My magic money-saving hack for buying your first proper camera

Panasonic Lumix G7 twin lens kit deal
(Image credit: Future)

Saving money on a product is great, of course. However, if you're investing in a camera for the first time, there is a better approach to trying to find a camera deal and then trying to find a lens deal to match it – and the answer is to buy a twin-lens kit. 

If you're unfamiliar with the term, this means a bundle that includes a camera (usually with an APS-C sensor) and two "kit lenses". These are general-purpose optics that cover one of two focal ranges: standard and telephoto. 

A standard kit lens typically covers something like 18-55mm, which is the equivalent of 27-82.5mm in full frame terms on most models. This is great for everything from wide-angle landscape shots, to street photography and reportage, to portraiture. 

A telephoto kit lens picks up where the standard leaves off, usually covering something in the range of 55-250mm, which is 82.5-375mm – perfect for long-range photography of subjects like wildlife. 

Usually a camera comes bundled with just one of these kit options (typically the standard as that's the most widely used). Looking for a twin kit lens option offers great value, but more than that it means that you won't need to buy another lens unless you really, really want to – after all, you have an enormous 18-250mm range, covering pretty much all the photography bases! 

The best twin lens kit camera deals

Canon EOS R50 twin lens kit | was £1,099 | now £897
Save £202 

Canon EOS R50 twin lens kit | was £1,099 | now £897
Save £202 
With a 24.2MP sensor, oversampled 4K, 15fps bursts and advanced AF, the R50 is a great all-rounder. The RF-S 18-45mm f/4.5-6.3 and RF-S 55-210mm f/5-7.1 lenses are both image stabilized, for smooth shooting. 

Nikon Z50 twin lens kit | was £1,249 | now £949
Save £300 at Amazon

Nikon Z50 twin lens kit | was £1,249 | now £949
Save £300 at Amazon
The 20.9MP Z50 comes with stabilized Z DX 16-50mm f/3.5-6.3 and Z DX 50-250mm f/4.5-6.3 lenses, giving you everything from wide-angle to telephoto without any gaps.

Olympus OM-D E-M10 IV  + 14-42mm + 40-150mm | was £899 | now £849
Save £50 at LCE

Olympus OM-D E-M10 IV  + 14-42mm + 40-150mm | was £899 | now £849
Save £50 at LCE
A longtime beginner mirrorless camera favorite of ours. With its 2x crop factor from its MFT sensor, this twin-lens kit gives an effective focal length range of 28-300mm.

See Olympus OM-D E-M10 IV review

Panasonic Lumix S5 II + 20-60mm + 50mm|£2,199|now £1,699
SAVE £500 at Wex  

Panasonic Lumix S5 II + 20-60mm + 50mm|£2,199|now £1,699
SAVE £500 at Wex  
The Lumix S5 II is a full-frame mirrorless camera with a big filmmaking pedigree. It’s built around a 24.2MP CMOS sensor, boasts phase hybrid AF, cinema 4K 60p and 6K 30p – and it’s no stills slouch either. It’s not surprising we gave it five stars in our review

Full Panasonic S5 II review

Sony A6100 twin lens kit | £835
Buy at Clifton Cameras

Sony A6100 twin lens kit | £835
Buy at Clifton Cameras
The popular A6100 boasts a rich 24.2MP sensor with powerful autofocus and 4K video. It comes with the 16-50mm f/3.5-5.6 Power Zoom and 55-210mm f/4.5-6.3 lenses, both of which are image stabilized.

See our full Sony A6100 test

Kit lens limitations

So what's the catch? Well, historically, kit lenses weren't great quality – they were made to create budget-friendly kits with entry-level cameras, so performance came second to price.

These days, however, kit lenses are by no means bad lenses! They often boast great optical performance, and they are super compact and lightweight, making them the perfect companion to a starter or intermediate camera system. 

Still, in order to maintain that size, weight, affordability and quality, the tradeoff is speed. Kit lenses are not very "fast", which means the aperture usually only opens up to f/3.5 or f/4.5. In simple terms, this means that they don't blur the backgrounds as much as faster lenses (with apertures like f/2.8 or f/1.8), and you need to shoot with a slower shutter speed in order to work in low light conditions. 

There are ways around both points. You can, for example, increase the amount of blur by increasing the distance between your subject and the background. And to compensate for the slower aperture (without raising your ISO, which degrades image quality), many kit lenses offer image stabilization (IS) that counteracts the effect of camera shake while shooting at slower speeds.

Many people who buy these kinds of cameras don't actually end up buying more lenses. However, there are some things that kit lenses simply can't do. 

Macro photography is one of them, so to shoot super close-ups, you'll need to invest in a macro lens. If you want to shoot at extreme distances, a super telephoto lens will be necessary. To cover fast action, like sports or birds, you'll need a fast aperture, which means a dedicated lens for sports or lens for birds. And for portraiture with the most buttery-smooth backgrounds, you'll have to look at a portrait lens

That said, those are the kinds of specialisms that come further down a photography journey. The first thing you need is a camera with lenses that cover all the bases – and the best way to achieve that from day one is with a twin lens kit! 

James Artaius
Editor

James has 22 years experience as a journalist, serving as editor of Digital Camera World for 6 of them. He started working in the photography industry in 2014, product testing and shooting ad campaigns for Olympus, as well as clients like Aston Martin Racing, Elinchrom and L'Oréal. An Olympus / OM System, Canon and Hasselblad shooter, he has a wealth of knowledge on cameras of all makes – and he loves instant cameras, too.