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Point & Shoot

(75 products)

Compact, pocketable, and ready when you are — point-and-shoot cameras make great everyday and travel companions. Browse our selection for simple, high-quality shooting without the bulk of an interchangeable-lens kit.

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How to choose a point-and-shoot camera

Point-and-shoots are having a real moment — creators want a pocket camera that beats a phone without the bulk of an interchangeable-lens kit. Here's how to pick the right one.

Why a compact over a phone?

A dedicated compact has a much larger sensor than a phone, real optical zoom, and a look that's hard to fake computationally. You get shallow depth of field, better low-light files, and — increasingly the point — a deliberate, single-purpose device that keeps you off notifications while you shoot. The trade-off is no apps and slower sharing, which many people now see as a feature.

Sensor size is everything

This is the spec that separates a great compact from a glorified webcam. A 1-inch sensor (Sony RX100 series, Canon G7 X) is the sweet spot for image quality in a truly pocketable body. Larger APS-C compacts (Fujifilm X100 series, Ricoh GR) deliver near-interchangeable-lens quality. Smaller 1/2.3-inch sensors are fine in good light and for big zoom ranges, but fall behind a modern phone indoors.

Zoom vs. fixed lens

Decide between reach and quality. Travel-zoom compacts cover huge focal ranges in one body, ideal for vacations and wildlife from a distance. Fixed-lens compacts use a single high-quality prime (often a 23–28mm equivalent) that's sharper and faster — better for street, everyday, and low light. There's no wrong answer, just a different priority.

For video and vlogging

If you're buying to vlog, look for a flip-up or fully articulating screen, reliable face and eye autofocus, in-body or digital stabilization, and a mic input or at least good built-in audio. Some compacts are purpose-built for creators with these features front and center.

Frequently asked questions

Are point-and-shoot cameras still worth buying in 2026?

Yes — arguably more than ever. A compact with a 1-inch or larger sensor gives you image quality, optical zoom, and a distinct look your phone can't match, in something that still fits a pocket. The renewed popularity has been driven by creators wanting a dedicated, distraction-free camera.

Will a compact really beat my phone?

In the ways that matter for photography, yes: bigger sensor, true optical zoom, better low-light files, and real background blur. Phones win on convenience, computational tricks, and instant sharing. If you want better images and a more intentional shooting experience, a good compact is a clear step up.

What sensor size should I look for?

Aim for a 1-inch sensor at minimum for a meaningful jump over a phone; APS-C compacts go further still. Avoid the tiny 1/2.3-inch sensors unless you specifically need an enormous zoom range and shoot mostly in good light.

Which is best for travel?

For travel, a 1-inch travel-zoom hits the balance of reach, quality, and pocketability — one camera that covers wide scenes and distant subjects. If image quality matters more than zoom, a fixed-lens APS-C compact is the connoisseur's travel pick.

Should I buy new or used?

Both work well — compacts are simple and durable. Popular models hold value, so used can save real money; just buy from a source that inspects and tests the camera. Every used compact we sell is hand-checked in Milwaukee with honest condition notes and photos of the actual item.

Local to Milwaukee? Stop by our camera store in Oak Creek, WI to try a few compacts in hand and find the one that fits your pocket and your shooting.

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