X100 · 2011 · discontinued

Fujifilm X100 review

Launch price $1,199 · 12.3 MP Bayer sensor · 720p 24p video

4 / 10reviewed June 14, 2026
Product photo of the Fujifilm X100
Image: Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 4.0

The camera that started the line: 12MP Bayer sensor, fixed 23mm f/2 and the first hybrid viewfinder.

Verdict

The original X100 that started the line, with a 12.3 MP Bayer sensor, fixed 23mm f/2 lens, and the first hybrid OVF/EVF on any Fuji. Discontinued, 720p/24 video, 5 fps burst, no weather sealing.

Collectors and Fuji historians who want the camera that started the X100 line of cameras.

In detail

If you have ever held an X100, you know the feeling. Photographers tend to pick it up for a Bayer sensor (unusual for Fuji) and the price it launched at. Released in 2011 at $1,199, the body is no longer in production. It sits in the X100 line, Fuji's fixed-lens compact line with a 35mm-equivalent prime built in.

At 12.3 MP, native ISO is 200 to 6400, modest by modern standards, but the sensor still has the distinctive early-X100 rendering. Burst at 5 fps is conservative, this is a camera aimed at slower work. Video tops out at 720p 24p.

The body has typical Fuji fit and finish: light, plastic-heavy in places. There is no IBIS, so for low light you lean on stabilized XF glass. At 445 g it sits in the comfortable middle. There is a single SD UHS-I slot. Bottom line: the used market is where this camera makes the most sense now.

Pros and cons

What we like

  • Original X100 that started the line
  • First hybrid OVF/EVF on any Fuji
  • Fixed 23mm f/2 lens design
  • Collector favorite, full stop

The headline win is the original X100 that started the line, the camera that made Fuji cool again. Film simulation count is 4, the older but still solid lineup. Pair that with the first hybrid OVF/EVF on any Fuji, and you have a real piece of camera history that still takes lovely pictures.

Trade-offs

  • 12MP Bayer sensor, 720p/24 video
  • No IBIS, no weather sealing, 5 fps burst

The honest trade-off is 12MP Bayer sensor, 720p/24 video. No in-body stabilization means relying on stabilized XF glass for low light. Burst rate is conservative, fine for portraits, street, and landscape, but rules out serious sports work. The EVF at 1.44 million dots is on the lower-resolution side. The fixed lens is the whole point, but you cannot swap focal lengths.

Who is this for

Collectors and Fuji historians who want the camera that started the X100 line. Light enough to make a great second body or a daily-carry option. Street, travel, and everyday-carry photographers tend to fall in love with this format.

Full specifications

Release year2011
Launch price$1,199
StatusDiscontinued
Megapixels12.3 MP
Sensor generationBayer
ProcessorEXR Processor
ISO range200–6400
AF points49
Subject detectionnone
Burst (fps)5
Max video720p 24p
CodecH.264
Log profileNo
StabilizationNone
ViewfinderHybrid OVF/EVF (1.44M dot)
LCD2.8" fixed
Weather sealedNo
Weight445 g
Card slots1
Card typesSD UHS-I
BatteryNP-95
Battery life (CIPA)300 shots
Film sims4

Highlighted rows are class-leading within the current Fujifilm APS-C lineup.

Film simulations (4)

  • PROVIA
  • Velvia
  • ASTIA
  • Monochrome

Compared with

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See it in the wild

Owner impressions and real-world photos from the Fuji community.