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[Solved] Canon R50 Cyber Monday Deals 2025?

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Is anyone else eyeing the Canon R50 for Cyber Monday 2025? I’ve been holding off on upgrading from my older DSLR and the R50 seems like a perfect entry-level mirrorless for both photo and video.

Right now I’m mainly shooting travel and some casual YouTube content, so the R50’s compact size and 4K video are really appealing. I’m hoping Cyber Monday will bring some solid discounts or at least good bundle deals (extra battery, kit lens, maybe an SD card or small mic?). I’m also wondering if retailers usually discount the R50 body-only more, or if the best value tends to be the RF-S 18–45mm kit.

Thanks.


11 Answers
7

Cyber Monday deal is already live:


5

You can set price drop alert at WhenPriceDrop. They will alert you when price drops.

https://www.whenpricedrop.com/product/B0F2523BMZ/

https://www.whenpricedrop.com/product/B0F258T13X/


3

Honestly, I have been seeing a lot of folks in the community talk about stacking deals rather than just looking for one big price drop. One thing that basically never gets mentioned is using education or student discounts if you can - sometimes you can get an extra 10 percent off even on top of the standard holiday sales. Also, from what I have seen on the forums, most people end up ditching the kit lens pretty fast for travel and YouTube. If you can find a good price on the body-only, picking up the Canon RF 16mm f/2.8 STM is a HUGE upgrade for vlogging because it is wider and better in low light, I think. It makes a world of difference for that handheld travel look. TL;DR

  • Check for cashback through sites like Rakuten and consider these community-favored alternatives to save money:
  • Canon RF 16mm f/2.8 STM instead of the kit lens
  • SmallRig Cage for Canon EOS R50 for better mounting options
  • Stacking student discounts for an extra 10 percent off Pretty sure that is the smartest way to stretch your budget right now without getting stuck with gear you will just want to replace in a few months!


2

> Honestly, I have been seeing a lot of folks in the community talk about stacking deals rather than just looking for one big price drop. Coming back to this an hour later... honestly its getting ridiculous how much work we have to do just to get a fair price these days. Regarding what #9 said about stacking deals, it drives me crazy that you have to jump through ten hoops, find student IDs, and time things to the exact second just to avoid getting ripped off. Companies keep jacking up prices while the build quality feels more like a toy every year. Its such a scam how they raise the original price in October just to discount it back to normal for Cyber Monday. You really gotta be careful because these big retailers know exactly how to manipulate us with the hype. I am always suspicious of anything that looks too good to be true because half the time its just old stock or some weird bundle with trash accessories that nobody wants anyway. Its frustrating that we even have to have these long threads just to find a decent entry point into the hobby without blowing a mortgage payment. The whole thing is exhausting tbh. It feels like the industry is just trying to squeeze us for every penny while quality goes downhill.


1

Re: "> Honestly, I have been seeing a lot..." - totally agree, it's a massive chore trying to track everything these days. Caught up with the thread today and it looks like everyone has covered the price drops and safety stuff pretty well. Basically, you are looking for that $100 discount or a lucky refurbished score. Since you are moving from a DSLR, dont forget these quick tips:

  • Grab the Canon Mount Adapter EF-EOS R so your old glass doesnt go to waste.
  • Stick to the big name shops for the warranty peace of mind.
  • If you find the body-only for a steal, grab a Canon RF 50mm f1.8 STM for better low light than the kit lens. Honestly, the R50 is a beast for travel. Just make sure you get a fast card like the Lexar Professional 1667x 128GB SDXC UHS-II so you arent waiting on the buffer while shooting 4K. It really makes a difference for video work. Good luck with the hunt!


0

Hey,

I’m in a pretty similar use case (travel + YouTube), and I’ve been watching Canon deals every Black Friday/Cyber Monday for years now. I picked up the R50 earlier this year after shooting DSLRs for a long time (came from a 70D), so I’ll share what I’ve actually seen + what I’d do in your shoes.

