Nikon Z50II Price Increase: What It Means for US Buyers

Quick Facts:

  • Story: Nikon Z50II price increase confirmed by Nikon Japan
  • Effective date: June 1, 2026
  • Products affected: 12 items (four Z50II camera options, two binoculars, five loupes, one tripod adapter)
  • New Z50II body price: 160,600 yen in Japan, tax included
  • Stated reason: rising raw material, manufacturing, and logistics costs
  • US pricing: no matching increase announced yet
  • Correction: Nikon revised the four camera figures on May 20, 2026
  • Best for: anyone weighing a Z50II purchase during 2026

 8 min read

Nikon Z50II Price Increase: What Changed and When

The Nikon Z50II price increase is official. Nikon Japan confirmed on May 18, 2026, a revision to shipping prices on 12 products, with the change effective June 1, 2026. The Z50II is the only consumer camera on the list. It appears alongside three Z50II lens kits, two binoculars, five loupes, and one tripod adapter. The change applies to Japan for now. Even so, US buyers have real reason to pay attention, because Nikon raised US prices twice during 2025.

Two days later, on May 20, Nikon issued a correction. The update fixed a misprint in the four camera prices from the original notice. Because of the misprint, early coverage cited figures Nikon has since replaced. This article uses only the corrected price sheet.

Nikon DX shooters should pay close attention. Released in late 2024, the Z50II pairs a 20.9-megapixel DX sensor with the EXPEED 7 processor from Nikon’s higher-end bodies. It ranks among Nikon’s best-selling crop-sensor mirrorless cameras. Because the revision starts at the shipping-price level, retailers in Japan will pass the cost through to buyers. The same cost pressures also reach every market Nikon serves.

So far, Nikon has not announced a matching US increase. American buyers still have clear reason to track this story. Below, you will find the full corrected price list, the reasons behind the revision, the odds of a US increase, and a practical new-versus-used buying plan.

Every Product in Nikon’s June 2026 Price Increase

The Nikon camera price increase covers 12 products across four categories. The table below lists every affected item with its revised Nikon Japan price. Camera figures show Nikon Direct prices including tax. Since Nikon did not publish the prior prices in its corrected list, exact per-product percentage changes stay undisclosed.

Notably, all four camera entries are Z50II options. The binoculars, loupes, and tripod adapter sit outside most photographers’ shopping lists. For Nikon DX shooters, the four camera rows carry the weight of this announcement.

Product New Nikon Japan Price (from June 1, 2026)
Nikon Z50II (body) 160,600 yen
Z50II 16-50mm VR lens kit 182,600 yen
Z50II Double Zoom kit 214,500 yen
Z50II 18-140mm VR lens kit 215,600 yen
8×20 HG L DCF binoculars 69,300 yen
10×25 HG L DCF binoculars 74,800 yen
New Pocket Type Loupe 12D (Burgundy) 5,500 yen
New Pocket Type Loupe 16D (Burgundy) 6,100 yen
New Pocket Type Loupe 12D (Midnight Blue) 5,500 yen
New Pocket Type Loupe 16D (Midnight Blue) 6,100 yen
New Pocket Type Loupe 20D (Midnight Blue) 7,700 yen
Tripod Adapter TRA-5 29,700 yen

These figures apply to the Japanese market. They are not US retail prices. Nikon sets US pricing on a separate schedule, and a US revision has not been announced.

Buy New Before Prices Move

Lock In Today’s US Price on the Nikon Z50II

Nikon raised US prices twice in 2025. US pricing has held so far in 2026, and a new body ships with Nikon USA’s full warranty.

Why Nikon Is Raising Prices Again

Nikon points to a familiar set of pressures. In its announcement, the company cited rising raw material costs, higher manufacturing expenses, and increased logistics costs. Nikon also said its efficiency and cost-reduction work no longer offsets those increases over the medium to long term.

The timing fits Nikon’s wider financial picture. The company recently posted a record net loss for fiscal year 2026, as covered in our report on Nikon’s record financial loss. Because the imaging division faces soft demand in several segments, price revisions serve as one lever Nikon pulls to protect margins.

This is not a one-off event. Nikon Japan raised domestic prices in October 2022, then again in May 2023, each time naming raw material and manufacturing costs. Its May 2023 round alone touched more than 50 products, including the flagship Z9. The June 2026 change therefore continues a multi-year run of cost-driven revisions rather than marking a sudden shift.

Recent history rewards a closer look. Nikon’s October 2022 increase covered mirrorless cameras, Nikkor Z lenses, binoculars, and golf rangefinders. At the time, the company named the global semiconductor shortage alongside rising raw material costs. Each revision since has arrived with a similar explanation. The pattern signals a structural cost problem and not a short-term one. Structural costs do not respect borders, which raises the obvious question for US buyers.

Will the Nikon Z50II Price Increase Reach US Buyers?

Nikon has not announced a US version of this price revision. The team at Nikon Rumors flagged the same uncertainty when the news broke. So nothing is confirmed for American buyers at this point.

