
Fujifilm XF 18-135mm F3.5-5.6 R LM OIS WR Lens
The lens can be used for many subjects in various shooting scenes as it covers frequently used angles of view. These include wide angle, often used for shooting landscapes and architecture with an excellent sense of perspective (27mm), a normal angle of view that naturally captures the image as is (35mm, 40mm, 50mm), and telephoto, which symbolically cuts out portraits and sports scenes (85mm, 135mm, 200mm with its 7.5x zoom. In order to realize high descriptive performance with sharpness and rich contrast from wide angle to telephoto, high-performance glass materials including 4 aspherical glass lenses and 2 ED glass lenses are used. Multi-layer coating HT-EBC, which has high permeability (99.8%) and low reflectance (0.2%), is applied to the entire lens to effectively reduce lens flare and ghosting, which often occur in backlight conditions. Utilizing the wide zoom range of the lens, there is more freedom in composition and selecting angles.
The lens can be used for many subjects in various shooting scenes as it covers frequently used angles of view. These include wide angle, often used for shooting landscapes and architecture with an excellent sense of perspective (27mm), a normal angle of view that naturally captures the image as is (35mm, 40mm, 50mm), and telephoto, which symbolically cuts out portraits and sports scenes (85mm, 135mm, 200mm with its 7.5x zoom. In order to realize high descriptive performance with sharpness and rich contrast from wide angle to telephoto, high-performance glass materials including 4 aspherical glass lenses and 2 ED glass lenses are used. Multi-layer coating HT-EBC, which has high permeability (99.8%) and low reflectance (0.2%), is applied to the entire lens to effectively reduce lens flare and ghosting, which often occur in backlight conditions. Utilizing the wide zoom range of the lens, there is more freedom in composition and selecting angles.
The lens can be used for many subjects in various shooting scenes as it covers frequently used angles of view. These include wide angle, often used for shooting landscapes and architecture with an excellent sense of perspective (27mm), a normal angle of view that naturally captures the image as is (35mm, 40mm, 50mm), and telephoto, which symbolically cuts out portraits and sports scenes (85mm, 135mm, 200mm with its 7.5x zoom. In order to realize high descriptive performance with sharpness and rich contrast from wide angle to telephoto, high-performance glass materials including 4 aspherical glass lenses and 2 ED glass lenses are used. Multi-layer coating HT-EBC, which has high permeability (99.8%) and low reflectance (0.2%), is applied to the entire lens to effectively reduce lens flare and ghosting, which often occur in backlight conditions. Utilizing the wide zoom range of the lens, there is more freedom in composition and selecting angles.
The lens can be used for many subjects in various shooting scenes as it covers frequently used angles of view. These include wide angle, often used for shooting landscapes and architecture with an excellent sense of perspective (27mm), a normal angle of view that naturally captures the image as is (35mm, 40mm, 50mm), and telephoto, which symbolically cuts out portraits and sports scenes (85mm, 135mm, 200mm with its 7.5x zoom. In order to realize high descriptive performance with sharpness and rich contrast from wide angle to telephoto, high-performance glass materials including 4 aspherical glass lenses and 2 ED glass lenses are used. Multi-layer coating HT-EBC, which has high permeability (99.8%) and low reflectance (0.2%), is applied to the entire lens to effectively reduce lens flare and ghosting, which often occur in backlight conditions. Utilizing the wide zoom range of the lens, there is more freedom in composition and selecting angles.
in 32 offers
The lowest price for Fujifilm XF 18-135mm F3.5-5.6 R LM OIS WR Lens right now is $671.54 at eBay.com.au, compared across 27 retailers.
The all-time low was $404.76 on 26 May 2026 — today's price is 66% above the lowest ever. It has been notably cheaper before — worth setting a price alert.
Prices last updated 9 June 2026.
Last updated at 09/06/2026 00:30:48
Fujifilm XF 18-135mm F3.5-5.6 R LM OIS WR Lens
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Fujifilm Fujinon XF 18-135mm F/3.5 - 5.6 LM OIS R WR Lens
Affiliate Disclosure: We may receive a small commission for purchases made through this link at no extra cost to you. This helps support our site. Thank you!
Fujifilm Xf 18-135mm F/3.5 - 5.6 R Lm Ois Wr Lens
Delivery $126.36
Affiliate Disclosure: We may receive a small commission for purchases made through this link at no extra cost to you. This helps support our site. Thank you!