**1. What deals you can realistically expect**
Based on the last few years of Canon entry-level mirrorless deals (M50 II, R10, R50):
- **Body-only** usually drops by about **$100-ish** at the big stores.
- **Kit (R50 + RF-S 18–45)** tends to get the better *effective* value – not always a massive price cut, but you often get:
- extra battery
- cheap bag
- memory card
- sometimes a small on-camera mic or cleaning kit

So in your **$700–$900 range**, I’d expect something like:
- **$699–$749** for the kit with some extras, or
- **Body-only** around **$550–$600**, then you add a lens separately.

**2. Where I’d actually buy (from painful experience)**
I’d suggest you stick to: **B&H, Adorama, Best Buy, Amazon sold-by-Amazon only**.
I got burned once by an Amazon third-party seller years ago (grey market body, no US warranty, weird packaging) and it was a headache. Now I’m super strict: if it’s not an **authorized Canon dealer**, I just skip it, even if it’s $50 cheaper.

**3. Kit vs body-only – what’s actually worth it for travel/YouTube**
I own the **R50 + 18–45 kit** and, honestly, for travel it’s been better than I expected. It’s not a crazy sharp pro lens, but:
- it’s **tiny**, super easy to throw in a sling bag
- perfect for vlogging at arm’s length in 4K
- fine for casual travel stills (especially if you’re posting online, not printing huge)

If you’re just getting started in RF and coming from DSLR, I’d say **you might want to consider the kit first**, unless you already have a specific RF lens in mind. Buying body-only and then a better zoom or prime can blow your budget fast.

**4. How I personally “time” the deal**
What I usually do (and did with the R50):
1. **Check current price now** and write it down (body-only + kit).
2. A week before Black Friday, I compare again – Canon often starts “holiday” pricing early.
3. Cyber Monday is often just a repeat of the Black Friday price, maybe with a slightly different bundle (e.g., different SD card or bag), not a huge new drop.

If you see:
- **R50 kit at ~$699–$749 with extra battery and a decent 64–128GB SD**, that’s usually a genuinely good deal, not just hype.
- Anything that looks like a “too good to be true” mega bundle on a random site ("12-piece pro kit!!") – be careful. It’s often junk accessories + grey market body.

**My recommendation for you**
Given your budget and needs, I’d suggest:
- Aim for an **R50 + 18–45 kit bundle** in the **$700–$750** range from B&H / Adorama / Best Buy / Amazon (sold by Amazon).
- Prioritize a deal that includes at least **one extra genuine Canon battery** (3rd-party can be flaky) and a **UHS-I V30 SD card**.
- If you don’t see anything significantly better than that, it’s still a solid buy at that price. Don’t over-wait and miss it like last year – prices usually bounce back in December.

FWIW, the R50’s been fantastic for light travel and casual YouTube for me. AF is miles better than my old DSLR, and 4K looks great as long as you’re mindful of light.

Hope this helps! Feel free to ask if you want a more detailed R50 user rundown for travel/YouTube specifically.


0

Hey, nice, the R50 is a really solid camera for what you’re doing!

I’ll kind of break it down as **Option A vs B vs C** based on what I’ve seen the last couple years.

### Option A – Body-only R50
**Pros:**
- Best if you *already* plan to buy a better lens soon (like the RF-S 18–150 or even a fast prime).
- Sometimes dips a bit lower in pure price (like $50–$100 off vs MSRP) during Canon/retailer promos.

**Cons:**
- For travel/YouTube, you’ll immediately need at least one lens, so body-only can *look* cheaper but end up costing more once you add glass.
- Cyber Monday body-only deals aren’t usually the “wow” ones, more like small rebates.

### Option B – 18–45mm Kit (most common bundles)
**Pros:**
- This is where the **best value bundles** usually show up: camera + 18–45 + extra battery + cheap bag + SD card.
- The 18–45 is not amazing, but it’s light, good for vlogging at 18mm, and totally fine for travel.
- Historically, this is what gets the biggest effective discount (bundle value), not the body-only.

**Cons:**
- The kit lens is kind of slow (f/4.5–6.3), so low light and background blur are just ok.

### Option C – 18–45 + 55–210 or 18–150 Bundles
**Pros:**
- Sometimes the **step-up kits** barely cost more than the base kit on big sale days.
- For travel, 18–150 is fantastic: you can leave everything else at home.

