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[Solved] Best Cyber Monday Camera Deals 2025?

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I’m trying to plan ahead for Cyber Monday 2025 and want to make sure I don’t miss out on the best camera deals this year. I’m mainly looking for a mirrorless camera for both travel and some casual video work (YouTube / short-form content), but I’m open to DSLRs or even higher-end compacts if the discount is really good.

Right now I’m eyeing cameras like the Sony A7 IV, Canon R8/R7, and maybe the Fujifilm X-S20, but I’m not sure which brands or models usually get the biggest price drops on Cyber Monday vs just small “bundle” deals. I’ve heard that some of the best discounts are on slightly older models (like previous-gen full-frame bodies or kits with 24–70mm lenses), but I don’t know what’s realistic to expect in 2025.

Budget-wise, I’m hoping to stay around $1,000–$1,500 total, ideally including at least one decent lens and a memory card. I’m also trying to figure out which stores usually have the most reliable deals: Amazon, B&H, Best Buy, Adorama, or manufacturer sites like Sony/Canon directly.

For those who’ve followed camera sales the last few years, what specific brands/models and retailers should I be watching for the best Cyber Monday camera deals in 2025, and what kind of discounts are actually worth waiting for?


15 Answers
10

Basicly, you can find best deals at Amazon, B&H Photo Video, Adorma. Just check links below:


0

Hey, nice that you’re planning this early – I kinda do the same thing every year lol.

So, from my own experience watching Black Friday/Cyber Monday deals the last 3–4 years (and burning way too much time refreshing B&H and Amazon), I’d say a few things:

**1. The biggest real discounts are usually on “one‑gen-old” bodies**
When I bought my current setup, I skipped the newest stuff and went for the slightly older bodies:
- I grabbed a **Sony A7 III kit** *after* the A7 IV came out – the price drop + bundle freebies were way better than anything I saw on the A7 IV itself.
- Same pattern with Canon – the **R6** got better deals once the R6 II dropped.

For your list, in 2025 I’d personally watch for:
- **Sony:** A7 IV if an A7 V exists by then; otherwise look hard at **A7 III / A7C** kits.
- **Canon:** If you like the R8/R7, watch for them but also keep an eye on **R10** or older RP/R** kits for cheaper full frame.
- **Fuji:** X‑S20 discounts will probably be modest; the bigger cuts usually hit X‑S10 / X‑T30 II / X‑T4 kits.

**2. Brands that actually discount well (in my experience)**
- **Sony:** Not crazy on bodies, but really solid on **lens+body bundles** and free accessories.
- **Canon:** Better straight body price drops, especially through **Canon Refurb** (seriously worth watching).
- **Fuji:** More “reasonable” cuts, but their **kit combos** (like X‑S20 + 18–55 f/2.8–4) are often the sweet spot.

**3. Where I’ve had the best luck**
Over the years I’ve bought from:
- **B&H & Adorama:** Best “real” photo deals. I’ve snagged extra batteries, SD cards, and bags thrown in. Cyber Monday is basically Black Friday extended there.
- **Best Buy:** Hit or miss, but I actually grabbed my A7 III there because they price‑matched B&H *and* had 0% financing. Good for in‑store returns too.
- **Amazon:** Great for quick price drops, but the bundles are often kinda random. Good for memory cards and extra batteries more than the camera itself, imo.
- **Manufacturer sites (Sony/Canon/Fuji):** Not always the *lowest* price, but I’ve seen really good **refurb + warranty** deals around Cyber Monday.

**4. What’s actually worth waiting for (for your budget)**
With **$1,000–$1,500** and wanting body + lens + card, based on what I’ve seen:
- **Very realistic:**
- APS‑C like **Canon R7/R10**, **Fuji X‑S10/X‑T30 II**, or **Sony a6700/a6400** + kit lens + decent 128–256GB SD card.
- You’re probably looking at **$1,100–$1,400** all in if you time it right.
- **Possible but tighter:**
- Older full frame like **Sony A7 III**, **Canon RP**, maybe even a discounted **R8 kit** if 2025 is kind.
- Expect something like $1,400–$1,600 *before* card and extras, unless there’s a crazy sale.