Fuji Fujinon Xf18-135mm F3.5-5.6 Lens
Free delivery
Affiliate Disclosure: We may receive a small commission for purchases made through this link at no extra cost to you. This helps support our site. Thank you!
Fujifilm XF 18-135mm f/3.5-5.6 R LM OIS WR Lens
Delivery $14.95
FujiFilm XF 18-135mm F3.5-5.6 R LM OIS WR Lens
Free delivery between 11–18 June
FUJIFILM XF 18-135mm f/3.5-5.6 R LM OIS WR Lens
Delivery $15
Fujifilm | XF 18-135mm f/3.5-5.6 R LM OIS WR Lens | All-In-One Zoom 27-206mm Equivalent | ED and Aspherical Elements | HT-EBC Coating | Weather-Sealed
Delivery $9.90
Fujifilm XF 18-135mm f/3.5-5.6 R WR Lens
Free delivery
Fujifilm XF 18-135mm Zoom f/3.5-5.6 R OIS WR Lens
Delivery between 12–17 June $26.64
originally posted on bhphotovideo.com
I Love This Lens; it even holds up in pixel-peeping tests to my primes at equivalent apertures. I bought this lens as part of a deliberately small but well planned travel, hiking and walkabout kit built around the Fuji X system. The attached image is of a Coyote that wandered through my backyard a few days after receiving my lens last winter. It was photographed on the Fuji X-T3 with the 18-135 mm zoomed out all the way to135mm (35mm equivalent 206mm), through a closed kitchen window, and cropped 8-fold! Out of camera jpeg, no post! I rest my case.
originally posted on lensrentals.com
Was very skeptical about "renting" a lens... especially online... especially from a place that didn't require a large deposit.From the arrival - to how it was shipped - to the lens itself... everything was perfect.The lens itself? I would rather just have a couple prime lenses on me. However, if that isn't very possible and I find myself wanting to shoot a variety of items then I would purchase it. It's...7/10 but as any wide range (18 - 135+) it is more of a jack of all trades type that I would be satisfied with as a travel lens. Glad I was able to rent it vs buy it... would have been a disappointing purchase at its price. Now when I do add it to the collection I'll know what I am in for.If there are any worries or doubts about renting a lens - don't.
originally posted on bhphotovideo.com
I have had this lens for awhile but just started using it lately. I have a X T-2 and several other Fuji lenses, and absolutely LOVE the Fuji system. BUT....as much as I love the focal length range, I hate how difficult it is to get the lens to lock into focus especially with moving subjects. By the time it settles into focus, I have lost the crucial moment. So far I have used it in a museum where, thank goodness, the subject matter isnt moving so there is time to wait for the lens to focus. However, at a recent livestock show, I lost some wonderful moments because the lens was just too slow. In both the museum and inside the huge barns at the livestock show I was shooting at ISO 3200 @ f/5-5.6. For still subjects, this aperture setting worked just fine. Slow shutter ... MoreI have had this lens for awhile but just started using it lately. I have a X T-2 and several other Fuji lenses, and absolutely LOVE the Fuji system. BUT....as much as I love the focal length range, I hate how difficult it is to get the lens to lock into focus especially with moving subjects. By the time it settles into focus, I have lost the crucial moment. So far I have used it in a museum where, thank goodness, the subject matter isnt moving so there is time to wait for the lens to focus. However, at a recent livestock show, I lost some wonderful moments because the lens was just too slow. In both the museum and inside the huge barns at the livestock show I was shooting at ISO 3200 @ f/5-5.6. For still subjects, this aperture setting worked just fine. Slow shutter speed also added to the problem with the moving subjects at the livestock show so cant fault the lens for that. Focus was the big problem. The lens is usable but disappointing. Im being kind giving it three stars because I do like the focal length range and focuses when it gets around to it. However, some day I might wish I had given it only two.
| Maximum Aperture | f/3.5 to 5.6 |
| Minimum Aperture | f/22 |
| Lens Mount | FUJIFILM X |
| Format Compatibility | APS-C |
| Angle of View | 76.5° to 12° |
Fujifilm XF 18-135mm F3.5-5.6 R LM OIS WR Lens
Free delivery
Affiliate Disclosure: We may receive a small commission for purchases made through this link at no extra cost to you. This helps support our site. Thank you!
