Fujifilm X-T10 vs X-T100
The X-T100 leads on more headline specs, but the X-T10 counters on 8 fps continuous shooting and a lighter 381 g body.
The short version
The Fujifilm X-T10 and Fujifilm X-T100 are both Fujifilm X-T bodies. The X-T100 is the newer of the two, arriving in 2018. At launch the X-T10 was $799 and the X-T100 $599, making the X-T100 the more affordable of the two.
On paper the X-T10 is the stronger body of the two. It gives you 8 fps continuous shooting and a lighter 381 g body.
The X-T100 isn't far behind. It hits back with 24.2 MP of resolution, face/eye-detection AF, and 4K/15p video, with a couple more edges beyond that.
So which one? If you want 8 fps continuous shooting, get the X-T10. If 24.2 MP of resolution is closer to what you actually need, the X-T100 is the smarter buy. And the X-T100 costs less — $599 at launch.
Where the X-T10 wins
- +8 fps continuous shooting
- +a lighter 381 g body
Where the X-T100 wins
- +24.2 MP of resolution
- +face/eye-detection AF
- +4K/15p video
- +430-shot battery life
X-T10 vs X-T100: full specs
| Spec | 2015 · $799 | 2018 · $599 |
|---|---|---|
| General | ||
| Release year | 2015 | 2018 |
| Launch price | $799 | $599 |
| Status | Discontinued | Discontinued |
| Sensor & Image | ||
| Megapixels | 16.3 MP | 24.2 MP |
| Sensor generation | X-Trans II | Bayer |
| Processor | EXR Processor II | EXR Processor II |
| ISO range | 200–6400 | 200–12800 |
| Autofocus & Burst | ||
| AF points | 49 | 91 |
| Subject detection | none | face-eye |
| Burst (fps) | 8 | 6 |
| Video | ||
| Max video | 1080p 60p | 4K 15p |
| Codec | H.264 | H.264 |
| Log profile | No | No |
| Physical | ||
| Stabilization | None | None |
| Viewfinder | EVF (2.36M dot) | EVF (2.36M dot) |
| LCD | 3" tilt | 3" tilt touch |
| Weather sealed | No | No |
| Weight | 381 g | 448 g |
| Storage | ||
| Card slots | 1 | 1 |
| Card types | SD UHS-I | SD UHS-I |
| Power | ||
| Battery | NP-W126 | NP-W126S |
| Battery life (CIPA) | 350 shots | 430 shots |
| Software | ||
| Film sims | 5 | 6 |
Highlighted cells are best in class between these two. Specs sourced from public Fujifilm product pages.