Digital Camera World Verdict
The Lumix L10 feels like exactly the sort of compact travelable camera Panasonic (and everybody else) should be making right now. It blends a stylish retro body, a genuinely useful 24-75mm equivalent Leica zoom, strong stills, impressive video specs, and Panasonic’s social-ready Real Time LUT system into a camera that feels purpose-built for travel, street, and everyday photography. It is not perfect. The body is bigger than I expected, the lack of IBIS is disappointing, and the Fujifilm X100VI still feels more premium in the hand. But as a modern compact with a zoom, the L10 is a very convincing alternative.
Pros
- +
Excellent Leica zoom lens
- +
Great in-camera LUT system
- +
Built-in EVF and hotshoe
- +
Strong battery life
Cons
- -
No in-body image stabilization
- -
Bigger than expected
- -
Fewer classic manual dials
- -
Not as premium as X100VI
Why you can trust Digital Camera World
Compact cameras are back in a big way, not only because people want something better than a phone, but because they want cameras that produce finished-looking JPEGs straight out of camera. Panasonic has plenty of history in this space. The Lumix LX100 and LX100 II were cult favorites, pairing a Micro Four Thirds-sized sensor with a fast 24-75mm equivalent zoom lens in a genuinely compact body.
The new Lumix L10 is a spiritual successor to those cameras; it picks up the same large-ish 4/3-type sensor, a fast Leica-branded zoom lens, an electronic viewfinder, a fully articulating screen, and Panasonic’s excellent Real Time LUT system built in – something which will undoubtedly be hugely influential to its success. Fujifilm has built a huge audience around film simulations and recipes, and this is Panasonic’s answer.
This is a camera aimed at the same crowd currently hunting down models such as the Fujifilm X100VI, Leica D-Lux 8, and Ricoh GR III. The question is whether it does enough to stand out against these super-hyped rivals.
Specifications
Price at launch | £1,299 / $1,499 / €1,499 / A$2,599 |
Sensor | 4/3-type back-illuminated CMOS, 26.5MP total, 20.4MP effective |
Processor | Latest-generation Lumix image processing engine |
Lens | Leica DC Vario-Summilux 10.9-34mm (24-75mm equivalent), F1.7-2.8 |
ISO | 50-25,600 |
Stabilization | No in-body image stabilization, lens-based POWER O.I.S. only |
Continuous shooting | Approx 11fps mechanical, up to 30fps electronic |
Video | 5.6K up to 60p, 5.2K 4:3 up to 30p, C4K/4K up to 120p, FHD up to 240p |
Viewfinder | 0.39-inch OLED LVF, 2.36m dots, 0.74x magnification |
Screen | 3.0-inch free-angle touchscreen, 1.84m dots |
Storage | 1x UHS-II SD card slot |
Battery | DMW-BLK22, rated to approx 420 shots with rear monitor or 410 shots with LVF |
Dimensions | 127.1 x 73.9 x 66.9mm / 5.01 x 2.91 x 2.64in |
Weight | Approx 508g / 1.12lb with battery, SD card and hotshoe cover |
Price
The Lumix L10 costs £1,299 / $1,499 / €1,499 / A$2,599 at launch, while the special edition Titanium Gold version, which is the version I tested, costs $100 / £100 more and will be sold through more limited channels, primarily via Panasonic’s own store, depending on region. Black and silver versions are due in June 2026, with the Titanium Gold edition following in July 2026.
That price is a little more premium than I expected from Panasonic, and I would question if it is a touch too expensive for what you are getting. But the L10 has a strong build, a built-in EVF, a fully articulating screen, a hotshoe, a fast Leica zoom lens, strong autofocus, and a far more serious video specification than most fixed-lens compacts.
The bigger issue is just what else this money can buy. You can often find interchangeable lens cameras with a zoom lens for around the same price. The Lumix S9, while it is not exactly the same kind of camera, does get you a full-frame sensor in a compact body for less money.
When it comes to rival compacts, the Fujifilm X100VI is the most direct competitor in terms of size and style. While it is a bit more expensive, it has an APS-C sensor, IBIS, a hybrid viewfinder, and a more premium feel. Its defintely not a simple decision that will be defined by price alone.
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Design & Handling
The Lumix L10 looks fantastic. Panasonic has gone for a retro-inspired design, and the result is the best-looking Lumix cameras in years. It comes in black, silver, and Titanium Gold, with the gold version marking the 25th anniversary of Lumix.