Fujifilm Fujinon XF 18-135mm F/3.5 - 5.6 LM OIS R WR Lens
Affiliate Disclosure: We may receive a small commission for purchases made through this link at no extra cost to you. This helps support our site. Thank you!
Fujifilm Xf 18-135mm F/3.5 - 5.6 R Lm Ois Wr Lens
Delivery $126.36
Affiliate Disclosure: We may receive a small commission for purchases made through this link at no extra cost to you. This helps support our site. Thank you!
Fuji Fujinon Xf18-135mm F3.5-5.6 Lens
Free delivery
Affiliate Disclosure: We may receive a small commission for purchases made through this link at no extra cost to you. This helps support our site. Thank you!
Fujifilm XF 18-135mm f/3.5-5.6 R LM OIS WR Lens
Delivery $14.95
I Love This Lens; it even holds up in pixel-peeping tests to my primes at equivalent apertures. I bought this lens as part of a deliberately small but well planned travel, hiking and walkabout kit built around the Fuji X system. The attached image is of a Coyote that wandered through my backyard a few days after receiving my lens last winter. It was photographed on the Fuji X-T3 with the 18-135 mm zoomed out all the way to135mm (35mm equivalent 206mm), through a closed kitchen window, and cropped 8-fold! Out of camera jpeg, no post! I rest my case.
Was very skeptical about "renting" a lens... especially online... especially from a place that didn't require a large deposit.From the arrival - to how it was shipped - to the lens itself... everything was perfect.The lens itself? I would rather just have a couple prime lenses on me. However, if that isn't very possible and I find myself wanting to shoot a variety of items then I would purchase it. It's...7/10 but as any wide range (18 - 135+) it is more of a jack of all trades type that I would be satisfied with as a travel lens. Glad I was able to rent it vs buy it... would have been a disappointing purchase at its price. Now when I do add it to the collection I'll know what I am in for.If there are any worries or doubts about renting a lens - don't.
I have had this lens for awhile but just started using it lately. I have a X T-2 and several other Fuji lenses, and absolutely LOVE the Fuji system. BUT....as much as I love the focal length range, I hate how difficult it is to get the lens to lock into focus especially with moving subjects. By the time it settles into focus, I have lost the crucial moment. So far I have used it in a museum where, thank goodness, the subject matter isnt moving so there is time to wait for the lens to focus. However, at a recent livestock show, I lost some wonderful moments because the lens was just too slow. In both the museum and inside the huge barns at the livestock show I was shooting at ISO 3200 @ f/5-5.6. For still subjects, this aperture setting worked just fine. Slow shutter ... MoreI have had this lens for awhile but just started using it lately. I have a X T-2 and several other Fuji lenses, and absolutely LOVE the Fuji system. BUT....as much as I love the focal length range, I hate how difficult it is to get the lens to lock into focus especially with moving subjects. By the time it settles into focus, I have lost the crucial moment. So far I have used it in a museum where, thank goodness, the subject matter isnt moving so there is time to wait for the lens to focus. However, at a recent livestock show, I lost some wonderful moments because the lens was just too slow. In both the museum and inside the huge barns at the livestock show I was shooting at ISO 3200 @ f/5-5.6. For still subjects, this aperture setting worked just fine. Slow shutter speed also added to the problem with the moving subjects at the livestock show so cant fault the lens for that. Focus was the big problem. The lens is usable but disappointing. Im being kind giving it three stars because I do like the focal length range and focuses when it gets around to it. However, some day I might wish I had given it only two.
The perfect lens for a day trip or vacation. Wide angle for landscapes/architecture through 202mm full frame equivalent for close up work and candids.Lightweight. Sharp. Perfect for any situation outdoors.Not great for indoor use as you really have to bump up your ISO to 3200 or so for hand holding. 3.5 is just not fast enough for indoor photography without flash. When to zooming to telephoto it quickly goes to 5.6. I use my 16mm 1.4 for indoor shots.Highly recommended if you know its limitations.
A bit heavy but a nice feel with my X-S10. Great range for a variety of subjects. Brings my nature shots in close. Good value with the bundle as you need the filters. Zoom ring a bit stiff but I'm sure this is because of the WR. I wish someone would make zoom lenses with "clicks" at each point letting you know where you are on the scale.
