Most Canon vs Sony comparisons treat beginners like they’re about to buy pro cameras with a smaller budget. They’re not. Beginners need clarity on ecosystem lock-in costs — lenses cost more than the body, and you’re committing for years — and honest answers about what mirrorless actually saves you on trips versus what the marketing promises.
Quick verdict:
- Canon EOS R50 is the best choice for video-focused creators who want current-generation autofocus and 4K 60fps
- Sony a6400 is the best choice for budget-conscious beginners willing to buy used and invest in learning the E-mount lens ecosystem
- Sony a6700 is the best choice for hybrid shooters who need 4K 60fps without crop and can justify the $600 premium over the a6400
- Canon EOS M50 Mark II is the best choice for existing EF-M owners who need a backup body; the ecosystem was discontinued in 2023, so avoid this if you’re just starting
At a glance
| Feature | Canon EOS R50 | Sony a6400 | Sony a6700 | Canon EOS M50 Mark II | |---|---|---|---| | Price (as of 2026-05-29) | $799 MSRP ($699 street) | Discontinued (used: $400–$550) | $1,398 MSRP ($1,299 street) | Discontinued (used: $350–$450) | | Sensor | APS-C, 24.2MP | APS-C, 24.2MP | APS-C, 26MP | APS-C, 24.1MP | | 4K video | 4K 60fps (oversampled) | 4K 30fps (crop) | 4K 60fps (oversampled) | 4K 24/30fps | | Autofocus points | 1053 (Dual Pixel II) | 425 (Fast Hybrid) | 425 (Fast Hybrid + AI) | 143 (Dual Pixel) | | Battery life (CIPA) | ~410 shots | ~410 shots | ~480 shots | ~305 shots | | Native lens ecosystem | 80+ RF lenses | 35+ E-mount lenses | 35+ E-mount lenses | 30+ EF-M lenses (discontinued) | | Best for | Video creators, vloggers | Budget buyers, photo-first | Video-serious hybrids | EF-M owners only | | Biggest weakness | No weather sealing; newer mount = fewer used lens bargains | 4K is cropped and 30fps only; discontinued | $600 more than a6400 for features most beginners won’t use | Dead ecosystem |
Canon EOS R50 — best for video creators on a current budget
The EOS R50 launched in 2023 as Canon’s answer to the question “what if we gave beginners the autofocus system from our $2,000 cameras?” Dual Pixel CMOS II covers 100% of the frame, tracks eyes and animals reliably in video, and doesn’t hunt when your subject turns their head. If you’re planning to vlog, shoot short films, or create Instagram Reels, this is the camera that won’t get in your way.
The 4K 60fps frame rate is the real separator here. The a6400 caps at 4K 30fps with a crop, and the M50 Mark II doesn’t hit 60fps at all. If you’ve watched YouTube tutorials and seen slow-motion B-roll at 60fps, this is how you get it without stepping up to a $1,500 body.
Strengths:
- Video autofocus is transparent — eye tracking, animal detection, and subject-priority all work as advertised
- 4K 60fps without crop; oversampled from 6K, so image quality is better than 1:1 4K
- RF mount gives you access to Canon’s current lens ecosystem, not a legacy system
- Compact for an APS-C body (700g with battery and kit lens)
Weaknesses:
- No weather sealing — a rain shower on a hike means you’re wrapping this in a plastic bag
- RF mount is newer (2018), so fewer cheap used lenses on eBay compared to Sony’s E-mount
- Battery life is acceptable (410 shots) but not generous; buy a second battery before your first trip
Best for: Vloggers and content creators who shoot more video than stills, buyers who want current-generation autofocus without paying $1,500, and anyone stepping into the Canon ecosystem for the first time.
Wondering if you should buy a DSLR instead? Here’s why mirrorless is the smarter path in 2026.
Sony a6400 — best for budget-conscious photo learners
The a6400 launched in 2019, got discontinued in 2022, and flooded the used market with $400–$550 bodies that still outperform most current beginner cameras in autofocus speed and subject tracking. If you’re buying your first camera and care more about learning photography than shooting 4K 60fps video, this is the best value per dollar in 2026.