I tested the Titanium Gold model, and while it is a little flashier than the version I would choose myself, it still looks good. My preference would probably be the silver version, which feels like the most classic of the three, but Panasonic has done a good job across the range. All three models have metal top and bottom plates, a magnesium alloy front case, matching lens barrels, and a black Saffiano-style faux leather wrap.
The Titanium Gold version has a few unique touches. The Lumix logo moves from the front of the camera to the rear corner, which makes the front look cleaner and more discreet. I actually quite like the front Lumix logo on the black and silver versions, as it gives them a more classic camera look, but the gold model’s subtler branding does make sense for a limited edition. The gold kit also includes a titanium-colored auto lens cap, a Lumix-branded leather strap, and a dedicated L10 lens cloth.
The lens is the familiar Leica DC Vario-Summilux 24-75mm equivalent F1.7-2.8 zoom, although Panasonic says it has been updated with dust resistance, which was a major complaint with previous versions. Otherwise, it keeps the same focal length range and aperture rating as the LX100 II, and I have no real complaints about that. This is an excellent everyday range, wide enough for travel and street, long enough for portraits and detail shots, and fast enough to give the camera some low-light and depth-of-field flexibility. A wider aperture or longer zoom would have been great, but it would have made the camera bigger, and it already pushes the definition of “compact.”
That is one of my main design reservations. The L10 is bigger than the LX100 II and is noticeably chunkier in the hand. It still just about qualifies as a compact camera, but it is not slipping into a jeans pocket. Then again, neither is the LX100 II or Fujifilm X100VI. More surprisingly, the L10 is around the same size as the X100VI, despite the Fuji squeezing in an APS-C sensor, IBIS, and a hybrid optical/electronic viewfinder. I am not entirely sure where all the extra space has gone on the Panasonic.
The L10 feels well built, but side by side with the X100VI, the Fuji feels more polished. Its buttons and dials have more heft, the body feels more solid, and it is simply the camera I would rather pick up and hold. On its own, the L10 feels great. In direct comparison, it feels a little less premium.
Panasonic has also made some control changes from the LX100 II that I am not fully sold on. The old shutter speed and exposure compensation dials have gone, replaced by a mode dial and a more multifunctional control dial. For what should primarily be a photographer’s compact, this seems like a big concession to hybrid shooters. I also just miss the look of those old-school numbered dials. There is also a new dedicated record button (another nod to hybrid shooters).
Although functionally, it still operates the same. The L10 still has a manual dial in the corner, which by default changes the main parameter of whichever mode you are using, with an exposure compensation button beside it and a custom function button in the center.
The shutter is surrounded by a zoom rocker, although you can also zoom using the lens control ring, either linearly or using step zoom to jump between common focal lengths, which is often quicker.
The Titanium Gold version also adds a threaded shutter release, so you can attach a soft release button. I personally hate soft shutter releases, but I know they are hugely popular, and it is a nice nod to traditional photography. While I understand Panasonic wanted some things to justify a special edition model, but where most other changes are cosmetic; this is a functional change that feels somewhat unfair to black/silver L10 users.
One change I do really like is the revamped aspect ratio switch. On older cameras, I rarely used the aspect ratio switch because I preferred to shoot full resolution and crop later. I am clearly not the only one who feels this way, as on the L10, it can be repurposed as a custom switch. I set it up to jump between three LUTs for quick access, which immediately felt more useful, but you can set it to a number of different functions, like quick zoom positions or different photo styles. Or if you love aspect ratio shooting, you can still use it that way.
Around the back is a dedicated LUT button, which gives fast access to Panasonic’s color tools, as well as an AF-On button. There is a small rear thumb wheel and a four-way controller for ISO, focus, white balance, and shutter/self-timer controls. The thumb wheel is a little fiddly on a camera this small, but overall, the L10 is still very easy to use. Even with the changes to the top dials, almost everything I needed was only a few taps away.
The rear screen is a 3-inch, 1.84m-dot fully articulating touchscreen. It is not a class-leading panel, but it gets the job done, and the full articulation is useful for video, vertical shooting, and awkward angles. The touchscreen is also important because there is no joystick, so it is the only way to position the focus point.
There is also a 2.36m-dot OLED EVF, which is especially notable given Panasonic recently left one off the ZS300 and also managed to make the Lumix S9 sell well without one. But I am glad it is here on the L10 – a premium compact like this should have a viewfinder.
The L10 also has a hotshoe, which is very good news after its frustrating omission from the Lumix S9. There is no built-in flash, so if you want flash, you will need to use an external unit on that hotshoe. The single UHS-II SD card slot is on the bottom of the camera in its own compartment, separate from the battery. That battery is the DMW-BLK22, the same type used in most Lumix mirrorless cameras, which makes the L10 a more convenient companion for existing Lumix owners.
