Update 21\/2\/20: The Fujifilm X-T4’s specs appear to have now leaked in full, so we’ve updated this story with our impressions of those, along with the camera’s design. Read on for the full leaks and rumors, along with our analysis of what this means for X-T3 upgraders or anyone who’s looking to move to Fujifilm’s X-Series. <\/em><\/p>\n The Fujifilm X-T4 will be officially announced on February 26, but there won’t be much left to reveal if the recent rumors and leaks are to be believed – it now looks like we have the mirrorless camera’s full specs, along with a good look at its design. <\/p>\n For those who aren’t familiar with Fujifilm’s X-Series, they’re among our favorite mirrorless all-rounders – and the X-T4 will sit at the top of the family, above the more travel-friendly Fujifilm X-T30<\/a> and entry-level Fujifilm X-T200<\/a>.<\/p>\n The current Fujifilm X-T3<\/a> is only around 18 months old, which means the X-T4 is arriving a little sooner than expected. The new model will also likely have the same sensor as its predecessor, so what new features will it bring? <\/p>\n We’ve rounded up all of the latest leaks and rumors to help you decide whether it’s a camera that’ll be worth upgrading to when it’s announced soon…<\/p>\n Fujifilm has now confirmed that the Fujifilm X-T4 will be announced on February 26, with an official countdown clock<\/a> ticking down to the date.<\/p>\n What we don’t yet know is when the X-T4 will actually be available to buy. The usually reliable Fuji Rumors<\/a> is pretty confident, though, that the Fujifilm X-T4 will be shipping from March, which would seem likely given previous Fujifilm release schedules.<\/p>\n The same site has also claimed that the X-T4 will cost $1,700 (body only). If the recent X100V is anything to go by, this will work out at around £1,599 and AU$2,999 in the UK and Australia respectively.<\/p>\n This is pretty much in the ballpark of what we expected for the X-T4. The X-T3’s launch price was $1,499.95 \/ £1,349 \/ AU$1,999, but it doesn’t have in-body stabilization, a new larger battery, or the other new features below. <\/p>\n It does mean the X-T4 is a touch pricier than its main rival, the Sony A6600, was at launch – that camera arrived in 2019 for $1,400 \/ £1,450 \/ AU$2,399. A host of good-value, full-frame rivals could also provide stiff competition, with cameras like the Nikon Z6 available today for $1,799 \/ £1,499 \/ AU$2,350.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n The X-T4’s biggest new feature is going to be in-body image stabilization (IBIS), a feature that appears to have been confirmed by recent leaks. <\/p>\n The inclusion of IBIS would be a big new inclusion for both stills and video, and the leaked specs suggest the X-T4 has been made a little bigger to incorporate it – we’re expecting it to be 5mm thicker and weigh 68g more than the X-T3. <\/p>\n Still, if you can accept that, then IBIS will improve handheld shooting in both low light and with lenses that don’t have built-in stabilization themselves (on Fujifilm lenses, these are the ones without OIS in their name). <\/p>\n It’s also significant because, so far, only one Fujifilm camera has included IBIS – the Fujifilm X-H1<\/a>. If the IBIS rumors are to be believed, the X-T4 could in some ways be a spiritual successor to the X-H1 as much as the X-T3, given that camera was announced in February 2018, almost exactly two years before the X-T4’s rumored launch date.<\/p>\n Fujifilm X-Series cameras have traditionally lacked IBIS because their main sell has been the ‘big sensor-small body’ combo for stills photographers, and adding stabilization usually means a larger body. <\/p>\n But with video becoming a much greater focus on the X-T line in recent models, and Fujifilm’s engineers apparently working away to make their IBIS system smaller, it certainly seems like a plausible inclusion on the X-T4 that would help differentiate from the smaller, travel-friendly Fujifilm X-T30<\/a>.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n Some apparently leaked images from Fuji Rumors<\/a> and Fuji Addict<\/a> seem to have given us our first glimpse of the Fujifilm X-T4’s front and rear designs – and it looks like most of the early rumors were correct.<\/p>\n They show a fully articulating rear touchscreen like the one on the Panasonic S1H<\/a> – this would be handy for both folding the screen inwards to protect it while traveling, and also shooting video to camera.<\/p>\n Otherwise the X-T4 looks very similar to its predecessor, bar a slightly thicker body to help accommodate that IBIS system. There appears to be a new HDR mode on the left-hand subdial, while the AF Assist lamp appears to have moved up a bit.<\/p>\n\n
Fujifilm X-T4: release date and price<\/h3>\n
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Fujifilm X-T4: will it have in-body image stabilization (IBIS)?<\/h3>\n
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Fujifilm X-T4: design<\/h3>\n
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