How Much Is a Used Leica Q2 Worth? (2026 Price Guide)
Live data, refreshed daily. Last updated . Reviewed by Ked, a Leica M shooter (film and digital).
Current Leica Q2 Used Price in 2026
As of June 21, 2026: Used Leica Q2 bodies are listed at a median of $4,013, but they actually change hands around $3,650 — buyers typically pay at or below the bottom of the asking range. The fair range (middle 50% of asking prices) is $3,681–$4,437; rare finishes and special editions push the full span far wider. The cheapest active listing right now is $2,094 (eBay US).
Market pace121 listed now · half are gone within 6 days, a fast-moving used market.
The Leica Q2, released in 2019, refined the original Q with a 47MP CMOS sensor, improved weather sealing, OLED viewfinder, and 4K video. The Summilux 28mm f/1.7 ASPH lens is shared with the Q. The Q2's high resolution and fast lens make digital crops to 35mm/50mm/75mm equivalents practical, effectively giving the camera multiple focal lengths. On the used market the Q2 sits as the best price-to-performance entry into the modern Q line.
Leica Q2 Price by Region
Excludes special editions, collectables, bundles, and call-for-price listings.
| Region | Listings | Low | High | Avg |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| North America | 48 | $2,094 | $7,200 | $4,154 |
| Europe | 40 | $3,234 | $16,999 | $5,151 |
| United Kingdom | 21 | $2,573 | $5,558 | $3,839 |
| Japan | 6 | $3,400 | $6,297 | $4,281 |
| Australia | 3 | $3,786 | $4,312 | $4,026 |
| Hong Kong | 2 | $3,729 | $3,859 | $3,794 |
Leica Q2 Special Editions
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Frequently Asked Questions
What accessories add the most value to a used Leica Q2?
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 Q2 still be serviced?
Usually yes. Leica services its current and recent digital bodies, and the Leica Q2 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 lens and sensor does the Leica Q2 have, and can you change the lens?
The Q2 pairs a fixed 28mm f/1.7 Summilux ASPH lens with a 47.3MP full-frame CMOS sensor and the Maestro II processor. The lens is permanently built in and cannot be swapped, which is the core trade-off of the Q line: you get a stabilized, very sharp prime in a weather-sealed compact body, but you are committed to the 28mm angle of view. Normal close focus is 30cm, and a dedicated macro ring on the barrel drops that to 17cm. It is one of the sharpest fixed lenses Leica has made, and a big part of why resale values stay high.
How do the Q2's built-in 35/50/75mm crop frames work, and what do they cost in resolution?
The 28mm lens never physically zooms; the crop frames simply mask a tighter section of the 47.3MP sensor and show framelines in the viewfinder. At 28mm you get the full 47.3MP, 35mm yields about 30MP, 50mm about 14.7MP, and 75mm drops to roughly 6.6MP. The cropped JPEG is saved at the reduced resolution, but the DNG raw always records the full uncropped 47.3MP frame, so you can re-crop or recover the wider view later. Because the sensor is so high-resolution, the 35mm crop is genuinely usable for prints, while 75mm is better treated as a compositional aid than a true telephoto.
How weatherproof is the Q2, and how good are the autofocus and macro mode?
The Q2 carries an IP52 rating, meaning it resists dust and dripping water when tilted up to 15 degrees, making it one of the few compacts of its era with formal sealing certification. Leica rates the autofocus at about 0.15 seconds, but it is a contrast-detection system with 49 selectable points, so it is quick on static subjects and slower to track motion than modern phase-detect cameras. The macro mode engages by twisting a ring on the lens and focuses as close as 17cm. It is a close-focus mode, not a true macro: at its closest it reproduces a subject at roughly a third of life size (about 1:3), well short of the 1:1 a dedicated macro lens gives. The widest aperture is also restricted in macro, so you cannot shoot it wide open at f/1.7.
What is the Leica Q2 Monochrom, and is it worth the premium over a standard Q2?
The Q2 Monochrom, released in 2020, is a black-and-white-only version that removes the color filter array from the same 47.3MP sensor. Deleting that layer increases light sensitivity and per-pixel sharpness, and it pushes the maximum ISO up to 100,000 versus 50,000 on the color Q2. It shoots only monochrome files with no option to revert to color, so it is a deliberate, single-purpose tool. It commands a premium new and used, and only makes sense if black-and-white is your primary intent; otherwise the standard Q2 produces strong monochrome conversions in post.
Q2 versus the original Q (Typ 116) versus the Q3, which should I buy in 2026?
The 2015 Q (Typ 116) shares the same 28mm f/1.7 lens but has a 24MP sensor, no weather sealing, and the slowest autofocus of the three, so it is the budget entry. The 2019 Q2 adds the 47.3MP sensor, IP52 sealing, a higher-resolution viewfinder, and crop frames, and remains the value sweet spot used. The 2023 Q3 jumps to a 60MP sensor with hybrid phase-detect autofocus, a tilting screen, 8K video, and USB-C, and is the one to buy if you need fast autofocus or a flip screen. For most buyers in 2026, a used Q2 delivers the bulk of the Q experience for well under Q3 money.
What should I check when buying a used Q2?
Because the lens is fixed, you cannot clean the sensor yourself, so inspect sample shots at f/8 against a plain background for dust spots before buying. Confirm the firmware is current, since early units had a bug producing unreadable raw files that Leica later fixed, and test high shutter speeds because some bodies show banding at roughly 1/2500 and faster. Also exercise the macro ring, the aperture and focus rings, and the rear screen and viewfinder for wear. The Q2 has held value unusually well and softened only modestly after the Q3 arrived; we track the live used market daily so you can see current asking prices rather than guess.
