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Home / Features / Which lens should you buy first? The best beginner glass for less than £500

Which lens should you buy first? The best beginner glass for less than £500

Barrels for beginners

Kit lenses are great for getting started. But once you begin to experiment with more creativity photography, there’s a good chance you’ll want to move beyond the barrel that came bundled with your camera. Luckily, the best beginner lenses don’t have to break the bank.

Ready to upgrade your glass? The list below features a whole range of entry-level lenses, to suit all kinds of photography styles, camera brands and budgets. What unites them is that they all cost less than £500 – and despite their affordability, they all represent a sound optical investment.

So whether you want a telephoto for wildlife, a wide angle for landscapes or something to capture portraits with stunning blurred backgrounds, this buying guide is packed with the best beginner lenses.

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1) The nifty fifty

Best beginner lenses: 50mm prime

The first lens for many of us (besides the barrel that might be bundled with your camera body), nifty fifty refers to formidably sharp 50mm glass. If you’re using a Micro Four Thirds camera from the likes of Olympus or Panasonic, 25mm is the equivalent.

This focal length is perfect for portraits, street photography and everyday shots. The super wide f/1.8 aperture makes blurred backgrounds a breeze. It also means you can shoot at rapid shutter speeds, even in low-light conditions. And as with any fixed focal length lens, you can forget about twisting the barrel, experimenting instead with moving around to find different framing options.

50mm glass tends to be very budget-friendly regardless of the manufacturer, which means it’s ideal for first-time photographers. Pick one to fit your camera from the list below for a solid prime starter lens.


2) Canon EF-S 10-18mm F/4.5-5.6 IS STM

Best beginner lenses: Canon 10-18mm

Wide-angle lenses are ideal for shooting epic scenery or stunning interiors. Because of the unique perspective effect captured at focal lengths like 10mm, they also offer lots of room for creative photography – especially when experimenting with foreground/background object placement.

This wide-angle barrel is designed for Canon’s APS-C DSLRs – or their mirrorless cameras with the right adapter. It comes equipped with image stabilisation to combat blur when shooting in dark conditions, plus an STM autofocus system for quick, quiet focusing. Handy if you have to shoot somewhere hushed.


3) Sigma 18-300mm F/3.5-6.3 C DC Macro OS HSM

Best beginner lenses: Sigma 18-30mm

Can’t decide what kind of photos you want to take? You don’t have to, with this do-it-all solution for Nikon and Canon APS-C DSLRs.

Capable of capturing everything from wide-angle vistas to faraway details and wildlife, the huge 16.6x zoom range makes it a truly versatile lens solution for shooting every day.

It has a hyper-sonic motor for fast autofocusing, in-built image stabilisation for sharper shots and it’s incredibly light and compact. Ideal if you’re looking for a flexible barrel that won’t take up your entire kit bag.


4) Nikon 85mm f/1.8 G AF-S

Best beginner lenses: Nikon 85mm

This ultra-wide aperture mid-telephoto lens from Nikon is a dream for portrait photographers. With a nice long focal length, it’s great for getting tight headshots, while the maximum f/1.8 aperture offers bags of separation by creating a soft blurry background – complete with dreamy bokeh balls – while keeping your subject’s face nice and sharp.

Another thing to love about this lens is that it’s designed to work on both APS-C and full-frame Nikon DSLRs, so it will grow with you as you climb the camera ranks. It can even work on Z mirrorless cameras with the FTZ adapter.


5) Fujifilm XC 50-230mm F/4.5-6.7 OIS II

Best beginner lenses: Fujifilm 50-230mm

If you’re one of the many photographers opting for a camera from Fujifilm’s brilliant range of APS-C mirrorless models, this telephoto zoom is the perfect companion to your kit lens.

With a large zoom range and handy in-body image stabilisation, it’s brilliant for getting to closer to the action without losing sharp detail. Which means it’ll cover you for handheld protraits, wildlife photography and sports action.

It also benefits from the quintessentially elegant Fujifilm design, plus it’s extremely light for the versatility it offers.


6) Panasonic 14mm F/2.5 Lumix G II ASPH

Best beginner lenses: Panasonic 14mm

This Micro Four Thirds lens fits camera bodies from Olympus and Panasonic. It offers an effective focal length of 28mm – due to the M43 sensor crop factor – making it a perfect walkabout lens for all occasions.

It’s great for everything from astrophotography to environmental portraits to travel shots where you want to capture more of the scene, while the ‘pancake’ design offers a tiny profile that helps when going incognito. Because there’s nothing like a big barrel to scare away the stars.


7) Sony 35mm F/1.8 OSS

Best beginner lenses: Sony 35mm

Sony’s modern answer to the classic focal length, its 35mm f/1.8 is a compact prime lens with a fittingly formidable reputation.

Designed to work with Sony’s brilliant range of APS-C mirrorless cameras – including the A6400 – it offers the perfect focal length for full-length portraits, intimate street scenes or dramatic travel shots. It excels when shooting from the hip, too.

And thanks to that wide f/1.8 aperture, it’s great for blurring backgrounds or gaining the advantage when working in darker environments.

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