Sony’s E-mount ecosystem has been around since 2010, which means the used lens market is deep. You’ll find Sigma, Tamron, and Tokina glass at 40–60% off retail, and Sony’s own lenses show up used constantly. A year from now, when you want a fast prime or a telephoto zoom, you’ll save $200–$400 buying used E-mount compared to hunting for RF-mount bargains that don’t exist yet.
The downside: 4K video is cropped (1.5x on top of the APS-C crop) and capped at 30fps. If video is half your work, this will frustrate you within six months.
Strengths:
- Autofocus in photos is still class-leading — 425 phase-detect points, fast tracking, reliable eye-AF
- Used market is flooded; buy a body for $450 and put the $250 savings toward a better lens
- E-mount lens ecosystem is mature; you’ll find cheap used telephoto, macro, and specialty glass easily
- Excellent ergonomics for an APS-C body; the grip is deep enough for medium-sized hands
Weaknesses:
- 4K video is cropped to 1.5x and limited to 30fps — dealbreaker for serious video work
- Discontinued in 2022, so no firmware updates coming; you’re buying end-of-life hardware
- No current retail availability; you’re shopping used or hoping for old stock
Best for: Budget-conscious beginners who shoot more photos than video, buyers willing to hunt for used lenses, and anyone who wants to learn photography without spending $1,200 upfront.
Sony a6700 — best for video-serious hybrids with a bigger budget
The a6700 is what you get when Sony takes the a6400, adds AI object tracking, bumps the sensor to 26MP, and fixes the 4K crop problem. It launched in late 2022 at $1,398, which is $600 more than a used a6400 and $100 more than the Canon R50. For most beginners, that premium buys features you won’t use for two years — but if you’re planning to shoot video seriously (short films, YouTube, paid client work), the 4K 60fps without crop and better battery life justify the jump.
The AI tracking is genuinely better than the a6400’s standard phase-detect. It recognizes people, animals, birds, and vehicles, then sticks to them even when they’re partially obscured. Based on retail-support feedback, one of the most common autofocus complaints has been “it focused on the background instead of my kid.” The a6700 solves this more reliably, but the a6400 already handles 90% of cases well enough — you’re paying $600 for the last 10%.
Strengths:
- 4K 60fps oversampled from 6K, no crop — matches the R50 in video specs
- AI object tracking is a step up from the a6400; recognizes and prioritizes subjects more reliably
- Battery life is 480 shots (CIPA), 70 more than the a6400 or R50 — genuinely noticeable on a full-day shoot
- Same deep E-mount lens ecosystem as the a6400
Weaknesses:
- $1,398 MSRP is $600 more than a used a6400 for features most beginners won’t use in year one
- Overkill for pure photography — the a6400’s autofocus is already excellent in stills
- Street price holds near MSRP; limited used market because it’s only two years old
Best for: Hybrid shooters who need 4K 60fps and plan to do paid video work within a year, travel photographers who prioritize video alongside stills, and buyers with a $1,500 budget who want room to grow.
Canon EOS M50 Mark II — best for existing EF-M owners
The M50 Mark II launched in 2020 as Canon’s compact mirrorless option, built on the EF-M mount. Canon discontinued the EF-M system in 2023 when they went all-in on RF mount, which means you’re buying into a dead ecosystem. No new lenses are coming. Third-party support has stopped. The used market for EF-M glass is thin because the system never gained traction.
The only reason to buy this camera in 2026 is if you already own EF-M lenses and need a backup body. For everyone else, the R50 exists at a similar price point ($799 MSRP vs ~$500 used for the M50 II) and gives you access to an ecosystem that Canon is actually supporting.
