Sony a6700 aps c camera released ai autofocus mirrorless – Breaking News & Latest Updates 2026
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Sony’s new A6700 puts the company’s best-in-class autofocus in a more affordable camera

Priced at $1,400, the A6700 continues Sony’s trend of trickling advanced features down from spendier models.

Priced at $1,400, the A6700 continues Sony’s trend of trickling advanced features down from spendier models.

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Sony is launching its new A6700 APS-C mirrorless camera today, bringing key AI-powered autofocus enhancements from the company’s full-frame lineup to its mainstream (and more affordable) A6000-series. The 26-megapixel mirrorless camera, which succeeds 2019’s A6600, offers 4K video at up to 120fps, a big boost from the 30fps of its predecessor. It’s priced at $1,399.99 for the body alone.

The biggest upgrade here is AI processing. The new camera gets the same autofocus enhancements that made Sony’s $3,900 A7R V camera so great, giving it the ability to detect more granular subjects than before — it won’t only know you’re looking at an animal but what kind of animal — or bug — thanks to that pricey camera’s AI processor trickling down to this model. It’ll know when you’re looking at a car or a plane, too. Sony is also adding 334 more phase-detect autofocus points. There’s also AI-based auto-framing that can track subjects without you having to move the camera yourself, which is handy if the person (or thing) you’re filming is moving around a lot.

Front view of the Sony A6700
Isometric front view of the Sony A6700
Top-down view of the Sony A6700
Side view showing the grip of the Sony A6700
Top down of the Sony A6700 showing it with a telephoto lens
Isometric front view of the Sony A6700 with no lens
Side view showing the SD-Card, USB-C, 3.5mm audio jack, other ports.
Isometric rear view showing vari-angle LCD flipped out and twisting
Isometric view of the Sony A6700 from the bottom, showing the camera without lens and the battery pack sliding in/out of the grip.
Isometric view of the side of the Sony A6700, showing an SD card being inserted.
Three quarter view of the Sony A6700 with a microphone attachment on the top
Rear three quarter view showing a smartphone clip, with smartphone plugged into the camera.
Front view showing the camera with a long zoom lens.
Top-down view showing the Sony A6700 with a telephoto lens
Rear view showing a finger touching the screen.
Isometric three quarter shot showing a smaller zoom lens on the Sony A6700
Three quarter view of the Sony A6700 showing a flash attachment.
Shot showing a person sitting at a table, smiling into the Sony A6700, which sits on a small tabletop tripod stand and has a microphone attached. A laptop sits on the table to the left, and the camera is attached to it with a cable.
Photo of a person holding the Sony A6700 up to their eye and pointing it directly at the photographer. They appear to be on a beach, in the early evening.
A three-quarter shot of the Sony A6700 sitting on a porous, beige rock near what appears to be ocean water.
Straight-on shot of the camera body, with no lens attached, and the vari-angle LCD flipped out to the side.
A picture of a person, standing on a beach and looking down at the camera, which has its LCD flipped out. The person’s head is not visible.
Close-up of a person from the side, holding the Sony A6700 up to their eye while they take a photograph.
Image taken just over the shoulder of a person looking at an application that has several images, presumably taken on the Sony A6700. The camera sits on what looks like the arm of a chair, just beyond the person’s hand.
1/24Image: Sony

That’s what the new A6700 is bringing downmarket. Additionally, Sony changed the LCD to a vari-angle-style touchscreen. While that’s a solid enhancement for videographers, it may make this camera less desirable for some still photographers, as the vari-angle screen, for all its charms, can add extra steps when you just want to pop the LCD up for a quick shot from the hip.

That said, the new screen has a 33-degree wider viewing angle than the A6600 and an OLED screen Sony says is twice as bright, so it may be worth the tradeoff if you’re the outdoorsy type.

Physically, the A6700 has some much-needed upgrades, especially on the connectivity front. It’s finally got a USB-C port, which supports USB-PD fast-charging (the A6600 only had Micro USB) and 3.2 Gen 2 (10Gbps) transfer speeds. It also gets a new customizable front dial and compatibility with Sony’s Creators’ App for cloud uploads.

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On paper, the Sony A6700 seems like a logical upgrade to the A6600, making it ideal for content creators, vloggers, or anyone who wants to capture professional-looking pictures and videos for a lower price than Sony’s high-end cameras. While the camera body alone costs $1,399.99 like its 2019 predecessor, it’s $1,499.99 for the camera with the 16 to 50mm lens and $1,799.99 with the 18 to 35mm lens. You can preorder the device from Sony’s website today, and it will start shipping in August.

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