How Much Is a Used Leica M10 Worth? (2026 Price Guide)
Live data, refreshed daily. Last updated . Reviewed by Ked, a Leica M shooter (film and digital).
Current Leica M10 Used Price in 2026
As of June 28, 2026: Used Leica M10 bodies are listed at a median of $5,048, but they actually change hands around $4,323 — buyers typically pay at or below the bottom of the asking range. The fair range (middle 50% of asking prices) is $4,786–$5,707; rare finishes and special editions push the full span far wider. The cheapest active listing right now is $3,875 (eBay DE).
Market pace60 listed now · half are gone within 13 days, a fast-moving used market.
The Leica M10, introduced in 2017, marked a return to the slim profile of film-era M bodies after the thicker M240. Featuring a 24MP CMOS sensor, ISO dial on top plate, and Maestro II processor, the M10 brought digital M photography closer to the classic experience. It was the first digital M thin enough to use all vintage M lenses without compatibility issues. The M10 remains a popular entry point to digital rangefinder photography on the secondary market.
Leica M10 Price by Region
Excludes special editions, collectables, bundles, and call-for-price listings.
| Region | Listings | Low | High | Avg |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Europe | 26 | $3,875 | $56,905 | $6,934 |
| North America | 17 | $4,200 | $9,200 | $5,752 |
| Japan | 7 | $5,000 | $13,120 | $7,632 |
| Hong Kong | 5 | $4,459 | $4,759 | $4,609 |
| United Kingdom | 4 | $5,023 | $6,591 | $5,596 |
| Australia | 1 | $5,374 | $5,374 | $5,374 |
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Frequently Asked Questions
What accessories add the most value to a used Leica M10?
Condition is the main driver of value; on a modern digital body the accessories that move price are the genuine battery and charger, which are expensive to replace, plus the original box and papers. There is no period-case or matching-number premium the way there is on vintage and collectible Leicas, so condition and shutter count matter far more.
Can a used Leica M10 still be serviced?
Usually yes. Leica services its current and recent digital bodies, and the Leica M10 is new enough that support and parts are readily available. Servicing a digital body means sensor cleaning, firmware updates, and electronic repair, which Leica handles. Because most private and online sales are sold untested, check everything on arrival, especially the sensor, EVF, and card slots.
What are the differences between the Leica M10, M10-P, M10-R, M10-D, and M10 Monochrom?
The original M10, introduced in January 2017, and the M10-P (2018) share the same 24MP full-frame color sensor; the M10-P adds a quieter shutter, a touchscreen, a built-in level gauge, and a discreet engraved top plate in place of the red dot. The M10-R (2020) is the high-resolution version, swapping in a 40MP sensor with about a stop more dynamic range and longer maximum exposures. The M10 Monochrom (2020) uses a dedicated 40MP black-and-white sensor with no color filter array, giving sharper detail and cleaner high-ISO files but recording only in monochrome. The M10-D (2018) is a screen-less variant for a film-like experience, with no rear LCD and review and settings handled through the Leica FOTOS app over Wi-Fi.
Should I buy the 24MP M10 or the 40MP M10-R?
The 24MP sensor in the M10 and M10-P produces excellent files for prints and general shooting. The M10-R's 40MP sensor adds substantially more detail along with roughly a full stop better dynamic range and high-ISO performance, plus much longer maximum exposure times for night and long-exposure work. The trade-off is cost and file size: the M10-R commands a clear premium used and rewards careful technique and good lenses. For most photographers the 24MP M10 or M10-P is plenty; choose the M10-R if you crop heavily, print large, or want the extra latitude. We track live used prices for all of these daily so you can compare what each variant is selling for.
Why is the Leica M10 so much thinner than the M (Typ 240)?
With the M10, Leica reduced the body depth to 33.75mm, about 4mm less than the M (Typ 240) and close to the dimensions of a film M like the M6 or M7. That thinner body is the main reason many shooters describe the M10 as the most film-like digital M to hold and carry. Leica also enlarged the optical viewfinder, giving roughly a 30 percent larger field of view than the M240. If the slim, traditional handling of a film body is what draws you to the M, the M10 generation delivers it more closely than the M240 before it.
Does the Leica M10 have a dedicated ISO dial, and does it shoot video?
Yes, the M10 introduced a mechanical ISO dial on the top plate, replacing the menu approach of the M240 and adding to the camera's stripped-down, film-camera feel. The dial pulls up to set ISO directly. The M10 does not shoot video at all; unlike the M240, video was deliberately dropped to keep the camera focused on still photography. If you need video in an M body you would have to look at the M240 generation instead.
What should I check when buying a used Leica M10, and are there known issues?
Rangefinder calibration is the most important thing to verify, since a knock can throw the patch out of alignment and cause front or back focus that is most visible with fast lenses shot wide open, so test focus accuracy with more than one lens. Inspect the sensor for marks and the rangefinder patch for clarity. The M10 Monochrom and M10-R use the same 40MP sensor generation that a few users have reported showing a faint artifact in very smooth tones, so review files from those two variants carefully if buying unseen. Check the shutter count where available, confirm the battery still holds a reasonable charge, and look for any sign of moisture, since these bodies are not weather-sealed.
Should I save up for the Leica M11 instead of buying an M10?
The M11 is a meaningful step up on paper: a 60MP sensor with selectable 60, 36, and 18MP capture, built-in storage alongside the SD card, a USB-C port, and far better battery life than the M10. It does not, however, add autofocus, stabilization, or video, so the core rangefinder experience is the same. If you want the latest high-resolution sensor, the M11 is worth the wait. If you want the classic M experience at a lower price, a used M10, M10-P, or M10-R remains an excellent buy. In particular the M10-R is thought to be the apex of digital M rangefinder evolution with its higher-resolution 40.8MP sensor. We track live prices for both so you can weigh the real cost difference.