**5. For travel + YouTube, what I’d personally prioritize**
From actually using this stuff for casual video and travel:
- **Flip screen** – absolute must for YouTube. (This is why I’d lean Canon R8/R7 or Fuji X‑S20 over older Sony bodies unless you go A7C.)
- **Good kit lens** – the Fuji **18–55 f/2.8–4** is miles better than most cheap kit lenses. With Canon, the **18–150** on APS‑C is super flexible for travel.
- **Autofocus & ease of use** – Sony and Canon both nailed video AF for casual creators. Fuji has improved, but IMO it’s not *quite* as brainless.

If I were you, planning strictly for Cyber Monday 2025 with that budget, I’d **actively stalk**:
- **Canon R7 or R10 kit** at B&H / Adorama / Canon Refurb.
- **Fuji X‑S20 or X‑S10 + 18–55** at B&H (they love Fuji bundles).
- **Sony A7C or a6700 kit** if a new gen appears and pushes prices down.

I’d start making a short list + price tracker now (even just a Google Sheet with current prices) so when Cyber Monday hits, you actually know if a “deal” is real.

What matters more to you between these: full-frame look, smallest possible size for travel, or easiest video workflow? That might help narrow which system to chase when the deals drop.

Hope this helps! Feel free to ping back with what you’re leaning toward and I can tell you what I’d pick in your shoes.


0

Hey, planning this early is actually smart for cameras.

Purely from tracking deals the last few years, I’d watch **slightly older bodies + real % discounts**, not just “free bag + filter” bundles.

If prices follow the usual pattern:
- **Sony** – new hot stuff (A7 IV) usually only gets small gift-card/bundle promos. The better value is often **A7 III kits** or **A7C** bodies dropping into your budget, sometimes around $1,200–$1,400 with a basic zoom.
- **Canon RF** – Canon tends to do **instant rebates** more than huge slashes. I’d expect **R8 / R7 with kit lens** to dip into your range, maybe ~$1,200–$1,400 with card and bag. Older bodies like **RP / R10** can go really cheap.
- **Fujifilm** – they’re one of the few that do **real percentage cuts**. I’d definitely watch **X-S10/X-T30 II kits**; they often undercut the newer X-S20 but are still great for travel + YouTube. X-S20 might get modest body-only rebates.

For video/travel specifically:
- Look for: **flip screen**, **good AF in video**, **no/soft 30‑min limit**, and **no brutal crop in 4K**.
- A7 IV: great AF, but 4K60 is cropped; budget might be tight for body + lens.
- R8: really solid video and AF, but watch for overheating and short battery.
- X-S20: good IBIS + vlog modes, pretty ideal if you find a kit deal.

Retailers (based on what I’ve seen):
- **B&H / Adorama** – most “serious” camera bundles, often with legit extras (fast SD card, extra battery).
- **Best Buy** – good for mainstream brands and open-box steals if you’re quick.
- **Amazon** – ok, but a bit messy; check you’re buying from **authorized dealer** for warranty.
- **Manufacturer sites** – better for **refurbs**. Sony/Canon refurbs can be crazy good value if you’re ok with “like new”.

If it were me with $1,000–$1,500:
- Target a **discounted previous‑gen body + decent zoom**, not the newest flagship.
- Example realistic combos (based on past years):
- Sony A7 III + 28–70mm kit around $1,200–$1,400 on sale.
- Canon R8 + RF 24–50mm kit in the same ballpark.
- Fuji X-S10/X-S20 + 18–55mm (great lens) sometimes sneaks under $1,500.

What I’d actually do now: make a shortlist of **2 bodies + 1 lens each**, then track their prices from now through fall. If you see **$300+ off or ~20% real discount** on a kit from an authorized dealer, that’s usually worth jumping on.

Hope this helps! If you narrow to 1–2 systems, people can probably suggest specific lenses that give you the best bang for Cyber Monday deals.


0

Hey, love that you’re planning this out early.

Since others covered *what* to buy, I’ll be the boring safety guy and talk about *how* to buy it safely, because Cyber Monday can get sketchy fast.

