Street, Travel & Documentary Photography — X-T1 (2014): The camera that put Fujifilm back on the map — weather sealed, a class-leading EVF, physical dials, and X-Trans colour that earned a generation of loyal fans.
Enthusiast Photography, Travel & Street — X-T30 III (2025): 40MP resolution and flagship-level subject detection in the most affordable X-T body — the best value Fujifilm camera ever made.
Who should buy what
X-T1 (2014)
X-T30 III (2025)
Quick take: The x-t30 iii has the highest resolution at 40mp; the x-t1 is the most affordable; only the x-t1 is weather sealed. Scroll down for the full spec breakdown.
Full specifications
| Specification | X-T1 (2014) | X-T30 III (2025) |
|---|---|---|
| Price | £299 | £849 |
| Sensor | 16.3MP APS-C X-Trans CMOS II | 40.2MP APS-C X-Trans BSI CMOS 5 HR |
| Resolution | 16.3MP | 40.2MP |
| Video | 1080p/60p | 6.2K/30p, 4K/60p, 1080p/240p |
| Autofocus | Phase-detect + contrast-detect hybrid AF (49 points) | Phase-detect, subject detection (human, animal, vehicle, aircraft) |
| Stabilisation | None | None (no IBIS) |
| Burst Rate | 8fps | 8fps mechanical, 20fps electronic |
| Battery Life | ~350 shots (CIPA) | ~380 shots (CIPA) |
| Weight | 440g (with battery and card) | 360g body only |
| Dimensions | 129.0 × 89.8 × 46.7mm | 118 × 83 × 47mm |
| Weather Sealed | Yes | No |
| Viewfinder | EVF, OLED 2.36M dots, 0.77× magnification — largest APS-C EVF at launch | EVF, 2.36M dots, 0.62× magnification |
| Screen | 3.0" 3-direction tilting LCD, 1.04M dots (no touch) | 3.0" touchscreen, tilting |
| Mount | Fujifilm X-mount | Fujifilm X-mount |
| Memory Cards | Single SD UHS-I slot | Single SD UHS-I slot |
| Connectivity | USB, Wi-Fi | USB-C, Bluetooth, Wi-Fi |
Suitability by genre
| Genre | X-T1 | X-T30 III |
|---|---|---|
| Street | ||
| Travel | ||
| Portrait | ||
| Landscape | ||
| Vlogging & Video | ||
| Wildlife |
GearScore™ suitability scores are based on aggregated purchaser reviews weighted by photography genre. See how scores are calculated →
More comparisons with X-T1
Camera family history