Panasonic FZ80D: One-minute review
The Panasonic FZ80D / FZ82D (Confusingly, Panasonic seems to call it the latter, but it most retailers call it the former) is an updated variant on the Lumix FZ80 bridge camera launched back in 2017. The new version has been refreshed with USB-C charging and improved resolution for the EVF and rear screen. Otherwise, it’s pretty much the same camera, so it’s more of a relaunch than a new camera.
The specifications look pretty spectacular on paper, including a huge 60x zoom, a very useful 20mm equivalent wide-angle capability, 4K video, and Panasonic’s clever 4K Photo modes, which can grab an 8MP still from a continuous 4K video sequence, or focus on a subject after you’ve shot it by capturing a short video sequence with multiple focus points.
They key drawback with cameras of this type, though, is the sensor size. The FZ80D / FZ82D uses a tiny 1/2.3-inch sensor no bigger than those in a smartphone, as it’s the only way to get this incredible zoom range in an affordable, portable camera.
This impacts heavily on the image quality, and it’s compounded by a drop-off in lens performance at long zoom settings. At short-to-medium zoom settings images are about as good as those from a smartphone, but by the time you reach the longest zoom setting – which is probably one of the reasons why you bought the FZ80D / FZ82D – the definition has fallen through the floor, and is not really adequate.
The FZ80D / FZ82D delivers a huge list of features for the money, but its plasticky build quality, and especially its variable performance, could leave you disappointed. It does an awful lot, but it does none of it very well.
Panasonic FZ80D / FZ82D: Price and availability
- $478 / £429 / AU$699
- Available now
The Panasonic FZ80D / FZ82D is priced at $478 / £429 / AU$699, and is available now. That puts it at a similar price to some of the cheaper best beginner mirrorless cameras, but none of these will come with zoom lenses that match the Panasonic’s zoom range – such lenses don't exist for mirrorless cameras, although of course you can swap lenses on a mirrorless camera, and there are telephotos available that give you something like the same reach. The difference is the image quality – images from the FZ80D / FZ82D do not approach the quality of those from the best mirrorless cameras, and you don’t need to be an expert to see the difference.
Quick specs
Panasonic FZ80D: Design
• Same shape and size as a beginner DSLR
• Distinctly plasticky feel overall
• Disappointing fixed rear screen
The Panasonic FZ80D / FZ82D definitely looks the real deal. It’s the same size and shape as an old-school beginner DSLR like a Canon EOS Rebel, for example, with the same rounded corners and big viewfinder housing on the top. The difference is apparent when you turn it on and use the zoom lever to extend that huge 60x zoom – you could never do that on a DSLR.
The body does have a plasticky feel, though the dials and buttons work pretty well. There’s only one control dial rather than two, which is often the case with beginner-oriented cameras, and there’s no spinning dial around the four-way pad on the back, which is actually a bit of a relief since these seldom work well.
While the FZ80D / FZ82D does have improved EVF and rear screen resolution compared to the original FZ80, it’s not all good news. For a start, there’s no eye sensor to detect when you’ve taken the camera from your eye – if you want to compose a shot on the rear screen instead you have to press a button next to the viewfinder.
Worse, the rear screen is fixed – it doesn’t even have a tilt mechanism. That’s a real surprise in an era when just about every camera has some kind of rear screen articulation, and it’s going to make the FZ80D awkward for low-angle shots or video. Cheaply made but not cheap – that’s not a good combination.
Happily there’s not too much else to complain about. The menus are big, clear, and easily navigated, and the main mode dial has custom settings for those who like to shoot with specific setups. The memory card slot is next to the battery in the base of the camera, which is always a bit of a nuisance, but pretty normal in a lower-end camera.
Design-wise, the FZ80D / FZ82D is a mixed bag. It’s a good size and fits your hand well, but the finish and controls have a budget feel, and the viewing system is primitive.
