Leica M11-P
Rangefinder · Leica M · released 2023-10-26
Lowest now
$8,399
Above average 91% of MSRP
MSRP at launch
$9,195
Oct 2023
Inventory
3
across 1 source
Typical pricing right now
How we compute thisToday's price sits in the middle of its recent range. The 90-day window runs from $7,349 to roughly today's $8,399. 91% of the $9,195 MSRP. Prices have been steady this month.
- Lowest now
- $8,399
- MSRP
- $9,195
- % of MSRP
- 91%
- 90-day low
- $7,349
- All-time low
- $7,349 (May 21, 2026)
- 30-day trend
- -1.1%
Buy new on Amazon
(affiliate)
New from Amazon. Used prices below.
Specs
- Brand
- Leica
- Family
- Leica M
- Category
- body
- Body type
- Rangefinder
- Mount
- Leica M
- Sensor
- Full Frame
- Megapixels
- 60 MP
- Lens type
- —
- Sensor family
- Leica 60MP BSI CMOS (M11/Q3/SL3)
- IBIS
- no
- Weather sealed
- No
- Max video
- no video
- Max native ISO
- ISO 50,000
- Weight
- 640 g
- Dimensions
- 139 × 80 × 39 mm
- Body material
- aluminum/magnesium
- Released
- 2023-10-26
- Status
- current
Computational features
Multi-Exposure
Rangefinder-style M body; computational photography aids are minimal by design.
Autofocus & action
- AF system
- Manual focus only
- Burst (mechanical)
- 4.5 fps
- Buffer
- ~15 DNG / 100 JPEG (3 GB)
- Pre-burst capture
- No
- Card slots
- 1 (Internal + SD)
- Sensor readout
- BSI
M11-P adds Content Credentials and 256 GB internal storage; otherwise identical to M11 for burst/AF.
Latest pricing by source
Each row is a direct observation from the seller. How this works.| Source | Condition | Price | Listings | Observed | Link |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| mpb | excellent → excellent | $8,399 | 2 | Observed 2d ago | view listing |
| mpb | like new → mint | $10,669 | 1 | Observed 19h 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.
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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.