Verdict
Head-to-head · Best Vlogging Cameras Under $1000

DJI Osmo Pocket 3 vs Sony ZV-E10 II

Which is the better buy? Side-by-side on rating, price, strengths, and watch-outs — with the published ratings we averaged to get there.

The short answer

DJI Osmo Pocket 3 and Sony ZV-E10 II score essentially the same (4.5 vs 4.5). Pick the one whose trade-offs match your priorities — the strengths and watch-outs below are where they actually differ.

DJI Osmo Pocket 3
Ranked #2 in Best Vlogging Cameras Under $1000
DJI Osmo Pocket 3
$489.99as of Jun 7

The DJI Osmo Pocket 3 is the most convenient vlogging camera under $1000 thanks to its built-in 3-axis gimbal, which produces stabilized footage no mirrorless body in this list can match handheld. Its 1-inch sensor shoots sharp 4K/120fps with 10-bit D-Log M, and the rotating screen makes vertical content effortless. The trade-offs are a fixed lens and lingering audio-sync quirks with the wireless mic.

Strengths
  • Built-in 3-axis mechanical gimbal delivers buttery-smooth handheld footage no other camera here can match
  • Large 1-inch CMOS sensor with 4K/120fps and 10-bit D-Log M for strong low-light and grading flexibility
  • Pocketable all-in-one design with a bright 2-inch screen that rotates for instant horizontal-to-vertical switching
Watch-outs
  • Fixed lens with no interchangeable-lens path and a relatively narrow field of view for tight selfie vlogging
  • Reported audio-sync issues between the Pocket 3 and the Mic 2 transmitter that firmware hasn't fully fixed
  • Smaller battery than a full mirrorless body limits long shoots without the extension
Sony ZV-E10 II
Ranked #1 in Best Vlogging Cameras Under $1000
Sony ZV-E10 II
$1,298as of Jun 7

The Sony ZV-E10 II is the best all-round vlogging camera under $1000 for creators who want room to grow. It borrows the 26MP sensor and 759-point autofocus from Sony's far pricier bodies, shoots oversampled 4K/60p in 10-bit, and stays pocketable. The catch is the lack of IBIS, which means handheld walking shots lean on a cropped digital stabilizer rather than true sensor-shift correction.

Strengths
  • Best-in-class autofocus with a 759-point phase-detection system covering 94% of the frame, working down to -3EV
  • Oversampled 4K up to 60p with internal 10-bit recording and S-Log3 for serious color grading
  • Same 26MP BSI APS-C sensor as the pricier a6700 and FX30, so image quality punches above the price
Watch-outs
  • No in-body image stabilization, so handheld walk-and-talk relies on a heavy 1.33x digital crop
  • Rolling shutter is still visible in fast pans despite the faster sensor
  • A $300 price jump over the original ZV-E10 pushes it against cameras that add an EVF

How they stack up

DJI Osmo Pocket 3

The only camera here with a mechanical gimbal, so it beats the IBIS-less Sony ZV-E10 II and Fujifilm X-M5 for handheld walking shots. Its 1-inch sensor is smaller than the APS-C chips in the ZV-E10 II and X-M5, and its fixed lens trades the flexibility of those interchangeable-lens bodies for grab-and-go simplicity.

Sony ZV-E10 II

Pricier than the Fujifilm X-M5 and the gimbal-equipped DJI Osmo Pocket 3, but its autofocus is more reliable for face-tracked vlogging than either. Unlike the X-M5 it has no open-gate 6K mode, and unlike the DJI Osmo Pocket 3 and Canon PowerShot V1 it has no built-in stabilization hardware.

Specs side-by-side

SpecDJI Osmo Pocket 3Sony ZV-E10 II
Sensor1-inch CMOS26MP BSI APS-C CMOS
Video4K up to 120fps, 10-bit D-Log M4K up to 60p (oversampled), 10-bit 4:2:2
Stabilization3-axis mechanical gimbalDigital only (no IBIS)
Display2-inch rotatable touchscreen3.0-inch fully articulating touchscreen
AudioBuilt-in 3-mic array, DJI Mic 2 support
Battery~166 min (1080p/24fps)NP-FZ100, ~610 shots / ~130 min video
Weight179g377g (body)
TrackingActiveTrack 6.0 face/subject tracking
Autofocus759-point phase detection, 94% coverage
MountSony E-mount
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