Is the Canon 550D considered an entry-level DSLR?
Asked 2/11/2012
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I bought a Canon 550D because I was told it was a good camera for beginners. Later, some people said it was beyond entry level and that I could have bought a cheaper beginner model instead. Since it sits well below cameras like the 7D, I’m confused about where it fits in Canon’s lineup. Is the 550D actually an entry-level DSLR, and how is it different from Canon’s cheaper models?
Originally by Photography Stack Exchange contributor. Source · Licensed CC BY-SA 4.0
Photography Stack Exchange contributor
14y ago
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To be only slightly more fair than necessary to the uninformed, there is a level in Canon's line below the "hundreds" series (or the "i" series in North America). The 1100D (the Digital Rebel T3), and the 1000D (XS) before it, are cheaper and have lower specifications. To those whose experience is limited to big-box and department stores, it may seem like there's a big difference between them, but operationally the difference is very slight. They offer pretty much the same modes and user features; the differences are in image resolution and quality, speed and (most noticeably) price. The "thousands" series is not more beginner-oriented; it's just a way for people on a more constrained budget to get a foot in the door. But both the "thousands" series and the "hundreds" series are entry-level cameras.
Nikon's approach to the same problem (people on a very low budget) was to un-discontinue the D3000 after the better, newer D3100 was introduced rather than to produce a new similar but lower-spec body.
Canon's mid-range camera is the two-digit model (currently the 60D). While it is still rather beginner-friendly when the beginner is interested in learning photography, it does have a few extra buttons and dials that people who just want to step up to a "better point-and-shoot" might find intimidating. Those extra controls mean fewer visits to the menu screen to change settings, but there are still beginner-friendly scene settings and so on to help beginners get the pictures they need to get before they've learned how to do it themselves.
Single digits other than 1 indicate advanced-level cameras. Again, there are more controls to use without going through menus, but the hand-holding for beginners stops at this level. Sure, there are still all-automatic settings, but now you have to go digging through the menus to make the camera do all of the work for you, so the positions relative to entry-level and mid-level cameras are reversed.
Canon has always reserved the number 1 for its full-on professional line of cameras. They're expensive, rugged, and in a lot of ways actually simpler than the entry-level bodies for someone who knows what they're doing (or wants to learn how to do everything with minimal assistance from the machine). But they won't out-guess you or try to figure out what you're doing, so using them effectively means a lot more than charging up the battery and installing a memory card if you've never used an SLR before.
Originally by user2719. Source · Licensed CC BY-SA 4.0
user2719
14y ago
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Generated from our catalog & community — verify before relying on it.
Yes — within Canon’s DSLR lineup, the 550D is generally considered an entry-level DSLR. Canon’s mid-range models are the 50D/60D class, while cameras like the 7D sit higher still.
The confusion comes from Canon also having an even cheaper tier below the 550D: the four-digit models such as the 1000D/1100D. Those are more budget-oriented, but they are not really a different category for learning photography. They offer broadly similar shooting modes and beginner-friendly features; the main differences are lower specs, performance, and price.
So the 550D isn’t “not entry-level” — it’s better described as a more capable entry-level DSLR. For many beginners, that can actually be a good thing, because it gives more room to grow before the camera feels limiting. Some people may simply mean that a compact camera would be a simpler or cheaper true-beginner option, but among Canon DSLRs, the 550D is still entry level.
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