Nikon D7200, Nikon D500, Canon 80D, Pentax KP, Sony A6500ĭetail comparison. Much of the apparent detail in the Sony's rendering of the red-leaf pattern appears distorted instead of just being blurred. The Sony A6500 still manages to produce a sharper, more detailed image overall than the Nikon D7500 at ISO 3200, but noise and noise reduction artifacts are more noticeable, and the Nikon continues to produce better color.
And remember, you can always go to our world-renowned Comparometer to compare the Nikon D7500 to any camera we've ever tested! Nikon D7500 vs Nikon D7200 at Base ISO For those interested in working with the RAW files involved, click these links to visit each camera's respective sample image thumbnail page: Nikon D7500, Nikon D7200, Nikon D500, Canon 80D, and Sony A6500 - links to the RAW files appear beneath those for the JPEG images, wherever we have them. Clicking any crop will take you to a carrier page where you can click once again to access the full resolution image as delivered straight from the camera. All cameras in this comparison were shot with our very sharp reference lenses. NOTE: These images are from best quality JPEGs straight out of the camera, at default settings including noise reduction and using the camera's actual base ISO (not extended ISO settings). We've also included a few recent competitors in this comparison: the Canon 80D, Pentax KP and the Sony A6500. Below are crops from our laboratory Still Life target comparing the Nikon D7500's image quality to its predecessor's, the D7200, as well as to its big brother's, the D500.