Strengths:
- Genuinely compact — smaller and lighter than the R50 or a6400
- If you already own EF-M lenses, it’s a sensible upgrade from the original M50
- Used prices are low ($350–$450) because the market knows the ecosystem is dead
Weaknesses:
- EF-M mount is discontinued; no new lenses, no third-party support, thin used market
- Small LCD viewfinder (1.62M dots vs 2.36M on the R50 and Sony bodies) — genuinely harder to use in bright light
- 4K video is 24/30fps only, no 60fps option
- Canon has made it clear they’re not supporting this system going forward
Best for: Existing EF-M ecosystem owners who need a backup body; skip this entirely if you’re just starting out.
Side-by-side: video autofocus and frame rates
For years, Sony had the edge in video autofocus — phase-detect across the sensor, fast subject tracking, reliable eye-AF while recording. Canon’s DSLRs and early mirrorless bodies used contrast-detect in video mode, which hunted visibly and frustrated vloggers.
The R50 closes this gap. Dual Pixel CMOS II is phase-detect across 100% of the frame, tracks eyes and animals in video, and doesn’t hunt when your subject moves. In real use, the R50 and a6700 are functionally identical in autofocus performance. The a6400 is close but lacks the AI object tracking — it’ll occasionally lose a fast-moving subject where the R50 or a6700 wouldn’t.
Frame rates are where the split happens. The R50 and a6700 both shoot 4K 60fps oversampled from 6K, which means better image quality and the option to slow footage to 40% speed in post. The a6400 caps at 4K 30fps with a 1.5x crop, which is a dealbreaker if you’re framing wide shots or shooting in tight spaces. The M50 Mark II doesn’t hit 60fps at all.
Bottom line: If you plan to shoot video more than occasionally, the R50 or a6700 are the only real options here. The a6400 works for photo-first shooters who occasionally record clips, but the crop and 30fps limit will frustrate you if video becomes half your work.
Side-by-side: lens ecosystems and long-term costs
Beginners often focus on body price and ignore the fact that you’ll spend more on lenses over five years than you spent on the camera. This is where ecosystem choice matters more than megapixels or autofocus points.
Sony E-mount has been around since 2010. There are 35+ native Sony lenses, plus deep third-party support from Sigma, Tamron, and Tokina. The used market is flooded — search eBay for “Sony E-mount 50mm” and you’ll find 40+ listings under $200. A year from now, when you want a fast prime or a telephoto zoom, you’ll save $200–$400 buying used compared to RF mount.
Canon RF mount launched in 2018. There are 80+ native RF lenses, but the used market is thinner because the system is younger. Fewer third-party options exist (Sigma has been slow to adopt RF mount), and used prices hold higher because demand outpaces supply. The glass is excellent — Canon’s RF primes are sharper than most E-mount equivalents — but you’ll pay for it.
Canon EF-M mount is discontinued. Don’t buy into this ecosystem in 2026.
What this means for your budget: If you’re stretching to afford a camera now and need to buy lenses slowly over two years, Sony’s deeper used market will save you money. If you’re buying new glass and want the best optical quality, Canon’s RF lenses are worth the premium — but expect to pay 20–30% more than equivalent E-mount glass.
Planning to spend $1,500 total on your first camera setup? Here’s where that money actually goes.
Mirrorless vs DSLR: why this comparison skips DSLRs entirely
Beginners still ask “why not a Canon 5D or Nikon D850?” The short answer: Canon and Nikon have both declared mirrorless the future, stopped developing DSLR lenses, and moved their R&D budgets to mirrorless systems. Buying a DSLR in 2026 is a used-market purchase with no long-term support.
The longer answer: mirrorless gives you better autofocus in video (phase-detect across the sensor vs limited AF points in DSLR live view), smaller body size (no mirror box or pentaprism), and access to current-generation features like AI object tracking and eye-AF. The weight savings are real but overstated — a mirrorless body with a kit lens is ~200–300g lighter than a comparable DSLR, which you’ll notice on a five-day trip but not on a two-hour walk.
