Canon EOS R7
Typical pricing right now
How we compute thisToday's price sits in the middle of its recent range. The 90-day window runs from $1,039 to roughly today's $1,169. 78% of the $1,499 MSRP. Prices are down 2.5% over the last 30 days.
- Lowest now
- $1,169
- MSRP
- $1,499
- % of MSRP
- 78%
- 90-day low
- $1,039
- All-time low
- $1,039 (Jun 6, 2026)
- 30-day trend
- -2.5%
Specs
- Brand
- Canon
- Family
- Canon EOS R
- Category
- body
- Body type
- Mirrorless interchangeable lens camera
- Mount
- Canon RF
- Sensor
- APS-C
- Megapixels
- 32.5 MP
- Lens type
- —
- Sensor family
- Canon APS-C 32.5MP CMOS (R7/90D)
- Autofocus
- Phase Detection
- AF system
- Canon Dual Pixel CMOS AF
- IBIS
- 5-axis 8-stop
- Weather sealed
- Yes
- Max video
- 4K60
- Max native ISO
- ISO 32,000
- Weight
- 612 g
- Dimensions
- 132 × 90 × 92 mm
- Body material
- polycarbonate
- Released
- 2022-06-23
- Status
- current
Computational features
APS-C flagship with Depth Composite focus stacking and 30fps RAW Burst pre-shooting.
Autofocus & action
Birds-in-flight keeper rate
#22 on Mirrorless Comparison's AF rankingBirds-in-flight keeper rates come from Mirrorless Comparison. They shoot thousands of frames per body in the field and count how many come back sharp, which is the most useful hands-on autofocus test for wildlife we've found. Go read the full birds-in-flight rankings and their per-camera field notes.
See the full birds-in-flight test at Mirrorless Comparison →- AF system
- Hybrid (phase + contrast)
- Focus points
- 651 AF zones / 5915 positions (Dual Pixel CMOS AF II)
- Subject detection
- Human eye/face, Animal, Bird, Vehicle, Airplane, Train
- Burst (mechanical)
- 15 fps
- Burst (electronic)
- 30 fps
- Pre-burst capture
- No
- Card slots
- 2 (Dual SD UHS-II)
- Sensor readout
- Standard CMOS
Canon EOS R7; APS-C RF-mount with IBIS; 32.5 MP; Canon's top APS-C mirrorless.
Latest pricing by source
Each row is a direct observation from the seller. How this works.| Source | Condition | Price | Listings | Observed | Link |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| mpb | good → good | $1,169 | 5 | Observed 20h ago | view listing |
| mpb | excellent → excellent | $1,179 | 37 | Observed 20h ago | view listing |
| mpb | like new → mint | $1,279 | 7 | Observed 20h ago | view listing |
Price history
One point per day per (source, grade) pair, connected with lines. Hue marks the source; lightness within a hue marks the condition (darker = better grade). The dashed line is launch MSRP.
See Methods notes #1.1, #1.2, #1.3.
More in this family
Appears in
Curated lists where this camera currently qualifies. Each list ranks members by deal score.
Similar cameras
Compare with another model
How we compute each section
References on each chart link down here. More notes will land as new sections grow.
1. Price history
- #1.1 · Grade buckets
-
Each seller publishes their own raw condition labels (e.g. "Excellent+", "Like new minus", "Bargain"). Those are normalized to a small bucket set:
mint,excellent,good,fair,poor, andunknown. The "Latest pricing by source" table above shows both the raw label and the normalized bucket so you can audit any individual mapping. - #1.2 · Missing days
- A point is only drawn on a day when a snapshot existed for that (source, grade) pair. Lines connect across gaps so a series with sparse sampling still reads as a single trend, but absence of a point does not mean a stockout: it means we didn't see a listing at that grade that day.
- #1.3 · Color encoding
- Hue carries the source: terracotta = mpb, sage = keh, cobalt = B&H, honey = ebay. Lightness within a hue carries the condition: darker means a better grade (mint and excellent are darkest; poor is lightest). The dashed ink line is launch MSRP, included as a reference even though it isn't a price observation.