**Cons:**
- Easy to creep past your $900 budget if you’re not careful.

---

**What I’d watch for with your $700–$900 budget:**
- **“Real deal” zone (guessing based on past years):**
- R50 + 18–45 kit around **$650–$750** *with* at least:
- 2nd battery (Canon or reputable third-party)
- 64–128GB V30 SD card
- Or R50 + 18–45 + 55–210/18–150 around **$850–$900** all-in.

**Best places technically:**
- Stick to **Canon USA, B&H, Adorama, Best Buy, Amazon (sold by Amazon/Canon, not random storefronts)**.
- Watch for **“Canon USA Authorized Dealer”** mentioned on the product page. That’s huge for warranty.

**One more technical thing:**
- Make sure any SD card in a bundle is at *least* **UHS-I, V30, U3**. That matters for 4K so it doesn’t choke.

If it were me and I was mostly travel + YouTube, I’d *aim* for Option B: **R50 + 18–45 kit**, and use leftover budget for:
- Extra battery
- Decent SD card
- Simple on-camera mic (like a small shotgun)

That setup will already be amazing for your use case without going overboard. Hope this helps! 👍


0

Honestly, with $700–$900 I’d watch for: R50 + 18–45mm kit around $650–$700, or ~$750–$800 with extras (battery, card, bag) from Canon direct, B&H, or Best Buy only—skip random Amazon sellers, compare last year’s Black Friday prices, and if it drops below those, that’s a real deal, not hype.


0

Hey, I totally get being wary of sketchy sellers – camera gear isn’t cheap and it’s way too easy to get burned.

Since others already covered prices and value, I’d look at this from a **safety + reliability** angle. Kinda like:

### Option A – Big, trusted retailers (B&H, Adorama, Best Buy, Canon direct, Amazon *sold by Amazon*)
**Pros:**
- Genuine Canon USA warranty (huge if something fails in the first year)
- Proper return policies and no drama with refunds
- Batteries, chargers, SD cards, etc are almost always legit (no knockoffs that overheat or die randomly)
- Better packaging and shipping; less risk of a dropped/previously opened body
**Cons:**
- Deals might look “less crazy” vs random Amazon marketplace sellers

Honestly, this is where I’d stay for a new R50, especially for video.

### Option B – Authorized but smaller or lesser-known online shops
**Pros:**
- Sometimes match big-store prices or throw in small bundles
- Still can be Canon-authorized (check Canon’s dealer list!)
**Cons:**
- Customer service can be hit-or-miss
- Returns can be slower or more annoying

If you go this route, I’d double-check: US warranty? Sealed box? Clear return policy?

### Option C – Grey-market / sketchy third-party / “too good to be true” Amazon or eBay sellers
**Pros:**
- Looks cheap on paper
**Cons (and this is where I’d be super careful):**
- No Canon USA warranty, sometimes no warranty at all
- Bundled “extras” are often trash: unstable tripods, slow SD cards, unsafe generic batteries
- Risk of counterfeit batteries/chargers (these can legit overheat, swell, or fail mid-trip)
- Some do bait-and-switch: body-only instead of kit, open-box sold as new, etc.

For what you’re doing (travel + YouTube), a safe setup in your budget in 2025 might be:
- **Goal price:** R50 + RF-S 18–45mm kit from Option A sellers around **$650–$750**
- Add **one Canon-branded extra battery** (LP-E17) and a **reputable SD card** (Sandisk / Lexar / ProGrade, V30 or better).

If you see a deal that’s like $50 cheaper but from some random marketplace seller with a massive “45-piece bundle,” I’d skip it, tbh. I’d rather have fewer accessories that are safe and reliable.

Hope this helps! If you post a specific deal you’re considering closer to Cyber Monday, people here can sanity-check it with you.


0

Hey, nice pick — the R50 is a fantastic "do-it-all" body if you like to tinker and DIY your setup a bit.

**1. Your issue (as I see it)**
You don’t just want a cheap R50, you want a *smart* Cyber Monday setup for travel + YouTube, without getting burned by fake deals or sketchy sellers. And you’re cool doing some DIY rather than paying extra for “pro creator kits”. Perfect.