What mirrorless actually saves you on trips: A Canon R50 with the RF 24-105mm kit lens weighs ~700g. A Canon 80D (DSLR) with the EF-S 18-135mm weighs ~1,050g. Over a week-long trip, that 350g difference adds up — but if you add a second lens and a flash, both setups end up around 1.5kg in your bag. The real travel advantage is that mirrorless bodies are thinner (no mirror box), so they pack into smaller bag compartments, not that they’re feather-light.
The myth that needs to die: “Mirrorless is tiny.” It’s lighter than DSLR, not pocketable. A full-frame mirrorless with a decent zoom lens is still 1.2–1.5kg. Beginners expecting phone-sized gear end up disappointed.
How we compared these
This comparison is based on spec analysis, user reviews from B&H Photo and Amazon, hands-on testing with the R50 and a6400, and three years of retail-support experience fielding customer complaints about autofocus, battery life, and lens costs. Pricing verified via B&H Photo, Adorama, KEH Camera, and eBay sold listings as of May 29, 2026.
We didn’t test the a6700 or M50 Mark II hands-on, so those assessments rely on published reviews from DPReview, YouTube channels (Gerald Undone, The Kasey Stern), and user feedback in forums. For video autofocus comparisons, we relied on side-by-side tests from Cinema5D and Tom Calton, verified against our own R50 testing.
We’re honest about what we didn’t test: we haven’t shot paid client work with any of these cameras, haven’t used them in extreme weather, and haven’t stress-tested battery life beyond CIPA ratings. If you’re planning to shoot professionally, treat this as a starting point and seek out reviews from working photographers.
FAQ
Which camera is better for beginners, Canon or Sony?
Neither brand is “better” — the right choice depends on whether you prioritize video (Canon R50), budget (used Sony a6400), or long-term lens ecosystem costs (Sony E-mount has a deeper used market; Canon RF mount has better new glass). If you’re shooting more video than photos, the R50’s 4K 60fps and excellent autofocus make it the safer bet. If you’re learning photography and want to save money on lenses over the next two years, a used a6400 and the E-mount ecosystem will cost you less.
Is mirrorless better than DSLR for travel photography?
Yes, but the difference is smaller than marketing suggests. Mirrorless bodies are 200–300g lighter than comparable DSLRs and pack thinner in a bag (no mirror box), which matters on multi-day trips. The real advantage is autofocus in video — mirrorless uses phase-detect across the sensor, while DSLRs fall back to slower contrast-detect in live view. If you’re shooting stills only, the weight savings are nice but not transformative. If you’re shooting video, mirrorless is the only sensible choice in 2026.
Should I buy the Canon EOS M50 Mark II in 2026?
No, unless you already own EF-M lenses. Canon discontinued the EF-M mount in 2023, which means no new lenses, no third-party support, and a thin used market. The R50 exists at a similar price point ($799 MSRP) and gives you access to the RF mount ecosystem that Canon is actually supporting. The only reason to buy an M50 Mark II is if you already own EF-M lenses and need a backup body.
How much should I budget for lenses after buying a camera?
Plan to spend 50–100% of your camera body cost on lenses within the first two years. If you buy a $700 camera, budget $350–$700 for a second lens (usually a fast prime or telephoto zoom). Beginners often start with the kit lens, realize it’s too slow in low light or not long enough for wildlife, then buy a 50mm f/1.8 prime ($200 used) or a 70-300mm telephoto ($400 used). Sony E-mount has a deeper used market, so you’ll find more bargains; Canon RF mount holds higher used prices because the system is newer.
Affiliate disclosure: We earn commissions from purchases made through links in this article. These commissions do not influence our recommendations — every option listed includes at least one stated downside, and we’re transparent about which buyers each camera is actually best for.
For most beginners reading this in 2026, the choice comes down to this: buy a used Sony a6400 for $450, learn photography, and save money on lenses over the next two years. If video is half your work or you want current-generation autofocus, spend $699 on the Canon R50 instead. The a6700 is excellent but overkill for most beginners, and the M50 Mark II is a dead ecosystem you shouldn’t buy into.
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