Find what you are looking for

or search by

Topics

Article
Article

Article

e-Book
e-Book

e-Book

Video
Video

Video

Campaigns
Campaigns

Campaigns

Architecture
Compact Cameras

Compact Cameras

Architecture
DSLRs

DSLRs

Architecture
Videography

Videography

Architecture
Astrophotography

Astrophotography

Architecture
Mirrorless Cameras

Mirrorless Cameras

Architecture
Architecture Photography

Architecture Photography

Architecture
Canon Technologies

Canon Technologies

Architecture
Low Light Photography

Low Light Photography

Architecture
Photographer Interviews

Photographer Interviews

Architecture
Landscape Photography

Landscape Photography

Architecture
Macro Photography

Macro Photography

Architecture
Sports Photography

Sports Photography

Architecture
Travel Photography

Travel Photography

Architecture
Underwater Photography

Underwater Photography

Architecture
Photography Concepts & Application

Photography Concepts & Application

Architecture
Street Photography

Street Photography

Architecture
Full-Frame Mirrorless Cameras

Full-Frame Mirrorless Cameras

Architecture
Lenses & Accessories

Lenses & Accessories

Architecture
Nature & Wildlife Photography

Nature & Wildlife Photography

Architecture
Portrait Photography

Portrait Photography

Architecture
Night Photography

Night Photography

Architecture
Pet Photography

Pet Photography

Architecture
Printing Solutions

Printing Solutions

Architecture
Product Reviews

Product Reviews

Architecture
Wedding Photography

Wedding Photography

Products >> All Products

What’s the Difference Between RF-S and RF Lenses?

2023-08-24
84
76.56 k

Canon makes two types of lenses for EOS R series mirrorless cameras: RF lenses and RF-S lenses. Both of them fit on any EOS R series mirrorless camera—so what makes them different? Read on to find out.

In this article:

The short answer: Designed for different image sensors

The short answer: they are designed for different image sensor sizes

RF lenses RF-S lenses
- Designed for cameras with full-frame image sensors
- Larger image circle
- Designed for cameras with APS-C image sensors
- Smaller image circle

RF lenses are designed for full-frame cameras such as the EOS R8, R6 Mark II, R5, and R3.
Meanwhile, RF-S lenses are designed for APS-C (cropped sensor) cameras such as the EOS R100, R50, R10, and R7.

You can think of the “S” in RF-S to mean “small image circle”.


Why does it matter?

RF and RF-S lenses can be attached to any EOS R series camera regardless of its image sensor size. However, the final image’s field of view and recorded image resolution will be different. How exactly depends on the lens-camera combination. We will explore that later in the article.

As RF-S lenses are designed to cast a smaller image circle, they can also be made smaller and lighter than RF lenses.

Caution: Can be used only on EOS R series cameras
RF/RF-S lenses will not fit EOS DSLR cameras or EOS M series mirrorless cameras. This is because the lens mount is different. EOS DSLRs use the EF mount, and EOS M series cameras use the EF-M mount.

The detailed answer: More about image sensor sizes

The detailed answer, all the way from the basics


What is the image sensor?

The image sensor is the part of the camera that gathers light to form images. On Canon mirrorless cameras, this sensor is either of two sizes (formats): full-frame or APS-C format.


The size difference between APS-C and full-frame image sensors

Full-frame sensor: approx. 36 x 24mm
APS-C sensor: approx. 22.3 x 14.9mm

For more details on how the image sensor format affects your images, see Full-Frame vs APS-C Camera: Which Should I Choose?


How does this affect the lens?

Light entering the lens projects a circular image onto the image sensor. We call this the “image circle”. As an APS-C sensor is smaller than a full-frame sensor, the image circle cast by an RF-S lens does not need to be as big to cover the whole sensor compared to an RF lens.

This means smaller-diameter glass can be used to build the lens, enabling smaller, lighter lens bodies.

 

How does this affect my photos?

The 1.6x APS-C crop

At any given lens focal length, the smaller APS-C image sensor records a narrower part of the scene than a full-frame image sensor. This makes the resulting image look more “zoomed in” or “cropped”.

