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Buyer's Guide: The Best Compact Cameras
Under threat from smartphones and hybrid compacts, the classic compact camera could soon be struggling to hang onto its place in the market. Manufacturers are coming up with all kinds of new features to help their products stand out, and while we're not convinced by web-connected cameras, superzoom compacts are well worth a look.
Franck Mée
Translator: Catherine Barraclough
Updated: November 23, 2011
Translator: Catherine Barraclough
Updated: November 23, 2011

More Camera Reviews

Looking for a new compact camera? Cut to the chase with this pick of the best digital cameras currently on the market or, for more options, you can browse all our compact camera reviews.
For other types of camera you need our bridge camera, hybrid camera and SLR buyer's guides.
For other types of camera you need our bridge camera, hybrid camera and SLR buyer's guides.
- Sensor. Look for a BSI CMOS rather than a CCD sensor, as pictures taken in low light will come out better and look less grainy. The number of Megapixels doesn't have much importance these days.
- Zoom. Look for a lens with a wide-angle setting of 28 mm or less. This is essential for landscape photography and group photos. Anything under 25 mm is an ultra-wide-angle lens, which can capture wide landscape scenes or a whole skyscraper in portrait mode, for example. For natural portraits, the lens should zoom to at least 100 mm, and 300 mm should be the minimum zoom to look for when shooting far-off subjects like wild animals.
- Screen. The onscreen image shouldn't look black when you look at the screen from below (a common problem with TN screens) and the LCD should have a resolution of at least 460,000 dots for pictures to look sharp and precise.
- Responsiveness. A camera shouldn't really take more than two seconds to start up, although some superzooms can take a bit longer due to their monster lenses. The autofocus should work in well under a second too, otherwise you'll be hanging around waiting for the camera to catch up.
- Video: 720 HD is the lowest acceptable resolution you'll need for videos to look decent on today's HD TVs. Although 1080 HD files are bigger, picture quality is sharper. Sound should be recorded in stereo too, as poor-quality sound can ruin an otherwise perfectly good video.
With these factors in mind, here's our pick of the best compact digital cameras out there right now.
Editor's Choice 
The HX9V is a feature-rich superzoom compact that takes excellent pictures and has manual controls for advanced users. It films great-quality video too, in 1080 p/i HD resolution complete with good stereo sound and optical zoom. The Sony Cyber-shot HX9V is our favourite compact camera of 2011 even if, to be honest, there's not much point in it having 16 Megapixels—these mainly serve to push up file size and encourage the image processing system to get rather heavy-handed (some of you may find the pictures look a bit over-processed, in fact).
Two Alternatives 
Lower-Cost Superzoom
The SX230 is a great alternative to the HX9V. Although it's not as responsive as Sony's model, the SX30 is a fair bit cheaper, and takes comparable-quality photos and very good videos (although the maximum framerate of 24 fps means that some judder may be visible). It's only real downside is a rather limited battery life.
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Quality Budget Snapper
This stylish and super-small camera has nothing to envy of bulkier, more expensive models. It goes to show you can get a good sensor and a decent lens (quality drops a little at telephoto settings) without spending a fortune. Note that the screen resolution could be better, as could the sound recorded in video mode—although it is stereo, at least.
Best of the Rest 
Here are a few more of our favourites.
Under £100!
Review: Panasonic Lumix S1
The Panasonic Lumix S1 is the only digital camera under £100 we've tested that didn't turn out to be a complete disaster!
Loads of Controls
Review: Olympus XZ-1
It may not have the most powerful zoom, but the XZ-1 has a fast lens. Manual settings are on hand for advanced users but the video mode is a bit out-dated.
Rough, Tough & Waterproof
Review: Panasonic Lumix FT3
As well as taking decent pictures and being relatively responsive, this camera is waterproof to 12 metres ... at which depths you'll forget all about the low-quality screen.
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