.- Excellent control layout and handling
- Image quality up to high ISO settings
- Excellent autofocus using viewfinder
- Vibrant JPEG colour rendition
- Tilting screen better than on previous D7000-series models
- Slow Live View autofocus
- SnapBridge connectivity lacks features
- No peaking display to aid manual focusing
- Only a single SD card slot (older series models had two)
- Lack of touch focus point selection when using viewfinder
If you’re looking for a APS-C Digital SLR with high build-quality, then the Nikon D7500 is about as good as it gets, making it one of the best Nikon DSLRs. Find out how this 20MP camera performs in our full review:
Nikon D7500 – At a glance
- 20.9 million-pixel DX CMOS sensor
- $897 / £899 new, $750 / £439 used (like new condition) body only
- 51-point phase detection AF system
- 4K UHD video up to 60 fps
- ISO 100-51,200 (standard)
What is the Nikon D7500?
The Nikon D7500 is a DSLR designed for enthusiast photographers. With a 20.9MP DX-format sensor and 8fps shooting, it was introduced between the Nikon D5600 and the D500 in Nikon’s range, arriving in April 2017.
It started out at around $1,250 / £1,300 for the body only when it was launched, but is now around $1000 / £1000. This is a welcome price drop in a climate that has seen most prices increasing but reflects the fact that the D7500 uses relatively old technology and has been around for a little while.
Judged on its own merits, however, it’s remains a fine camera to this day. At first it suffered in comparison with the 24MP Nikon D7200, which was cheaper and more appealing in some ways, but with the D7200 now discontinued, it leaves the Nikon D7500 as one of the few DSLRs still sold new.
Rivals for the Nikon D7500 include the Canon EOS 90D, which is more expensive but also more advanced, and various Pentax DSLRs including the Pentax KF.
For those with a bigger budget, the mighty full-frame Nikon D850 is still around, too, so while DSLRs might be in decline, there’s still a good deal of choice. See our guide to the best Nikon DSLRs for more models, and also the best Nikon F-mount lenses to go with them.
Features
With Nikon’s Expeed 5 processor, the D7500 offers a standard sensitivity range of ISO 100-51,200, which is expandable up to ISO 1,640,000. As we’ll see, these hugely extended ISOs don’t give great results, but that shouldn’t mask the fact that this sensor delivers excellent high-ISO image quality.
Nikon says the D7500 can shoot at 8fps for 50 raw frames in a burst, which is a significant advance over the D7200’s 27 frames at 6fps. In practice, with a 16GB SanDisk Extreme U3 card rated at 90MB/sec, I measured an even faster rate of 8.2fps, but a slightly smaller buffer of 46 frames using lossless compression. This should still be ample for all but the most trigger-happy of action shooters.
Autofocus
Being a DSLR, the D7500 can track focus at full speed using its 51-point autofocus system, which uses the same phase-detection module as the D7200. Users can also match their specific lenses to their camera, with the Auto AF Fine Tune function to give the best focusing accuracy.
In live view, however, it falls back on contrast AF focusing technology – the Nikon D780 is the only Nikon DSLR to feature a sensor with on-chip phase-detection.
Metering
Metering employs a 180K-pixel RGB sensor – which is also used for face detection and subject recognition – while feeding information into the AF system to help the camera understand how a subject is moving around the frame.
Alongside the usual matrix, centre-weighted and spot modes, the D7500 gains Nikon’s highlight-weighted metering. This aims to avoid clipping bright areas of the image to white, allowing the user to make the most of the sensor’s dynamic range when post-processing raw files.
Perhaps surprisingly, the D7500 has just a single SD card slot, unlike either the D7200 or the D500. Another limitation is that older manual-focus lenses can only be used in manual-exposure mode, without any metering. While these omissions will disappoint Nikon fans, fundamentally, they reflect the fact that the D7000-series is no longer top of the firm’s DX lineup.
Built-in flash
Better news is that the built-in pop-up flash can work with Nikon’s radio-controlled Advanced Wireless Lighting system to operate off-camera speedlights wirelessly for creative lighting control. Nikon says the EN-EL15a battery should provide 950 shots per charge, and while this is down from 1,110 compared to the D7200, it will still be ample for most purposes.