In my experience (15+ years of chasing camera deals), the big thing is: stick to **authorized dealers only** for anything Sony/Canon/Fuji. So: B&H, Adorama, Best Buy, Amazon **sold by Amazon** (not random marketplace sellers), and the official brand stores. If you see an A7 IV for way below normal at some unknown site, it’s often:

- **Grey market** (no US warranty, manufacturer won’t touch it)
- Missing items (battery/charger swapped, “open box” passed off as new)
- Or a bait-and-switch / upsell call: “oh that price is body only without the ‘US battery’…”

For Cyber Monday 2025 specifically, I’d:

1. **Check warranty status** in the listing. If it doesn’t clearly say US/official warranty, skip.
2. **Avoid marketplace randos** on Amazon/eBay, even if the price looks insane. I’ve seen fake SD cards and knockoff batteries a lot.
3. **Buy memory cards & batteries from trusted brands + dealers** (SanDisk, Samsung, Sony, ProGrade, etc.). Counterfeit cards are super common on sale events and can corrupt footage. For YouTube/video work, that’s brutal.
4. **Use a credit card with purchase protection + extended warranty**. Saved me once when a “deal” lens had decentering and the seller got weird about returns.
5. **Screenshot the deal page** (price, model, included items) before checkout. Helps if there’s any dispute later.

On the “what’s worth waiting for” side, I’d say: a legit $200–$400 drop on a body like the A7 IV / R8 plus an **official** lens + card from B&H/Adorama is way better than some sketchy no-name store that’s $150 cheaper.

TL;DR from the safety-first angle: watch B&H / Adorama / Best Buy / Amazon (sold by Amazon) and manufacturer sites, ignore too-good-to-be-true fly-by-night shops, and don’t skimp on cards/batteries. Your footage (and sanity) is worth more than saving an extra 50 bucks.

Hope that helps! Happy to sanity-check any deals you’re considering when we get closer.


0

I’d DIY this instead of waiting on some “professional buying guide” or store rep – make your own deals list now. I’d track prices weekly, set CamelCamelCamel alerts on Amazon, wishlist stuff on B&H/Adorama, and test similar bodies in‑store so you know *exactly* what’s “good enough” for you. That way, on Cyber Monday you’re not relying on what salespeople push; you just compare your tracked baseline price vs. the sale and only jump when it’s a real drop (like $300+ off or a legit lens kit), not just a “free bag + card” bundle.


0

If you’re trying to stretch $1–1.5k, I’d watch for: previous‑gen bodies (A7 III / X-S10 / Canon RP) in legit kits from B&H/Adorama (body + basic zoom + card) hitting ~25–35% off vs MSRP. Those usually beat “new hot model + free bag” every time.


0

Hey, since others covered specific models, I’ll zoom out a bit and look at it from a market/brand angle.

If you look at the last 3–4 years of BF/CM deals:

**Sony** – Full‑frame bodies (A7 III/IV, A7C) don’t usually get *huge* price cuts, more like $200 off + a basic lens or card. Sony glass is expensive long‑term, so even if the body deal looks good, total system cost creeps up. Good if you want the ecosystem and can afford future lenses.

**Canon RF (R8/R7)** – Canon tends to do aggressive *kit* discounts on newer midrange bodies. R8/R7 with the 24–50 or 18–150 often gets solid bundle pricing on B&H/Adorama/Best Buy, more than Sony equivalent kits. Long‑term, RF is still kinda pricey but improving.

**Fujifilm (X‑S20 and older X‑S10/X‑T series)** – Fuji is where the percentage discounts are usually best. Bodies and lenses both see legit cuts, especially previous‑gen. Much cheaper to build out a small kit over time. For your $1–1.5k budget, Fuji gives the most “complete setup” (body + lens + card) on sale.

**Retailer pattern (from tracking deal threads):**
- **B&H / Adorama**: best for real kits and transparent discounts.
- **Best Buy / Amazon**: good for headline prices, but lots of fluff bundles.
- **Manufacturer stores**: better for refurbished than for raw discounts.

If I were planning purely from a value/market standpoint for 2025:
- Watch: **Fuji X‑S20/X‑S10 kits** and **Canon R7/R8 kits** at B&H/Adorama.
- Expect: around **15–25% effective savings** vs regular street price to be “worth waiting for.” Anything under ~10% is just noise unless it’s a lens you already wanted.

So IMO: if you care about long‑term cost and flexibility, Fuji > Canon > Sony for your budget, assuming similar Cyber Monday discounts.

Hope this helps!


0

Hey, one angle I haven’t seen dug into yet is **warranty + insurance** around those Cyber Monday deals. Super unsexy, but it’s saved me more money than "$300 off" promos tbh.