I got a used version of this lens to use with my XT3 from Adorama that has some issues with the zoom, but Ado is going to make it right. That being said, I've been experimenting with the lens (they said I could use it until it gets replaced), and it exceeds optical expectations. It really shines in well lit atmospheres, so exteriors and bright interiors. Even fully telephoto at f5.6, the depth of field is really nice. Focus is great. OIS works well. Shot some video last night of the parking lot behind my apartment. Some fluorescents but otherwise pretty dark. Even with a little light, I was still able to capture some interesting stuff at 135mm! Good testing because, rainy = grainy. Some crunch on the low end and lift on the brights in color correction. Testing out ... MoreI got a used version of this lens to use with my XT3 from Adorama that has some issues with the zoom, but Ado is going to make it right. That being said, I've been experimenting with the lens (they said I could use it until it gets replaced), and it exceeds optical expectations. It really shines in well lit atmospheres, so exteriors and bright interiors. Even fully telephoto at f5.6, the depth of field is really nice. Focus is great. OIS works well. Shot some video last night of the parking lot behind my apartment. Some fluorescents but otherwise pretty dark. Even with a little light, I was still able to capture some interesting stuff at 135mm! Good testing because, rainy = grainy. Some crunch on the low end and lift on the brights in color correction. Testing out some more video capabilities later today and will update here. Sunny day so I'll try it with an ND.Only reason I gave four stars is because the Zoom isn't smooth, a bit sticky. For photos, doesn't matter, but for video it's a problem.
I own almost every Fuji lens for the X-mount system and this is one I was determined never to purchase, considering that I almost never use my 18-55 zoom and consider the 16-55 as a benchmark. I finally decided to get this superzoom as a backup (a kind of security blanket when I intend to go out with a single prime lens but want a do-it-all secondary lens just in case). Well, I'm really impressed with the image quality all across the focal range with this zoom. I would not hesitate to use this lens even as a primary lens when I am uncertain about what focal length I was to use on a given outing. Perhaps I wouldn't be as happy if I was into pixel peeping, but that's just not what I do. The main limitation is that it's difficult to get a shallow depth of field, but ... MoreI own almost every Fuji lens for the X-mount system and this is one I was determined never to purchase, considering that I almost never use my 18-55 zoom and consider the 16-55 as a benchmark. I finally decided to get this superzoom as a backup (a kind of security blanket when I intend to go out with a single prime lens but want a do-it-all secondary lens just in case). Well, I'm really impressed with the image quality all across the focal range with this zoom. I would not hesitate to use this lens even as a primary lens when I am uncertain about what focal length I was to use on a given outing. Perhaps I wouldn't be as happy if I was into pixel peeping, but that's just not what I do. The main limitation is that it's difficult to get a shallow depth of field, but that is unavoidable with a superzoom, especially one this light and compact. My only complaint is that the zoom ring gets tight at long focal lengths, which is not confidence inspiring. In this sense, the build quality is perhaps somewhat questionable. But it doesn't detract from image quality, at leas on my copy. In short, this lens should serve its backup purpose well and, thus, allow me to use prime lenses and carry only few of them at any time. Highly recommended.
I've been shooting with the Fujifilm X system ever since the X-Pro1 came out, but had been a Canon L Series lens user going back to my early Canon DSLR days, and a Leica user before that. These days most of my work is with an X-Pro2. I have a fair number of Fujifilm primes as well as several zooms. For walking around, I used to rely on the Fujifilm XF 18-55 zoom. I always felt this was several cuts above the normal kit lens one associates with entry-level DSLRs, better built, and more consistent in performance across the zoom range than a plastic-bodied kit lens. With all that said, after an intensive period of use, I've come to feel that the XF 18-135 zoom easily surpasses the XF 18-55 both in terms of optical resolution and in-hand usefulness. It's obviously ... MoreI've been shooting with the Fujifilm X system ever since the X-Pro1 came out, but had been a Canon L Series lens user going back to my early Canon DSLR days, and a Leica user before that. These days most of my work is with an X-Pro2. I have a fair number of Fujifilm primes as well as several zooms. For walking around, I used to rely on the Fujifilm XF 18-55 zoom. I always felt this was several cuts above the normal kit lens one associates with entry-level DSLRs, better built, and more consistent in performance across the zoom range than a plastic-bodied kit lens. With all that said, after an intensive period of use, I've come to feel that the XF 18-135 zoom easily surpasses the XF 18-55 both in terms of optical resolution and in-hand usefulness. It's obviously larger and heavier than the 18-55, but optically it easily out-performs the sample of the 18-55 in my collection. Resolution is outstanding and noticeably better than the 18-55. Correction seems excellent. THE OIS is every bit as good as the 18-55 and certainly serves to compensate partially for the optical slowness of the non-constant-aperture design of the lens. That said, in outdoor daylight use the speed of the 18-135 is a non-issue, even at the low ISOs I usually work with. It comes down to this: with the 18-55 I usually ended carrying several additional lenses, usually at least a couple of primes, and sometimes the 55-200, just to be certain I'd be ready for something unforeseen. With the 18-135 I've quickly found that unless there's something I know I'm going to do outside of its considerable range, the need to carry additional lenses in a typical walking around scenario has been eliminated. So even though it's not a small and light package in hand, I end up carrying less in total. The size and weight of the 18-135 are more than compensated for by its range and by its excellent optical performance.