The grip is minimal, but this is a small camera, so I was not expecting a deep handgrip. It is just about enough, although I found using a SmallRig thumb grip made the camera feel much more secure. I am less keen on the strap lugs. I wish Panasonic had kept the eyelet-style lugs from the LX100 II, which looked neater and felt better suited to most of my third-party straps.
Performance
The L10’s biggest selling point is likely to be Panasonic’s built-in Photo LUT system. Fujifilm’s film simulations and community recipes have become a huge part of the X100VI’s appeal, and the L10 feels like Panasonic’s answer. It is not a direct copy, though. Rather than locking you into a fixed set of simulations as your starting point, Panasonic lets you load any custom LUT into the camera or even layer up to two LUTs, with hundreds to download or share through the Lumix Lab app.
Panasonic has also added new film-inspired Photo Styles to get you started, including L.Classic, L.ClassicNeo, and L.ClassicGold, as well as Leica Monochrome. We can argue all day about the strengths and weaknesses of film recipes versus LUTs, but LUTs have now reached the point where the right LUTs can be just as versatile and filmic. They just have a slightly steeper learning curve because there is more to understand, and more scope to get things wrong.
But after years of being a Fujifilm shooter, I am already a total convert to this way of working. The L10 can produce instant social media-ready JPEGs, and frankly, that is what I, and a lot of people, want from a camera like this now. Why should I spend hours tweaking photos in Lightroom when I can get a look I like straight out of camera?
I usually think Micro Four Thirds is something of a sweet spot for compact cameras, as it allows for smaller designs, which is why it is a bit of a surprise that the L10 has grown in size so much.
This is not the newest or highest-resolution sensor, but the image quality from the 20.4MP 4/3-type BSI CMOS sensor is very good, although it is another one of these confusing sensors where the image circle doesn’t cover the whole 26.5MP sensor in any aspect ratio.
The effective 20.4MP does leave less cropping room than some rivals, but it is enough for web, social, and prints at sensible sizes, and the kind of photography this camera is mainly designed for. Dynamic range is good, with useful latitude in the shadows, and Panasonic’s color science gives natural, pleasing results if you choose not to use any styles or LUTs.
The lens is sharp in the center throughout the zoom range, with a little softness at the edges and corners when shooting wide open, but it sharpens up nicely when stopped down. For travel and everyday shooting, I think the 24-75mm equivalent range is just about perfect.
Low-light performance is good too, the L10 can capture a good amount of detail, and noise reduction isn’t overly aggressive, although some finer detail is a little smoothed out. Results are still very usable, though, and I wouldn’t hesitate to take this camera out at night.
Autofocus is quick and mostly reliable. The L10 uses Panasonic’s Phase Hybrid AF system with 779 points, along with AI subject recognition for people, animals, vehicles, and more dynamic subjects such as urban sports. In practice, subject recognition worked very well. I still don't think Panasonic’s AF tracking is quite at Sony or Canon level, and it can occasionally get a little too enthusiastic about recognizing inanimate objects as subjects, but once it locked onto what I wanted, it generally stayed locked. The autofocus is also silent, which is not something I would say about the Fujifilm X100VI’s lens.
Close focusing is useful, but not perfect. The L10 can focus down to 3cm at the wide end, which is very close, but not always the most flattering or practical perspective for macro. At the long end, close focus jumps to 30cm, which is a little far away if you want truly tiny detail. You also need to manually switch the lens into macro mode, although in practice this behaves more like a focus limiter, and you can leave it in that mode while still focusing at normal distances. Full manual focus is also available if you want to be more precise.


The L10 includes Panasonic’s high-resolution mode, which stacks images to create a 96MP file in-camera, although I can’t say I personally have ever really found a frequent purpose for this. It also has Crop Zoom, which digitally crops beyond the optical zoom range. Crop Zoom is useful in a pinch, but with only 20MP to play with, quality drops off fairly quickly if you push it too far.
The biggest omission for me is in-body image stabilization. The L10 has lens-based POWER O.I.S., and that does help for night shooting and walking street shots, but I do not find it as effective as IBIS. Ideally, I would want a combination of both, and given the L10’s larger body, it feels like IBIS could have been included, especially when Fujifilm fits it around a larger sensor in the similarly sized X100VI.
Burst shooting is surprisingly powerful for this type of camera; it shares the processor from the S1 II, but not any level of sensor stacking. The mechanical leaf shutter reaches around 11fps, while the electronic shutter can shoot at up to 30fps. While I don’t think this will be anyone’s first-choice sports or wildlife camera, for things like urban sports, dance competitions, school sports days, or chasing your dog around the park, having that speed might turn out to be very useful.