**Option A: Big retailers (B&H / Adorama / Best Buy)**
Pros: you almost always get the **full US manufacturer warranty**, easy proof of purchase, and access to legit **extended warranty / damage plans** (SquareTrade, CPS, etc.). Returns are usually painless if there’s an issue out of the box.
Cons: discounts can be a bit smaller vs random Amazon sellers.

**Option B: Amazon (sold by Amazon vs marketplace)**
Pros: if it says **“Ships from and sold by Amazon.com”**, you’re typically good for warranty + Amazon’s return policy (which is great around the holidays).
Cons: some marketplace sellers are **grey market** – cheaper, but the US warranty may not apply at all, or repairs will be on you. Double‑check “Warranty” section and where it’s imported from.

**Option C: Manufacturer sites (Sony / Canon / Fuji direct)**
Pros: usually the **cleanest warranty situation**, and sometimes they bundle **discounted protection plans** or student/loyalty deals. Also easier if you ever need proof for repairs or recalls.
Cons: not always the rock‑bottom price, and fewer freebies (cards, bags, etc.).

For something like an A7 IV / R8 / X‑S20 that you’ll travel and shoot video with, I’d personally:

- Prioritize **US warranty + accidental damage coverage** over saving an extra $80. One trip, one drop… ask me how I know 😅
- Buy from **B&H / Adorama / Best Buy / Amazon (Amazon-sold)** or direct from the brand.
- Check if the deal includes a **manufacturer refurb** – those can be awesome: lower price, but still have a real warranty.

In your $1–1.5k budget, I’d rather get a slightly older body with **good coverage** than chase the newest body from a sketchy seller. Cyber Monday is peak time for “too good to be true” grey‑market kits.

So while you’re tracking prices, also note:
- Who’s selling it
- Exact **warranty length** (1 year vs 90 days refurb vs none)
- Whether you can add a **drop/spill** plan for cheap

That combo has honestly mattered more for me long‑term than whether I saved another 5–10% on the day.

Hope this helps!


0

From long‑term ownership: Option A (Sony FF like A7 IV/A7 III) vs Option B (Canon R7/R8) vs Option C (Fuji X‑S20). Sony wins on lens ecosystem and resale, Canon’s AF/color is great but RF lens prices hurt later, Fuji’s the most fun to shoot but less future‑proof for video. For Cyber Monday, I’d target a discounted Sony body + cheap 28‑70/28‑60 kit first – it ages best, holds value, and you can upgrade glass slowly without getting trapped by expensive mounts.


0

Hey, one angle I haven’t seen mentioned yet: where you live and the climate actually matter a *lot* for what’s a “good” Cyber Monday deal.

If you’re in a hot/humid place (SE US, tropical, etc.), I’d prioritize:
- **Weather‑sealing and build** over tiny savings. Sony A7 IV and Canon R7 are better here than R8. Fuji X‑S20 is decent but not a tank.
- **Overheating behavior** for video in warm rooms / outdoors. Sony and Canon both *say* they’re fine, but in real heat, newer bodies handle it better than older discounted ones. I’d be cautious with super-old 4K bodies even if the price looks amazing.

If you’re in cold/rainy/snowy regions:
- Black Friday/Cyber Monday is right when **winter hits**, so check deals on **bodies + WR lenses** (Fuji’s weather‑resistant zooms, Sony 24–105 f/4, Canon RF-S 18–150 for light travel). B&H and Adorama usually have better WR kits than Amazon, in my experience.
- Look for deals that include **extra batteries** – cold kills battery life fast. A “small” bundle bonus can be worth more than an extra $50 off.

So IMO, don’t just chase the lowest price. For your $1–1.5k, pick the system that actually survives your local weather, then wait for Cyber Monday deals from B&H/Adorama (US) or your equivalent regional pro retailer. A slightly smaller discount on a weather‑sealed, non‑overheaty body is way more “worth it” than a screaming deal on a fair‑weather camera.

Hope this helps!


0

Hey,

Since everyone’s covered prices and specs, I’ll be the grumpy service/maintenance guy for a sec – because Cyber Monday “deals” can bite you later if you don’t think about support.

**1. Prioritize brands with solid service networks where *you* live.**
Tip: Before you pick Sony/Canon/Fuji, check:
- Official service centers in your country (not just “authorized resellers”).
- Turnaround times & flat-rate repair costs on their sites.
I’ve unfortunately had Sony bodies sit in service for 6–8 weeks, while Canon RF gear came back in ~2–3.