On Canon APS-C cameras, this zoomed-in image’s angle-of-view is the same as an image shot at 1.6x the focal length on a full-frame camera. It’s known as the “1.6x crop effect”, and also applies to images shot with RF-S lenses on full-frame cameras like the EOS R8.

Let’s take a look at what happens with different camera-lens combinations.
- APS-C EOS R series camera (EOS R100, R50, R10, R7, etc.)
- Full-frame EOS R series camera (EOS R8, RP, R6 Mark II, R5, R3, etc.)

What happens: RF/RF-S lenses on an APS-C camera

RF/ RF-S lenses on an APS-C camera


APS-C camera, RF-S lens

The RF-S lens projects an image circle that is just big enough to cover the APS-C image sensor.

Image angle of view: 1.6x crop effect
Max. recorded image resolution: Same as the image sensor


APS-C camera, RF lens

The RF lens projects an image circle much larger than the RF-S lens. You still get the same image as on an RF-S lens, i.e., with the 1.6x crop effect. However, the image information from the “extra” parts of the image circle (light red in the image above) isn’t utilised.

Image angle of view: 1.6x crop effect
Max. recorded image resolution: Same as the image sensor

What happens: RF/RF-S lenses on a full-frame camera

RF/ RF-S lenses on a full-frame camera


Full-frame camera, RF lens

The RF lens projects an image circle that fully covers the full-frame image sensor.

Image angle of view: Same as the focal length
Max. recorded image resolution: Same as the image sensor


Full-frame camera, RF-S lens

The RF-S lens projects an image circle too small to cover the full-frame image sensor.

As the parts of the sensor not covered by the image circle don’t receive any light information, the corresponding corners of the image would normally appear black. However, your EOS R series full-frame camera automatically switches to 1.6x crop mode when it detects that an RF-S lens is attached. In other words, you automatically get more reach!

 

A: RF-S lens image circle
B: 1.6x crop mode recording area
C: Full-frame image sensor

1.6x crop mode

In this mode, a smaller area of the image sensor (B) is used to record the image.

Image angle of view: 1.6x crop effect
Max. recorded image resolution: Smaller than the image sensor (corresponds to B).

The image resolution captured by in area B depends on the camera. If your camera has more megapixels, area B will record higher resolution images.  For example:

Maximum still image resolution EOS R5 EOS R6 Mark II
Full-frame mode (3:2)
(Recording area: Full image sensor)
8192 x 5464
(approx. 44.8MP)
6000 x 4000
(24MP)
1.6x crop mode
(Recording area: B)
5088 x 3392
(approx. 17.3MP)
3744 x 2496
(approx. 9.3MP)

Table: Pros and cons of each combination

Pros and cons of each camera/lens type combination

 
Full-frame camera
APS-C camera
RF ✓ Angle of view = lens focal length
(Maximises wide-angle lenses!)
✓ 1.6x more reach
(Perfect for telephoto shooting)
✓ Can use the same lenses even when you upgrade to a full-frame camera

× Doesn’t maximise lens potential
RF-S ✓ 1.6x more reach
(Perfect for telephoto shooting)
✓ Portability

× Smaller recorded image resolution
✓ Most portable, cost-effective combination

Lens recommendations

Some lens recommendations


Lightweight and compact RF lenses

These also go well with APS-C cameras!

RF28mm f/2.8 STM
(On APS-C: 44.8mm equivalent)

RF16mm f/2.8 STM
(On APS-C: 25.6mm equivalent)

RF24-50mm f/4.5-6.3 IS STM
(On APS-C: 38.4 to 80mm equivalent)

RF50mm f/1.8 STM
(On APS-C: 80mm equivalent)


Travel-friendly RF-S lenses

These will form a lightweight combination with full-frame EOS R series cameras, too.

RF-S55-210mm f/5-7.1 IS STM
(88 to 336mm equivalent)

RF-S18-150mm f/3.5-6.3 IS STM
(28 to 240mm equivalent)


You may also be interested in:
4 RF Prime Lenses to Use with Your APS-C Camera
10 Concepts to Know Before Buying Your Second Lens

Share your photos on My Canon Story & stand a chance to be featured on our social media platforms