Panasonic FZ80D: Performance
• Fairly snappy autofocus
• Reasonable high-ISO quality
• Very weak stabilization at full zoom
The major disappointment with the Panasonic FZ80D / FZ82D is its performance at longer zoom settings, which is especially annoying because the huge zoom range is probably what convinced you to buy this camera. It does indeed zoom to an amazing 1200mm-equivalent (in full-frame terms) focal length, but by this point the image detail is very soft and there’s visible color fringing around object outlines. In fact, judging by the processed look of fine details and textures, it looks as if there’s some heavy image processing going on at the long zoom settings to try to compensate for the lens’s limitations.
This doesn’t just affect the maximum zoom setting. You can see the fine detail rendition starting to fall away even at 400mm-equivalent, and it just gets worse from there. I wouldn’t use the FZ80D / FZ82D past its 400mm setting for this reason, which means a lot of the focal range would be wasted for me.
There’s another issue with shooting at the 1200mm-equivalent maximum zoom: camera shake. The FZ80D / FZ82D does have image stabilization, and this works well at shorter focal lengths. But at 1200mm, it just can’t cope – if you try to shoot handheld the viewfinder image leaps all over the place, and even if you brace the camera against a wall or railing, getting a sharp-ish shot at this focal length is a lottery.
At shorter focal lengths and for everyday subjects, the FZ80D / FZ82D performs pretty well. Images look sharp, crisp, and clear, though highlight detail in bright skies is often lost, and the camera does not have the HDR modes that smartphones have. You might think it’ll be a step up if you switch from a smartphone to a bridge camera like this, but in some respects it’s a step down.
The autofocus is nice and snappy, and there’s a macro mode for close-up shots, which makes this camera even more versatile. The 4K Photo mode is good for extracting single frames from extended bursts, and the Post Focus mode is almost uncanny in the way it lets you choose the focus point after you’ve taken the shot. In fact, here the camera is capturing a short video with a focus that shifts from near to far, so it’s not magic after all – it just feels like it.
The issue with the 4K Photo and Post Focus modes is that they're based around 4K video capture, which means the images you extract are just 8 megapixels. If you want to capture a full-resolution sequence you’ll need to switch to the high-speed shooting mode, which tops out at 10fps, and that’s with the focus fixed on the first frame. 4K Photo mode aside, the FZ80D / FZ82D is okay for action sequences, but not great.
It did okay in my ISO tests, though. You can see fine details and textures start to slip away by ISO 400, but even at ISO 3200 images look reasonable as long as you don’t blow them up too much. This is where the FZ80D’s small sensor really holds it back; on a DSLR or mirrorless camera you'd be able to go way beyond these ISO settings before starting to lose quality.
Panasonic FZ80D / FZ82D: Sample images
Here’s a gallery showing our penguin at different focal length settings: 1200mm, 800mm, 400mm, 200mm, 100mm, 50mm and 20mm, moving the tripod nearer each time to keep the penguin more or less the same size in the frame to check for image quality at different zoom settings.
Here are some more sample images shot at a range of focal lengths, and which are more representative of casual day-to-day photography.
Should I buy the Panasonic FZ80D / FZ82D?
Buy it if...
Don't buy it if...
How I tested the Panasonic FZ80D / FZ82D
• I shot the same subject at different zoom settings with the camera on a tripod and the ISO set to 80 for absolute best quality
• I also tested the camera’s ISO performance using a tripod
• I checked the image stabilization across the zoom range
• I shot a range of subjects at different zoom settings handheld to get a feel for the kind of results average users can expect
The key feature of the Panasonic FZ80D / FZ82D is its massive 60x zoom range, but this is of limited use if it can’t maintain a good level of image quality at longer zoom settings. This is a regular failing of long-range bridge cameras, and likely to be a major disappointment for users who bought the camera specifically for that range.
It was also important to check the overall image quality and ISO performance. The FZ80D / FZ82D has a 1/2.3-inch sensor that's far smaller than the sensors in even cheap mirrorless cameras, and this can be a serious limiting factor.