**2. For your budget, factor in: cleaning + potential repair.**
Tip: Keep ~$100–150 aside for sensor cleanings and a basic out‑of‑warranty repair down the line.
Why: Mirrorless sensors are right there at the mount. For travel + YouTube, you’ll be swapping lenses, so you *will* get dust.

**3. Warranty matters more than a tiny discount.**
Tip: If it’s a choice between:
- Amazon “sold by third-party” with a slightly better price vs
- B&H / Adorama / Best Buy / manufacturer store with clean warranty,
I’d absolutely go with the latter. I’ve had issues with grey-ish imports where the brand just refused service.

**4. Check extended coverage *before* Cyber Monday.**
Tip: Look up manufacturer extended warranties (e.g., Sony Pro Support, Canon CarePAK, Fuji extended) and retailer plans.
Some BF/CM promos quietly bundle extra year(s) of warranty or free clean & check – that’s way more valuable long term than a free bag.

**5. Lens reliability > body hype.**
Tip: If you’re torn between a new hot body vs a slightly older body + higher-quality lens, I’d lean to the better lens. Zooms with weak build (loose barrels, sticky zoom rings) are what usually fail first in travel use.

**Concrete watchlist for you, service-wise:**
- **Retailers:** B&H / Adorama / Best Buy (US) – they’ve been the least painful for returns/DOA units in my experience.
- **Brands:** Canon and Fuji have been more consistent for me on turnaround; Sony is amazing tech-wise but service has been hit-or-miss time-wise.

So, when you’re comparing Cyber Monday deals, I’d evaluate them like this:
> *Discount % + lens quality + warranty length + who handles repairs*
Instead of just: *“body spec vs price.”*

That’s the stuff that matters 18 months after the sale, when something actually breaks.

Hope this helps! If you narrow it down to 2–3 kits, I can tell you which ones I’d trust most from a service/maintenance angle.


0

Hey,

So quick different angle here. A couple years ago I “won” a killer Black Friday deal on a new mirrorless kit… then did the math on the environmental side and kinda regretted it. Not because the camera was bad, but because I’d basically upgraded for a tiny bump in performance and a big bump in e‑waste / shipping footprint.

That got me looking at deals a bit differently, especially for camera gear.

**Here’s how I’d approach Cyber Monday 2025 if you care even a little about the environmental side *and* your wallet:**

1. **Favor systems that’ll last you 5–10 years**
From what you listed:
- **Sony A7 line**: great long-term ecosystem, tons of used lenses, so you’re less likely to churn gear every 2 years. That’s eco‑friendly *and* budget‑friendly.
- **Canon RF / Fuji X**: also solid, but RF lenses are kinda pricey, so you might be tempted to “trade up” more often.

2. **Look hard at refurbished instead of brand‑new “deals”**
Honestly, manufacturer refurbs on Cyber Monday (Sony/Canon direct, B&H “open box” etc.) can be the sweet spot:
- Lower environmental impact vs new production.
- Often better price than flashy “new + free bag” bundles.
- Full warranty in a lot of cases.
You might want to consider: **refurb A7 IV body + used/refurb 24–70 f/4** instead of chasing a brand‑new kit.

3. **Use the used market as your ‘deal’**
If you’re okay with it, keep an eye on:
- **MPB, KEH, B&H Used, Adorama Used**.
Around Cyber Monday, loads of people offload old gear to fund upgrades. Prices dip without extra packaging, shipping from China, etc. You’ll often get a better lens/body combo for your $1–1.5k than a new kit.

4. **Compare “total footprint” of your setup, not just the price**
A single full‑frame body + 1–2 versatile lenses (like a 24–70 and maybe a small prime) is usually better than bouncing through 3 cheap kits over 5 years. Less stuff, less shipping, less battery/charger clutter.

5. **Practical game plan for 2025 (with your budget)**
If I were you and wanted to stay eco‑-ish and cost‑effective, I’d:
- Shortlist: **Sony A7 IV, A7 III, Fuji X‑S20, Canon R8**.
- Watch **refurb sections** and **used listings** at B&H/Adorama/MPB from November 1 onward.
- Prioritize a solid lens + extra battery over random freebies. Those are what actually keep you from upgrading again soon.

Lesson I learned the hard way: the greenest (and cheapest long-term) Cyber Monday “deal” is usually the camera you’ll *keep* for years, bought either used or refurb, on a mature system with lots of lens options. Be careful with flashy bundle deals that push you into yet another upgrade cycle.

