How Much Is a Used Leica M11-D Worth? (2026 Price Guide)
Live data, refreshed daily. Last updated . Reviewed by Ked, a Leica M shooter (film and digital).
Current Leica M11-D Used Price in 2026
As of June 21, 2026: The fair range for a used Leica M11-D — where the middle half of listings sit — is $8,525–$9,942, around an asking median of $9,298. Confirmed sale prices are still thin for this model. The fair range (middle 50% of asking prices) is $8,525–$9,942; rare finishes and special editions push the full span far wider. The cheapest active listing right now is $7,762 (MPB EU).
Market pace24 listed now · half are gone within 53 days, a steady-moving used market.
The Leica M11-D, released in 2024, is the current-generation M without an LCD screen, the spiritual successor to the M-D (Typ 262). The back is replaced by physical dials for ISO, exposure compensation, and shutter speed. It uses the same 60MP triple-resolution sensor and electronics as the M11. The M11-D is aimed at photographers who want the latest M sensor with a screen-free shooting workflow. On the used market it is rare and commands prices close to new.
Leica M11-D Price by Region
Excludes special editions, collectables, bundles, and call-for-price listings.
| Region | Listings | Low | High | Avg |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| North America | 11 | $8,500 | $11,400 | $9,673 |
| Europe | 6 | $7,762 | $10,090 | $8,975 |
| Hong Kong | 3 | $8,599 | $9,989 | $9,062 |
| Japan | 2 | $11,223 | $12,085 | $11,654 |
| United Kingdom | 1 | $8,296 | $8,296 | $8,296 |
| ME | 1 | $9,500 | $9,500 | $9,500 |
All Leica M11-D Listings
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Frequently Asked Questions
What accessories add the most value to a used Leica M11-D?
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 M11-D still be serviced?
Usually yes. Leica services its current and recent digital bodies, and the Leica M11-D 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.
Why does the Leica M11-D have no rear screen, and how do you review your photos?
The M11-D deliberately omits the rear LCD to create a film-like workflow that keeps you focused on composition and exposure rather than the back of the camera. You compose through the optical rangefinder, shoot, and review images later by connecting over Wi-Fi to the Leica FOTOS app, which also serves as the camera's menu for white balance, file format, and other settings. There is no in-camera chimping or menu review in the field, so framing and exposure decisions are made at the moment of capture. For photographers who want to slow down that constraint is the appeal; for anyone who relies on checking the histogram or zooming in to confirm focus, it is a real adjustment.
Does removing the screen mean the M11-D gives up image quality compared to the regular M11?
No. The M11-D uses the same 60MP back-illuminated full-frame CMOS sensor as the rest of the M11 family, with triple-resolution capture at 60, 36, or 18 megapixels and a native ISO range of 64 to 50,000. It is built on the M11-P, so it also carries 256GB of internal storage, USB-C, and the same hardware Content Credentials. Image files are identical to what an M11-P produces; the only thing you lose is the rear display, with the ISO dial moving to the back where the screen would be.
What are Content Credentials on the M11-D and do they actually work?
The M11-D includes a dedicated hardware Content Credentials encryption chip built to the open C2PA standard, the same system Leica introduced on the M11-P. When enabled, it cryptographically signs each image with verifiable provenance metadata so the authenticity of the photo can be checked later, which matters for photojournalists and anyone concerned about manipulated or AI-generated images. The M11-D was the second camera, after the M11-P, to ship with this feature. It is an optional function you turn on, not something forced on every frame.
How is the M11-D different from the older screen-less Leica M-D (Typ 262) and M10-D?
All three drop the rear LCD, but they are generations apart. The M-D (Typ 262) from 2016 was the most stripped-down, with a 24MP sensor and essentially no way to change deeper settings, since it predated meaningful app control. The M10-D (2018) kept the 24MP sensor, recorded to an SD card, added a fold-out lever that works only as a thumb rest, and introduced Leica FOTOS pairing. The M11-D is the modern interpretation: the full 60MP M11 sensor, 256GB of internal memory instead of relying on a card, USB-C, a faster electronic shutter, and Content Credentials, with full menu access through the app making it far more practical as an only camera.
Who is the M11-D best suited for, and what are the real trade-offs of no screen?
It suits experienced rangefinder shooters who already trust their exposure and focus and want a deliberate, distraction-free experience, plus collectors drawn to the clean, red-dot-free design. The trade-offs are concrete: no chimping, no in-field histogram or focus-confirmation zoom, and no on-camera menu, so deeper settings and image review depend on the FOTOS app on your phone. The ISO dial lives on the backplate where the screen would be, and exposure compensation is handled by the rear thumb wheel, so the controls you use most stay tactile. If you frequently rely on the rear screen to verify shots, the M11 or M11-P is the more flexible choice.
What should I check when buying a used Leica M11-D?
Confirm the seller can demonstrate that the camera pairs with the Leica FOTOS app, since on a screen-less body the app is your only way to access menus, review images, and update firmware. Check that it is running current M11-family firmware, that USB-C charging and data transfer work, and that the BP-SCL7 battery (shared with the M11) still holds a healthy charge. Inspect the sensor and rangefinder for dust or vertical and horizontal alignment issues, as M rangefinders can drift and a recalibration is a known cost. Because there is no SD slot, verify the 256GB internal memory reads and writes cleanly, and where possible buy from a dealer offering a warranty. We track the live used market daily so you can see what to expect before you commit.