**2. A few DIY-focused ways to play Cyber Monday**

**A) Body or kit, then DIY the rest**
In my opinion, the best move is:
- Watch for **R50 body-only around $500–$550** or **R50 + 18–45mm kit around $650–$700**.
- Skip “creator kits” with generic tripods, meh mics, etc. and build your own kit.

Then DIY your bundle:
- **Extra battery**: get a genuine Canon LP-E17 (often ~$45–$60 on sale).
- **SD card**: look for a **UHS-I V30, 128GB**, ~90–170MB/s read (Sandisk Extreme / Pro, Lexar, Samsung Pro Plus). Cyber Monday usually has crazy SD sales.
- **Mic**: instead of the official kits, grab a budget shotgun like **Deity D4 Mini**, **Rode VideoMicro II**, or similar when they drop to $40–$70.

You basically “build your own creator kit” with better components for the same or less money.

**B) Use price tools like a nerd**
If you’re on desktop, I’d definitely:
- Use **camelcamelcamel** or **Keepa** for Amazon price history on R50 bundles. You’ll see right away if “$899 List – $749 Cyber Monday” is real or fake.
- For B&H / Adorama / Best Buy, I usually track prices 2–3 weeks before and screenshot them, so I know if a bundle is genuinely improved or just re-labeled.

**C) Refurb / open-box as a stealth deal**
If you’re okay with very mild DIY risk-checking:
- **Canon Refurb Store** often does extra % off around Black Friday/Cyber Monday. R50 refurb kits can dip into the **low $600s** and they’re basically like new.
- **Best Buy open-box**: filter for “Excellent – Certified” or similar and inspect the listing. I’ve saved $100+ this way, then just added my own accessories.

**3. What I’d personally do in your shoes**

With $700–$900 and your use case, IMO ideal combo:
- Target: **R50 + 18–45mm kit for ~$650–$700** from Canon / B&H / Adorama / Best Buy.
- Add your own:
- 1x Canon LP-E17 battery (or 2x if you shoot a lot of video)
- 1x 128GB V30 SD card
- 1x small shotgun mic (Deity / Rode mini)
- Cheap but decent mini tripod / grip (Ulanzi, SmallRig often have sales).

That usually lands you in the **$800–$900** range but with *way* better gear than most pre-made bundles.

Watch for:
- Any kit that just throws in a “58-piece accessory set” — usually junk.
- “Too good to be true” low prices from random Amazon marketplace sellers. Stick to **sold by Amazon / B&H / Adorama / Best Buy / Canon**.

If you wanna post any specific bundle links closer to Cyber Monday, people here can sanity-check them so you don’t miss out again. Hope this helps!


0

Hey, funny timing – I went down this exact rabbit hole last year doing a “what’s the smartest buy under ~$1k” spreadsheet for friends who wanted an R50.

Story bit first: I was *sure* the R50 kit would be the no‑brainer… then once I started comparing across brands + long‑term costs, the picture got more interesting.

From a market perspective in your price range:

- **Canon R50** – Very strong for autofocus + color, great for travel/YouTube. Cyber Monday usually means modest **body/kit discounts** but better **bundle value** (battery, card, bag). Canon tends to protect prices more than some rivals.
- **Sony (ZV‑E10 / a6100 if it resurfaces)** – Sony dealers are way more aggressive on discounting. You’ll often see **bigger % off**, and their used/refurb market is huge. Better if you care about long‑term lens ecosystem and maybe going more “serious” later.
- **Fujifilm (X‑S10 / X‑S20 if it dips)** – Sometimes you get surprise promo bundles with a kit zoom + grip. Not usually as cheap as Canon/Sony, but fantastic JPEGs for travel.

Lesson learned for me: if you’re pretty sure you’ll **stick with Canon**, the R50 kit at a decent Cyber Monday bundle price is totally a "it just works" option. But if you think you might expand your system a lot over the next 3–5 years, it’s worth watching Sony deals too – they often undercut Canon on **body price + long‑term lens options**, especially on sales weekends.

So: track R50 kit bundles in the $650–$800 window *and* keep an eye on Sony ZV‑E10 kits. Whichever hits a real discount (not just “free cheap tripod!!”) first is probably your best value.

Hope this helps!


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