In-camera raw processing allows you to tweak images before sharing them, and to this end, built-in Wi-Fi and Bluetooth allow connection to a smartphone driven by Nikon’s SnapBridge app. I’ll look at this in more detail later.
Video specs
For video, both 4K and Full HD recording are available. However, while the latter uses the full width of the sensor, 4K reads from a 3840×2160 pixel region in the centre; this imposes a 1.5x field-of-view crop.
In-camera electronic image stabilisation is available to compensate for shake when shooting hand-held. This has the advantage of being able to correct for rotation around the lens axis, which is important for video but something in-lens stabilisation simply can’t do. It also works with every lens, not just optically stabilised ones. But, sadly, it only functions in Full HD mode, not 4K.
Build and handling
For this price you’d expect Nikon to deliver a solid-feeling, ergonomically sound camera, and with the D7500 that’s exactly what you get. It has a deep grip with a thick rubberised coating that feels extremely secure in your hand, and a weather-sealed body that’s compact without being cramped.
The body measures 135.5x104x72.5mm and weighs 720g – a little heavier than the D7200, but noticeably smaller than the D500.
The control setup is based on the D7200’s, but in a welcome change, the ISO button is now much more sensibly placed; it sits immediately behind the shutter release, as on the D500. This comes at the expense of the D7200’s metering mode button, which has relocated to the camera’s back – a much more sensible prioritisation of these two functions.
Almost every important shooting function can be changed using easy-to-access external controls. There’s an exposure-mode dial on the left shoulder and a drive-mode dial beneath, both of which lock in position to prevent accidental changes.
Front and rear electronic dials change the main exposure settings, while the D-pad on the back is used to move the focus area.
Key settings such as metering, white balance, autofocus and flash mode have dedicated buttons on the camera body, while two Fn buttons on the front can be customised to suit the user.
A press of the ‘i’ button on the camera’s back brings up a short menu of other settings, mostly to do with image processing. Personally, I’d have liked to see a user-customisable quick menu here, as with most other cameras at this price point. But, to be honest, the D7500 is so well set up overall that this is a minor complaint.
This review originally featured on Trusted Reviews.
Viewfinder and screen
The D7500 has a reasonably large and bright optical viewfinder, with 0.94x magnification and 100% coverage of the lens’s field of view. A sensor above the eyepiece automatically switches off the rear screen when you’re using the viewfinder.
As well as displaying the most important exposure data in a panel beneath the focusing screen, it’s also possible to overlay gridlines to aid composition or show a dual-axis electronic level – although, oddly, you can’t have both at the same time.
Naturally, you don’t get any of the advantages of electronic viewing when it comes to accurately previewing exposure, white balance or depth of field before shooting – which is a considerable disadvantage of DSLRs compared to mirrorless cameras.
Rear screen
Below the viewfinder is the 3.2in 922k-dot LCD, which is an impressively slim unit that tilts up and down while adding little to the depth of the camera. I’d have preferred a fully articulated design as seen on the Nikon D5600 or Canon EOS 90D, since tilt-only screens are useless when shooting in portrait format.
In Live View the screen gives an accurate depiction of how your shots will come out, with exposure, white balance and depth of field all previewed live. This represents a considerable advantage over older Nikon D7000-series DSLRs like the Nikon D7000 which couldn’t adjust the aperture diaphragm while the cameras was being used in Live View.
Touchscreen limitations
Alongside touch focus and touch shutter release in Live View and video modes, the touchscreen can be used to operate menu selections and browse through images in playback, just like on a smartphone. But overall touch operation still feels tacked on as an afterthought, and the D7500 lacks features common elsewhere – such as touch focus point selection when using the viewfinder, or a customisable touch-sensitive control panel you can configure with your most-used functions.
Autofocus
When it comes to autofocus, it’s very much a tale of two systems. For viewfinder shooting, the D7500 uses a 51-point phase-detection system, with the AF array providing decent coverage by SLR standards – about 75% of the frame width, and 50% of its height.
Autofocus is super-fast and decisive, even in low light; indeed, Nikon says it’s sensitive down to -3EV, or effectively moonlight. The D7500 also gains the group-area AF mode previously seen on the D500, which allows multiple AF points to be used for keeping track of a moving subject, and works very effectively.
Switch to Live View, however, and it’s a very different story. Nikon is still using a rather basic contrast-detection system, and it’s painfully slow compared to mirrorless cameras or Canon’s Dual Pixel AF system. It’s okay for static subjects, but don’t even think about using it for anything that moves – indeed, Nikon doesn’t even bother offering an AF-C mode.
