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Home » At $4,499, the Sony A7R VI undercuts the A1 II by $2,000, and still matches it at 30fps
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At $4,499, the Sony A7R VI undercuts the A1 II by $2,000, and still matches it at 30fps

By dailyguardian.aeMay 14, 20262 Mins Read
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For years, the Sony A7R line was the camera you chose for the most detail possible, but, at the same time, you had to accept that it shot like a glacier. The A7R V was truly extraordinary: 61 megapixels with stunning image quality, yet achingly slow by sports-camera standards. 

The Sony A7R VI changes that equation entirely. Announced on May 13, 2026, and arriving in June at $4,499, the camera packs a brand-new 66.8MP stacked Exmor RS sensor with a BIONZ XR2 processor. On top of that, it shoots 30 frames per second with full autofocus and auto-exposure tracking. 

Why does the A7R VI’s 30 fps actually matter?

Simply because 30 fps is paired with 66.8 megapixels has never existed in a camera at this price, or at any price for that matter. The stacked sensor architecture gives the A7R VI a 5.6x faster readout than its predecessor, enabling blackout-free shooting. 

Throw in Sony’s best-yet AI autofocus, which can now read human body posture to track athletes mid-motion, and you understand what type of beast the new Sony A7R VI really is. It offers sixteen stops of dynamic range, 8.5 stops of IBIS, 8K at 30fps video, with dual-gain recording at 4K in up to 120 fps, all with a 9.44-megapixel OLED viewfinder. 

The new NP-SA100 battery delivers 30% more endurance than before, going up to 710 shots per charge via the LCD. 

How does the A7R VI stack up against the Sony A1 II?

At $4,499, the Sony A7R VI undercuts the A1 II by nearly $2,000, and, hear me on this, outresolves it by almost 17 megapixels (16.7 megapixels, to be precise). 

The A1 II matches the burst speed at 30 fps and has an edge in raw sensor readout (less rolling shutter at absolute limits), but for landscape, portrait, commercial, and even wildlife photographers, those advantages are quite narrow, I’d say. 

The A7R VI delivers A1 II-class speed with a significantly higher resolution at a price that puts flagship performance within the reach of working professionals. For the first time in mirrorless history, I see a sub-$5,000 camera competing with $6,500 sports flagships on burst speeds, with more resolution, no less, and I’m truly excited to get my hands on it.

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