Panasonic Lumix S1R
Lowest price we've ever observed
How we compute thisLowest price we've ever observed. This at $1,850 matches the lowest we've ever recorded for this body. That's 50% of the $3,699 MSRP. Prices are down 31.7% over the last 30 days.
Based on only 8 observed days in the last 90; the trend confidence is low until our history fills in.
- Lowest now
- $1,850
- MSRP
- $3,699
- % of MSRP
- 50%
- 90-day low
- $1,850
- All-time low
- $1,850 (May 4, 2026)
- 30-day trend
- -31.7%
Specs
- Brand
- Panasonic
- Family
- Panasonic Lumix S
- Category
- body
- Body type
- Mirrorless
- Mount
- L-mount
- Sensor
- Full Frame
- Megapixels
- 47.3 MP
- Lens type
- —
- IBIS
- 5-axis 5.5-stop
- Weather sealed
- Yes
- Max video
- 4K60
- Max native ISO
- ISO 25,600
- Weight
- 1020 g
- Dimensions
- 149 × 110 × 97 mm
- Body material
- magnesium alloy
- Released
- 2019-02-01
- Status
- current
Computational features
47MP full-frame with tripod-only 187MP High Resolution mode and in-camera focus stacking.
Latest pricing by source
Each row is a direct observation from the seller. How we collect this.| Source | Condition | Price | Listings | Observed | Link |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| bh | excellent → excellent | $1,850 | 1 | Observed 6d ago | view listing |
| mpb | excellent → excellent | $2,679 | 5 | Observed 23h ago | view listing |
| mpb | like new → mint | $2,749 | 13 | Observed 23h ago | view listing |
Price history
One point per day per (source, grade) pair, connected with lines. Hue marks the source; lightness within a hue marks the condition (darker = better grade). The dashed line is launch MSRP.
See Methods notes #1.1, #1.2, #1.3.
More in this family
Appears in
Curated lists where this camera currently qualifies. Each list ranks members by deal score.
Similar cameras
How we compute each section
References on each chart link down here. More notes will land as new sections grow.
1. Price history
- #1.1 · Grade buckets
-
Each seller publishes their own raw condition labels (e.g. "Excellent+", "Like new minus", "Bargain"). Those are normalized to a small bucket set:
mint,excellent,good,fair,poor, andunknown. The "Latest pricing by source" table above shows both the raw label and the normalized bucket so you can audit any individual mapping. - #1.2 · Missing days
- A point is only drawn on a day when a snapshot existed for that (source, grade) pair. Lines connect across gaps so a series with sparse sampling still reads as a single trend, but absence of a point does not mean a stockout: it means the scraper didn't observe a listing at that grade that day.
- #1.3 · Color encoding
- Hue carries the source: terracotta = mpb, sage = keh, cobalt = B&H, honey = ebay. Lightness within a hue carries the condition: darker means a better grade (mint and excellent are darkest; poor is lightest). The dashed ink line is launch MSRP, included as a reference even though it isn't a price observation.