Hope this helps! Happy to bounce ideas around if you narrow it down to 2–3 specific kits closer to November.


0

Hey, so quick story from last Cyber Monday:

I went in thinking “I’ll grab whatever has the biggest discount,” and almost pulled the trigger on a crazy-cheap DSLR kit. Looked great on paper. But when I dug into the specs, the AF system was ancient, rolling shutter was bad, and 4K had a brutal crop. For what I actually *do* (travel + YouTube), it would’ve been a performance downgrade vs my older mirrorless. I bailed, waited a week, and caught a less-flashy deal on a body that actually performed the way I needed. 0 regrets.

So from a performance-focused angle, here’s what I’d watch for in 2025, beyond just price:

1. **Autofocus system (video + stills)**
For travel + casual video, you really want:
- **Sony A7 IV**: Real-time tracking, good eye AF, very reliable for walk-and-talks.
- **Canon R8/R7**: Dual Pixel CMOS AF II is excellent; subject detection for people/animals is seriously good.
- **Fuji X-S20**: Big step up over older Fujis, but still not quite Sony/Canon level for fast action.

On Cyber Monday, be careful with “older full-frame deals” like A7 II / Canon RP / early R bodies. They’re fine for stills, but AF for video and face tracking is where you *feel* the age.

2. **Video readout / rolling shutter**
For YouTube / shorts, you might want to prioritize:
- A7 IV and R7: decent 4K oversampling, but rolling shutter is there if you whip-pan.
- R8: great image, very good oversampled 4K, but watch thermals on long takes.
- X-S20: solid 4K and good codecs; very nice if you care about Fuji color.

I’d suggest searching “rolling shutter test [model]” and “overheating test [model]” before you buy, even if the deal looks amazing.

3. **Lens that actually matches performance**
A lot of Cyber Monday kits throw in a slow kit zoom which kills low-light and bokeh. From a performance POV, I’d *rather* see:
- Sony: A7 IV + **28–70** or even just body + a discounted **28–75 f/2.8** (Tamron often gets nice sales).
- Canon R: R8/R7 + **RF 24–105 f/4–7.1** is ok, but if you spot deals on **RF 24–70/28–70 f/2.8** or a cheap **RF 35 f/1.8**, that’s a real upgrade.
- Fuji: X-S20 + **18–55 f/2.8–4** or **16–80 f/4**, not the 15–45.

4. **Where performance-centric deals usually show up**
From what I’ve seen the last few years:
- **B&H / Adorama**: Best for serious photo/video bundles (fast UHS-II cards, extra batteries, real lenses). Less fluff, more stuff a performance user actually needs.
- **Manufacturer stores**: Sometimes do trade-in or extra warranty, which is nice if you’re gonna push the camera hard (travel, daily shooting).
- **Amazon / Best Buy**: Good, but lots of “cheap-but-bad” kits. Make sure you’re not getting a no-name tripod and a bag instead of a decent lens.

**What’s actually worth waiting for?**
In your budget ($1–1.5k all-in), *performance-wise* I’d personally wait for one of these type of deals:

- **Sony**: A7 IV body around ~$1,8–1,9k with a usable lens/SD card is a stretch, but *if* there’s a refurb/open-box + discount stack, jump on it. More realistic: A7 III kit around $1,2–1,4k — still strong performance if you accept older AF/video.
- **Canon**: R8 with kit lens dropping into the ~$1,3–1,4k range with card/battery included. R7 kit under $1,5k with the 18–150mm would be a fantastic travel setup.
- **Fuji**: X-S20 + 18–55 in that ~1,3k window is a killer hybrid package.

Lesson learned from my own screw-up almost buying the wrong deal: don’t chase the deepest discount, chase the **best performance-per-dollar for what you shoot**. Make a tiny checklist now (AF, 4K quality, rolling shutter, lens speed) and only pull the trigger on Cyber Monday if a deal actually ticks those boxes.

Hope this helps! Feel free to throw in your short-list later this year and people can sanity-check specific bundles.


0

If you’re thinking long‑term, I’d actually pick based on **resale value** more than the raw Cyber Monday discount: Sony full‑frame (A7 line) historically holds value best, Canon RF is decent, Fuji depreciates faster, and DSLRs tank hardest.


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