Battery is one of the L10’s real strengths. If there is one clear benefit to the larger body, it is battery life. It is rated for around 420 shots using the rear screen or 410 using the EVF, but in my own use, I walked around shooting for a whole day and exceeded that rating, although shooting high-res video is going to take a significant hit to that time.
Video
Panasonic just can’t help itself. Video is also far better than I expected from a camera that is not primarily video-focused. The L10 can shoot 5.6K 17:9 up to 60p, 5.2K 4:3 up to 30p, and 4K 16:9 up to 120p, with all modes oversampled from 5.8K. There is also Panasonic’s MP4 Lite codec, which creates smaller files for quick transfer and easier editing on phones or lower-powered laptops.
Video quality is fantastic for this type of camera. Autofocus is snappy, but not so sudden that pulls feel jarring, so transitions are smooth and cinematic. Tracking and subject recognition are very good, although the system can still be tripped up by objects passing in front of the subject.
However, the lack of IBIS, for me, does limit the L10’s usefulness as a hybrid camera. You get optical stabilization in the lens and some digital stabilization, but without IBIS, options like auto panning and locked stabilization for static shots are not available.
The L10 is a much stronger hybrid compact than I expected, and would make a decent B-roll camera or on-the-road vlogging option. However, for more serious video work, I still think the Lumix S9 is the better choice in Panasonic’s small-body lineup, especially now it has more lenses to compliment it’s size.
Sample Images




























Verdict
The Lumix L10 is a very very good camera. I love the lens, with the most popular premium compacts having fixed primes; it is refreshing to have a more versatile zoom lens option. I love the LUT system; it's every bit as good as Fuji’s film recipes, and out-of-camera JPEGs are the future. And I love having photography first features like an EVF and a hotshoe. It is a camera I will now happily take traveling for social-first stills.
But I still wish it were smaller, as I am not really sure where the extra space has been used. And for the extra size, I wish it had IBIS. I also wish Panasonic had kept more of the old marked manual dials. I’m also not completely sold on the price, as it feels just a little caught up in a compact camera premium, considering you can get other similarly small, yet more versatile ICL cameras, plus a lens, for around the same price.
I feel the L10 is a camera caught between two ideas. It wants to be a stylish fixed-lens compact designed for photographers who want a proper camera with a viewfinder, a great lens, and a classic shooting experience. But it is also still a bit of a hybrid, with stronger-than-expected video, a fully articulating screen, a dedicated record button, and a control layout that feels more creator-focused than old-school photographer-focused.
Still, the L10 gives Panasonic a much-needed premium compact when the genre couldn’t be hotter – and a genuine alternative for anyone considering the Fujifilm X100VI.
Design ★★★★½ | The L10 looks fantastic, with a stylish retro body, but it is bigger than expected, and I miss some of the older dials. |
Photo Performance ★★★★★ | The 20.4MP 4/3 sensor and Leica 24-75mm equivalent lens produce excellent images day and night, especially with the extensive LUT options. |
Video Performance ★★★★☆ | Surprisingly impressive for a photo-first compact, with 5.6K, 4K up to 120p, MP4 Lite, and smooth autofocus, but the lack of IBIS makes it less capable for more serious handheld video work. |
Value ★★★★☆ | The L10 is not cheap, and while its capable specs and design can makes the price feel fair – it is undercut by other ICL cameras. |
Overall | ★★★★½ |
Alternatives
The obvious rival. The X100VI feels more premium, has a larger APS-C sensor, IBIS, a hybrid viewfinder, and Fujifilm’s excellent film simulations. It is more expensive, harder to buy, and limited to a fixed 35mm equivalent lens, but it remains the camera that the L10 has to beat.
As a full-frame interchangeable-lens camera rather than a fixed-lens compact, the Lumix S9 is not a direct rival, but it shares Panasonic’s Real Time LUT philosophy and is the better choice for hybrid work. It lacks an EVF and hotshoe, but with the right compact lens, it is a strong compact alternative.

Gareth is a photographer based in London, working as a freelance photographer and videographer for the past several years, having the privilege to shoot for some household names. With work focusing on fashion, portrait and lifestyle content creation, he has developed a range of skills covering everything from editorial shoots to social media videos. Outside of work, he has a personal passion for travel and nature photography, with a devotion to sustainability and environmental causes.
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