I'm a professional photographer and photo educator. I purchased this after drowning my 18-55 f2.8/4 lens in a bit of a canoe mishap. I decided to chance this lens to gain more reach in an all-in-one zoom; the 18-55 (one of the best kit lenses ever designed) just never had enough reach for me. I bought this lens used on Ebay and crossed my fingers. I just processed my first set of images with this lens...some test shots at both ends of 18 & 135mm using a range of f-stops. This lens is sharp! I'm not a pixel peeper. I'm a pro who knows what I want out of my glass. This lens fits the bill and exceeds my expectations. It's a bit slow on follow focus at 8 fps...so I need to play with my AF settings. However, I'm very, very impressed with the sharpness! Build is ... MoreI'm a professional photographer and photo educator. I purchased this after drowning my 18-55 f2.8/4 lens in a bit of a canoe mishap. I decided to chance this lens to gain more reach in an all-in-one zoom; the 18-55 (one of the best kit lenses ever designed) just never had enough reach for me. I bought this lens used on Ebay and crossed my fingers. I just processed my first set of images with this lens...some test shots at both ends of 18 & 135mm using a range of f-stops. This lens is sharp! I'm not a pixel peeper. I'm a pro who knows what I want out of my glass. This lens fits the bill and exceeds my expectations. It's a bit slow on follow focus at 8 fps...so I need to play with my AF settings. However, I'm very, very impressed with the sharpness! Build is everything I've come to expect in Fujinon lenses. If you're looking for a versatile zoom range and can handle the variable aperture this lens is for you. A note about the weight. I was concerned with the size/weight of it. Then I picked up my D750 body with no lens on it and the X-Pro 2 and lens were STILL lighter! Photo samples are outta da Fuji with only noise reduction applied. Bass guitar (135mm, ISO 6400, 1/35th, f11) and African Violoet (1/50 @ f8).
First off I'm going to say that as an XF WR lens you are getting very high quality no matter what. This lens does have some downsides, I do notice some vignetting around the edges especially at maximum zoom and there are some minor sharpness issues throughout. That's not the reason you should buy this lens. if you want sharp as attack zoom you've gotta go for fuji's telephoto f/2.8. Hands down the best. If you want a zoom for professional use, the 16-55 f/2.8 has you covered.This is the lens that I slap on my camera when I am just going out somewhere and I am taking photos for me or if I'm doing a minor event shoot where the photos are going on a website, in the paper, or social media and I need maximum versatility. I far prefer some of the majestic shots that ... MoreFirst off I'm going to say that as an XF WR lens you are getting very high quality no matter what. This lens does have some downsides, I do notice some vignetting around the edges especially at maximum zoom and there are some minor sharpness issues throughout. That's not the reason you should buy this lens. if you want sharp as attack zoom you've gotta go for fuji's telephoto f/2.8. Hands down the best. If you want a zoom for professional use, the 16-55 f/2.8 has you covered.This is the lens that I slap on my camera when I am just going out somewhere and I am taking photos for me or if I'm doing a minor event shoot where the photos are going on a website, in the paper, or social media and I need maximum versatility. I far prefer some of the majestic shots that come out of my primes but at the end of the day I prefer practicality if it's not a professional shoot.It's a 27 to 206mm FF equivalent lens with great build quality and weather resistance. For the price you're not going to find a more versatile lens out there.
| Maximum Aperture | f/3.5 to 5.6 |
| Minimum Aperture | f/22 |
| Lens Mount | FUJIFILM X |
| Format Compatibility | APS-C |
| Angle of View | 76.5° to 12° |