While we no longer rent this product, we do carry the Fuji X-T30. Additionally, you may find alternatives on the left-hand side of this page (see Recommended section).
Great for sports and action photography
16MP APS-C X-Trans CMOS II sensor
Fast, accurate autofocus
2.36M-dot OLED EVF and 3-inch 920k-dot rear LCD
The Fuji X-T10 is a retro-styled, enthusiast-level mirrorless camera in the Fuji X series. Key features include:
Baby X-T1. The X-T10 borrows several features from the flagship Fuji X-T1, including the 16MP X-Trans II sensor with second-generation processor, and the advanced autofocus system.
16MP Sensor. Mentioned above, the 16MP APS-C sensor produces extremely high-quality images. The X-Trans II forgoes the traditional Bayer design, eliminating the need for an optical low-pass filter. When combined with its use of the EXR Processor II, this means stellar high-ISO performance with a range of 100-51,200, 8 fps continuous shooting, and Full HD 1080/60p video recording.
Intelligent Hybrid Autofocus. The advanced autofocus system uses both contrast- and phase-detection for fast, accurate performance even in low-contrast situations. It offers your standard, run-of-the-mill single- and continuous-focus methods, but also features subject tracking with multiple zone areas to choose from. Combined with the 8 fps continuous shooting, this makes for a highly capable sports and action shooter.
Build and Design. While you lose the weather-sealing from the X-T1, the X-T10 still features a sturdy magnesium-alloy build. The retro “SLR film-camera” styling is similar to the X-T1’s, albeit in a smaller, lighter body. However, if you find the X-T10 too small for your liking, we offer the Fuji Metal Hand Grip for X-T30 / X-T20 / X-T10 to beef it up a little bit. There’s a 2.36M-dot OLED EVF and a 3-inch 920k-dot rear LCD for composition and review, but both come in with lower specs than the X-T1’s. While the layout is different, you still get all of the same control options, with manual dials for shutter speed, exposure compensation, and drive mode. The X-T10 features a built-in pop-up flash, rather than the clip-on version included with the X-T1.
Other Notable Features. All of the popular film-simulation modes made it into the X-T10. Being targeted at hobbyists/enthusiasts, there’s now an Auto mode for simple operation. The X-T10 has built-in Wi-Fi that allows wireless image transfer and remote operation via a free iOS and Android app. There’s also an interval shooting mode for time-lapse capture, panorama mode, and five different auto-bracketing modes. This camera records to SDHC/XC memory cards and uses the NP-W126 battery, which is rated for 310 shots per charge.