On a more positive note, though, the AF point can be placed anywhere in the scene, and since focusing uses the image sensor itself, it’s consistently accurate – even with fast primes and off-centre subjects.
Seasoned DSLR users will be used to this kind of behaviour, and may well be happy using the two AF systems in a complementary fashion. But the fact remains that the D7500’s modern mirrorless rivals all focus much quicker when you’re shooting with the rear screen and indeed offer the same AF system and choices in both viewfinder and live view shooting.
Video
With the same sensor and processor as the D500, the D7500 can record 4K video, giving impressively detailed footage. However, since it’s captured from a 3840×2160-pixel area at the centre of the sensor, it imposes a 1.5x field-of-view crop. It does not offer the full-width ‘oversampling’ of modern mirrorless alternatives. This can be an advantage if you’re trying to record distant action – sports or wildlife, perhaps – but it’s more problematic if you want to shoot a wideangle view.
It’s also possible to record Full HD video with no crop, although the quality of the footage isn’t anywhere near as good, and you’d get better results downsampling 4K. That said, it isn’t obviously much worse than other DSLRs, and is fine if you just want to record the occasional video.
Built-in electronic image stabilisation
One key new feature is the addition of built-in electronic image stabilisation for Full HD video, which appears to be a similar system to the one Canon introduced in its EOS cameras. It does a pretty good job of reducing the visibility of camera shake while shooting video hand-held, even when you’re using an unstabilised lens. However, it isn’t as effective as the in-body systems found in some competing cameras.
Nikon has included a flat Picture Control mode designed to allow easy colour grading of your footage in post-production, and a zebra pattern display to help you avoid clipping highlight detail.
Tap the screen to focus
You can use the touchscreen to autofocus on a new subject during recording, but this is slow and shows a distinct contrast-detection ‘wobble’ effect in your footage, which means it isn’t very usable in practice.
Sadly, there’s no peaking display to help with manual focusing either. These deficiencies leave the D7500 rather lacking in comparison to cameras such as the Canon EOS 90D or Sony Alpha 6500, so if you’re specifically looking for a camera that’s good for video, this isn’t the best choice.
SnapBridge Connectivity
As with Nikon’s other recent cameras, the D7500 includes Bluetooth and Wi-Fi connectivity. This is designed to establish an always-on connection to a tablet or smartphone via the free SnapBridge app for Android and iOS, and automatically transfer across a 2MP copy of every single image you take for sharing.
Alternatively, you can choose to send across only your favourite images by marking them in playback using the camera’s ‘i’ button. SnapBridge also provides a basic remote control capability with a Live View feed, but with no ability to change any settings remotely, it feels terribly outdated.
It’s possible to pair the camera with multiple devices, so you can alternate between using a smartphone and tablet. However, since there’s no option to set up a Wi-Fi-only connection, you have to manually switch between them each time using the camera’s Bluetooth menu – which isn’t very intuitive or convenient. I found that the best option is to add the Paired Devices sub-setting to the camera’s custom My Menu.
If you’re happy to work how Nikon thinks you should, SnapBridge functions pretty well, transferring your shots to your smart device with minimum fuss. It’s clever enough to pause transmission when the camera battery becomes low to conserve power for shooting, then resume transferring images after recharging.
However, if you prefer to work the other way round, taking advantage of the larger, higher-resolution screen of your phone or tablet to browse through your images then pull your favourites across individually, the process is annoyingly slow and clunky, with thumbnails taking an age to generate every single time.
Performance
In general use, the D7500 is an impressively accomplished performer, more than capable of handling almost any photographic situation you might present it with. Having shot well over a thousand images with the camera across a wide variety of situations, I rarely found it wanting.
Image quality is very good indeed, with the 20.9MP sensor delivering detailed images at low ISO settings and keeping noise under control up to about ISO 6400; it produced usable files even at settings as high as ISO 51,200.
Nikon’s matrix metering does a decent job generally. If anything, it errs on the side of underexposure to protect highlights, which is far more desirable than irrevocably clipping bright highlights.
Shooting in JPEG
JPEG colour rendition is by default bright and punchy, even at high ISO settings where colours might start to fade on other cameras. If you want to pep things up further, then Vivid and Landscape Picture Controls are available, while the Neutral and Portrait settings give more subtle renditions.
