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Nikon Z 5 full-frame mirrorless body drops to an all-time low of $896.95

Save $553 on the Nikon Z 5 full-frame mirrorless body, now at an all-time low of $896.95 its deepest discount ever.

T

Technobezz

Senior Editor

Jun 23, 2026
5 min read
Technobezz
Nikon Z 5 full-frame mirrorless body drops to an all-time low of $896.95

Nikon Z 5 | Our most compact price drops to $896.95

A $553 discount that's hard to ignore.

For just $896.95, down from its list price of $1449.95. That's $553 in savings on Nikon's smallest full-frame mirrorless body, and price trackers show this is the lowest it has ever been. The 30-day average sits at $1,140.45, so today's price undercuts that by more than $240.

THE DEAL

Nikon Z 5 | Our most compact

Nikon Z 5 | Our most compact

$896.95 (was $1449.95) - Save $553 (38% off)

WhereAmazon

ExpiresNo end date listed

Get This Price

This is an all-time low for the Z 5, beating the previous floor by a clear margin. The 90-day average of $1,153.82 makes the current deal a $257 savings over what buyers have typically paid this quarter. For a full-frame body that normally hovers around the $1,100 mark. This is the deepest cut we have tracked.

What You're Getting

The Z 5 packs a 24.3MP full-frame sensor into Nikon's most compact interchangeable lens body. You get 4K/30p video, 5-axis in-body stabilization for handheld shooting, and Eye-Detection AF that tracks people, dogs, and cats.

Built-in Wi-Fi and Bluetooth let you transfer images through the SnapBridge app. The body measures just 5.28 x 3.96 x 2.74 inches, making it one of the smallest full-frame options on the market.

Who This Is For

This is for photographers moving up from APS-C or Micro Four Thirds who want full-frame image quality without the bulk and cost of a pro body. The Z 5 makes sense if you shoot a mix of stills and video and want IBIS built in.

If you need higher burst rates or 4K/60p, the Z 6 II is a better fit, but it costs significantly more.

Final Verdict

At $896.95. This is the cheapest entry point into Nikon's full-frame Z system by a wide margin. The savings versus the 90-day average alone justifies pulling the trigger now rather than waiting for a deeper cut that may not come.

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