History still points one direction. US Nikon prices have not held flat. First, Nikon raised US prices by roughly 10% on June 23, 2025. Then the company raised them again on September 1, 2025, and the second round hit Z-mount mirrorless cameras hard.

The 2025 US increases came from tariffs rather than Japan’s domestic cost pressures. So the trigger differs from the June 2026 Japan revision. The direction has matched anyway. Across the past three years, Nikon prices have moved one way in market after market, and the way is up.

Tariffs add a second source of upward pressure. The US-Japan trade framework carries a 15% tariff rate on Japanese goods. As a result, any future US price sheet has reason to reflect both the tariff rate and the same material costs driving the Japan increase.

The honest read is straightforward. A matching US increase is not guaranteed, yet it fits a clear pattern. American buyers have absorbed two Nikon increases within the past year alone. For a popular body like the Z50II, waiting carries real risk to your budget.

Buying the Z50II New vs. Used

Once you decide to act, the next choice is new or used. A new Z50II body launched in the US at $909.95 in late 2024. New stock ships with Nikon USA’s one-year warranty and current firmware. For buyers who want full support and zero risk, new is the direct path. Amazon and other major retailers carry the body plus all three lens kits.

The used market tells a different story. MPB, a large used-gear retailer, recently listed Z50II bodies from about $874 to $984 depending on condition grade. Each listing shows a condition grade and product photos, so you choose the balance of price and cosmetics you want. MPB also includes a six-month warranty and free shipping on used purchases. Since the Z50II reached shelves in late 2024, most used copies have seen relatively light use.

Price is where the decision gets interesting. A used body does not always undercut a new one by much, and a top-grade copy near $984 sits close to the new launch figure. Instead, the stronger case for used is timing. Used stock already sits in the retail channel, so it stays clear of any future US increase on new bodies. Buy used now, and you pay today’s price no matter what Nikon USA does next.

For a wider comparison across Nikon’s lineup, see our guide to the best Nikon cameras of 2026 before you commit to either route.

Shop the Used Market

Find a Used Nikon Z50II at MPB

MPB grades and photographs every body, adds a six-month warranty, and ships free. Used stock already in the channel sidesteps any future US price increase.

Should You Buy a Z50II Before June 1?

Buyers with the Z50II already on a shortlist have a clear call. Buying before June 1 removes the risk of a price change and secures a current camera at a known cost. Above all, the Z50II earns its place for hybrid shooters who want strong autofocus and 4K/60p video in a compact DX body. Its 20.9-megapixel sensor and EXPEED 7 processor handle low light and fast subjects well for the class.

If you are still comparing models, there is no need to rush. US pricing has not moved yet, so you have time to handle the camera, read reviews, and weigh new against used. A body built for video also suits creators who shoot stills, as our guide to Nikon cameras built for video explains.

The practical hedge is simple. While the news settles, watch Nikon USA’s pricing pages through June. If US prices hold, waiting costs you nothing. If they rise, buying now or buying used protects your budget against the next Nikon camera price increase.

For most US buyers, the smart move is to settle the camera choice first and the timing second. Confirm the fit with our full Nikon Z50II review, then pick new for full warranty coverage or used to sidestep a future increase.

Nikon Z50II Price Increase FAQ

Is the Nikon Z50II going up in price?

Yes, in Japan. Nikon Japan confirmed a Z50II price increase effective June 1, 2026. The revised Nikon Japan price for the body is 160,600 yen including tax. Nikon has not announced a US increase.

When does the Nikon Z50II price increase take effect?

The change takes effect June 1, 2026, in the Japanese market. Nikon announced it on May 18, 2026, then corrected the four camera figures on May 20, 2026.

Will Nikon raise US prices in 2026?

Nikon has not confirmed a US increase. However, the company raised US prices twice during 2025. A 15% US tariff on Japanese goods adds further pressure. Watching Nikon USA’s pricing pages is the safest move.

How much does the Nikon Z50II cost?

New US bodies launched at $909.95. Used bodies at MPB recently ranged from about $874 to $984 by condition. The revised Japan price is 160,600 yen including tax. Nikon sets US pricing on its own schedule, so check current listings before you buy. The best Z50II price for you depends on new versus used.

Why is Nikon raising prices?

Nikon cited rising raw material, manufacturing, and logistics costs. The move follows a record net loss in fiscal year 2026. It also continues earlier Japan price increases from 2022 and 2023. Each of those rounds named the same core cost pressures.

Should I buy the Nikon Z50II now or wait?

If the Z50II is already your pick, buying before June 1 removes price risk. If you are still comparing cameras, US pricing has not changed, so you have time to decide. A used copy is one way to save now.

Alex Schult
Alex Schulthttps://www.photographytalk.com/author/aschultphotographytalk-com/
I've been a professional photographer for more than two decades. Though my specialty is landscapes, I've explored many other areas of photography, including portraits, macro, street photography, and event photography. I've traveled the world with my camera and am passionate about telling stories through my photos. Photography isn't just a job for me, though—it's a way to have fun and build community. More importantly, I believe that photography should be open and accessible to photographers of all skill levels. That's why I founded PhotographyTalk and why I'm just as passionate about photography today as I was the first day I picked up a camera.

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