Rendering character
Primes typically optimise for a single focal length — sharper corners, smoother bokeh, lower distortion than a zoom in the same range.
Viltrox 27mm f/1.2 for Fujifilm X.
APS-C 40mm-equivalent f/1.2 Pro prime for Fujifilm X
Best for
Avoid if
Typical price
$752.13Snapshot of current retail. Check current pricing at retailers below.
Product Snapshot
Quick Verdict
Best for: Low-light
Not ideal for: One-lens flexibility
Biggest strength: Fast f/1.2 aperture
Biggest compromise: Single focal length
Detailed verdict & alternatives below
Jump to verdictQuick verdict
Five-second read on who the Viltrox AF 27mm f/1.2 Pro is right for — and who should keep looking.
Best for
Not ideal if
Main tradeoff
Stills-first strengths vs. video capability — the body is honest about what it is, but video-heavy creators will outgrow it.
Community insights
Be the first to share how you use the Viltrox AF 27mm f/1.2 Pro.
Owner voting opens lower on the page. Aggregates here grow as the community votes.
Open the voting panelFocal character
Focal length is a lens's most decisive spec. Here's where this lens lives on the focal map and what its aperture unlocks.
The Viltrox AF 27mm f/1.2 Pro is a 27mm prime — one focal length, no zoom ring, no compromise on optics for flexibility. The wide-normal sweet spot — close enough to feel present, wide enough to keep context.
Max aperture of f/1.2 is the lens's headline feature. On paper, it gathers about four stops more light than an f/5.6 kit zoom — meaningful at every step from low-light handhold to shallow subject isolation.
Focal-length map
560 g on the scale — comfortable hand-held weight; sling-bag friendly.
Primes typically optimise for a single focal length — sharper corners, smoother bokeh, lower distortion than a zoom in the same range.
Wide-open performance is what you're paying for — strong low-light capability and pronounced background separation.
No OIS — pair with an IBIS body or higher shutter speeds for telephoto handheld work.
Use cases
A practical fit-rating per workflow, derived from this product's specs alone.
Travel
LimitedVersatile zoom range + light weight + sealing — the travel-lens trifecta.
Portraits
Very goodClassic 50–135mm focal range plus wide aperture is the portrait recipe.
Landscape
LimitedWide angle plus weather sealing is the landscape combination that matters.
Wildlife / sports
Not idealReach is non-negotiable; OIS earns extra credit for handheld work.
Street
LimitedCompact 28–50mm primes are the classic street choice.
Video
GoodStabilisation and a fast aperture are what video work asks of a lens.
Key strengths
The practical wins — derived from the shipping spec sheet, not from hands-on testing.
Wider aperture means more light, shallower depth of field, and faster shutter speeds — the single biggest creative spec on a lens.
Primes typically optimise for one focal length — sharper corners and smoother bokeh than a same-range zoom.
Main limitations
Honest tradeoffs. Every line below is derivable from the spec sheet — no padded warnings.
Fine for fair weather; pack a cover for events or rain alongside a sealed body.
No zoom flexibility — you reframe with your feet. Compositional discipline for some, a constraint for others.
Specs that actually matter
The handful of specifications that actually move the buying decision — translated into practical terms.
Fast aperture is the single biggest creative spec on a lens — wider opening for low light, shallower depth of field, faster shutter speeds.
Who cares: Portrait, event, and low-light shooters.
Form & coverage
Focal coverage from ultra-wide to super-telephoto, plus its widest aperture.
Focal length
Max aperture
f/1.2
Wide — environmental, street, video.
Background separation
Illustrative — driven by the f/1.2 aperture and 27mm reach. Wider apertures and longer focal lengths throw the background further out of focus.
Ownership reality
Practical ownership — carry weight, accessory burden, upgrade path. Not a market-timing read.
Mount commitment
Fujifilm X
Lenses are the longest-lived part of a kit. Mount choice locks in your future body options.
Carry weight
Manageable
Pro zooms add real weight to the bag; primes stay light.
Accessory needs
Filters, hood, cap
Plan for a UV/ND filter and the included hood; cleaning kit on top.
Owners
Real-world consensus voted by the community — not spec-sheet numbers. Sign in to add your votes.
Community verdict
0 votesNot enough community votes yet to call a verdict. Be the first to shape what this gear is known for — vote below.
Owner consensus
From community votes · not specsThe owner consensus unlocks once enough community members have voted to avoid a false read — 6 more votes to go. Vote or review above to help it along.
You're viewing the community consensus. Sign in to add your votes.
Sign in to voteWhat the community shoots with this most.
The lens optical signature.
Real-world autofocus performance.
Real-world low-light performance.
Bang for the buck.
What owners praise.
Recurring frustrations.
Share your experience
A 1-minute guided review — it also shapes the community consensus.
No community reviews yet
Be the first to share how this performs in the real world — your review also shapes the community consensus above.
Alternatives
Closest neighbors in the catalogue — same category, similar price, with a nudge for shared mount or ecosystem.
FAQ
The questions buyers most often have at this stage of the decision.
The Viltrox AF 27mm f/1.2 Pro is a Fujifilm X-mount lens. It works on any current Fujifilm X body without an adapter. Cross-mount use requires an adapter and may compromise autofocus performance.
Check current pricing for the Viltrox AF 27mm f/1.2 Pro
As an Amazon Associate, GearAtlas may earn from qualifying purchases. How affiliate links work