There’s no shortage of lens manufacturers from China – several come to mind, including Laowa, Viltrox, 7Artisans, Meike, Sirui and Thypoch. Google lists 14 known Chinese lens brands in all, between them making lenses for SonyNikon, Fujifilm, Panasonic and Leica cameras and more.
Laowa makes completely unique tilt-shift optics and high magnification macros opticswhile Thypoch engineers beautiful manual focus primes for Leica M cameras, at a fraction of the cost.
What’s striking from Viltroxis the speed at which it’s growing – by making high quality and affordable autofocus primes, it has gone from obscurity to a serious player in double-quick time.
Article continues below
I’m not alone in appreciating these brands – the big appeal of various Chinese-made lenses, now that the quality is there, is the price. I can buy a Viltrox prime that costs just a fraction of equivalent proprietary lenses and therefore saving myself hundreds if not thousands of dollars, plus it’s undercutting other leading third party brands, such as Sigma.
Its practices have potentially landed it in hot water, mind you – Nikon is suing Viltrox for alleged patent infringements. We’re yet to hear the outcome of this lawsuit, and whether Viltrox will be able to keep making Nikon Z-mount lenses. I’m hoping it can, but I would expect the prices of future Viltrox Z-mount lenses to go up a little.
Each Chinese lens manufacturer is relatively infant, certainly when compared to camera makers Sony, CanonNikon, Leica and others, plus established Japanese third party lens makers Sigma and Tamron.
As such, one thing holding Chinese lens manufacturers back right now is product range. Sigma has a much wider choice of lenses than Viltrox, for example. Crucially, we’re yet to really see a variety of autofocus zoom lenses, but that could be about to change.
One big step
Tipster @camerainsider on X recently posted that a ‘Chinese lens manufacturer that has never released an AF lens will launch a full-frame autofocus zoom lens in Q2, 2026.’ So, any day.
In fact, fresh news has emerged since I started writing this article, that the mysterious post could be referring to Thypoch. Previously known for stunning Leica M-mount manual focus primes, Thypoch displayed a new lens at The Photography Show in Birmingham, UK, last week, which was clocked by our sister site, Digital Camera World.
On display, a Thypoch 24-50mm AF F2.8 lens for Sony E-mount. Now I could be wrong, but this could be the very first autofocus zoom lens from China seen in the wild.
A Chinese lens manufacturer that has never released an AF lens will launch a full-frame autofocus zoom lens in Q2, 2026.March 12, 2026
It’s just one zoom lens, from one brand, for one lens mount (and we don’t know the price), but it’s a big step, and one that I expect other lens manufacturers from China to follow shortly.
I can’t believe that Viltrox isn’t already working on an autofocus zoom lens. If I were a betting man, I would gamble my house on Viltrox launching an autofocus zoom lens this year, sparking a new dawn of affordable zoom lenses.
We spoke with Sigma’s CEO Kazuto Yamaki and CP+ 2026 in Japan last month and asked him about the threat of low-cost Chinese rivals.
Yamaki said, “I’ve honestly been amazed by the progress that these manufacturers from China have made. I have a lot of respect for them. Overall, however, we believe there is a significant difference in quality while we also offer a huge range of lenses.”
There’s no doubt that Sigma has a huge head start over the likes of Viltrox – it was founded in the 1960s and was making world-first zoom lenses as long ago as 1979.
For me, Sigma is the first name that comes to mind when I think of third party lenses – I’ve owned several for my various cameras down the years, starting with a 35mm f/1.4 Art lens for my Nikon DSLR.
More recently, I’ve been drawn to Viltrox and its impressive primes, such as the 35mm f/1.2 LAB. However, it’s plain to see the limitations in Viltrox’s line up, which comprises prime lenses between 14mm and 135mm full-frame focal lengths only. Sigma has a much bigger choice; wider and longer primes, and zooms of all types. It’s also pushing the boat out with completely new optics, such as the 5-star 135mm F1.4 DG.
If China is to overtake Japan as the new lens-making superpower, we need more choice, most notably autofocus zooms. Given the siting of the Thypoch lens, and the rate at which Viltrox and others are developing new products, that day could come soon.
What I will say though, is that there is plenty to like about Sigma specifically beyond the lenses it makes. Sigma has been operating as a private family-owned business for over 60 years. It’s regularly developing entirely new products, made in Japan, that cost less than proprietary lenses, and it adheres to sustainable and eco-manufacturing practices.
Follow TechRadar on Google News and add us as a preferred source to get our expert news, reviews, and opinion in your feeds. Make sure to click the Follow button!
And of course you can also Follow TechRadar on TikTok for news, reviews, unboxings in video form, and get regular updates from us on WhatsApp too.