Nikon also offers a huge amount of control over the image-processing settings, so it should be possible to tweak colour output to match your taste. However, I did find the auto white balance to be a little erratic, with a clear habit of erring too much towards the cool side on bright, sunny blue-sky days, which makes images look a bit sterile.
In such cases it’s easy enough to switch to a preset, of course. If you’re shooting raw then you can also re-process in-camera with a better white balance setting. Alternatively, most mobile imaging apps will let you quickly warm up the image, too. In most cases, only a slight tweak is needed to give a more attractive result.
Image Quality
Nikon has used the same 20.9MP DX-format sensor as in last year’s D500, and it delivers similarly impressive image quality in the D7500. It’s slightly lower resolution than the 24MP sensors in Nikon’s cheaper DX DSLRs, but this has little practical impact unless you print larger than A3 (16x11in). The resolution of mid-range cameras seems to have hit a plateau since the D7500’s launch, so it’s not been left far behind at all.
In return, its high-ISO performance is very good indeed, despite the fact that the extended settings beyond ISO 51,200 are hugely over-optimistic. As usual, you’ll get the best possible results in terms of fine detail and noise control by carefully processing raw files.
Resolution
In JPEG, the D7500 delivers 3200 lines per picture height (l/ph) in our resolution chart tests. Using carefully processed raw files you’ll achieve rather better results, of around 3600 l/ph. Noise progressively reduces resolution as the sensitivity setting is increased, and by the time we reach ISO 1600, it’s down to around 3200 l/ph in raw.
Move up the scale to ISO 12,800 and the D7500 still registers 3,200 l/ph, but beyond this things deteriorate rapidly. The extended ISOs show very low resolution due to extremely high noise, with any detail on our resolution chart barely discernible by ISO 819,200.
Multiply the numbers on the crops below by 200 for the resolution in l/ph
Dynamic Range
When it comes to dynamic range, the D7500 scores very well in our Image Engineering tests. At ISO 50, we measure over 13EV dynamic range, indicating massive leeway for recovering additional details from raw files – especially in shadow regions. This drops off progressively as the ISO is raised, but values of 8.2EV at ISO 3200 and 6EV at ISO 51,200 still represent a strong showing. However, the precipitous decline in the extended settings again indicates why these have little practical use.
ISO and Noise
At low ISOs the D7500’s image quality is superb; fine detail is rendered with impressive sharpness and there’s no visible noise. At ISO 800, noise starts to have an impact on image quality, with low-contrast textures starting to blur and shadows losing detail.
ISO 1600 is still eminently usable, but by the time we hit ISO 6400 fine detail and colour saturation are visibly suffering.
Image quality progressively degrades at higher ISOs, and by ISO 51,200 colour rendition has become very broad-brush – although the image is still recognisable.
The first extended sensitivity of ISO 102,400 is still just about okay, but at higher settings it’s increasingly difficult to see the point as the image disappears under an ocean of noise, acquiring a distinct magenta hue at the top two extended ISOs.
Should I buy the Nikon D7500?
With the D7500, Nikon made an extremely capable DSLR that will, I’m sure, satisfy the needs of a lot of serious enthusiast photographers even in today’s mirrorless-dominated market. There are still photographers who prefer the size and handling of DSLRs and the look of their optical viewfinders.
The original conundrum for prospective buyers was whether it was good enough to command a significant premium over its predecessor, the highly-regarded D7200. As Nikon’s former DX flagship, this includes features that have been left out of the D7500 – most notably, dual-card slots and a magnesium-alloy body shell, alongside a slightly higher 24MP resolution.
This is compounded by the fact that many of the D7500’s updates turn out to offer relatively minor benefits over its predecessor in practice. For example, it’s great to have a tilting screen, but the camera’s relatively slow Live View autofocus meant I rarely used it. However, the D7200 has since been discontinued and is now available only on the used market, so the D7500 has the field to itself.
Find more great DSLRs from Nikon in our guide to the best Nikon DSLRs ever.
Further Reading:
- Nikon D7500 vs Canon EOS 7D Mark II
- Nikon D7500 DSLR gets firmware update version 1.11
- Nikon D7500 vs Nikon D500
- Canon EOS 90D review
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