BuyGuide — test it before you buy

How to Test a Used camera (DSLR / mirrorless) Before You Buy (25-Minute Check)

A used camera (DSLR / mirrorless) can be a great deal — or someone else's problem. This is the exact 25-minute test to run before you hand over cash, with the real tools and the red flags that mean walk away.

Bottom lineCheck the shutter count against the camera's rated life, test the sensor for dust and dead/hot pixels with a couple of controlled shots, exercise autofocus and every dial, and inspect the mount and screen. Low shutter count + a clean sensor = a healthy used body.

⏱ About 25 minutes · Targets the search: “how to test a used camera”.

The test kit

Cheap, Prime-fast tools that make this test reliable. (affiliate)

The step-by-step test

  1. 1. Read the shutter count (actuations)

    Every shutter is rated for a finite number of actuations — entry bodies ~100k, pro bodies 300k-500k+. Pull the actual count: many cameras embed it in EXIF (take a JPEG and check it on sites like camerashuttercount.com), Nikon/Pentax expose it directly, and tools exist per brand. A body at 20k on a 150k-rated shutter is barely broken in; one near its rated life is a gamble.

  2. 2. Test the sensor for dust and hot/dead pixels

    Set a small aperture (f/16-f/22), focus to infinity/manual, and shoot a bright, evenly-lit blank surface (sky or a white wall). Open the image and look for dark blobs (sensor dust — usually cleanable) or bright/colored stuck pixels that don't move. Then cap the lens, set a long exposure (e.g. 1-2s) at high ISO, and look for hot pixels (bright specks) — a few is normal, lots is a tired sensor.

  3. 3. Exercise autofocus across the frame

    Test AF in good and low light, using different focus points across the frame and continuous (servo) AF on a moving subject. Hunting, back/front-focus, or dead focus points mean an AF problem (costly on DSLRs, often a calibration on lenses). On mirrorless, test eye/subject-detect AF if the body has it.

  4. 4. Inspect the mount, screen and viewfinder

    Look at the lens mount for excessive wear, scratches, or play when a lens is attached. Check the LCD and EVF for dead pixels, cracks, or dimness. Articulating screens: hinge the screen fully and confirm it's not loose or flickering. Look down the throat at the sensor/mirror for fungus or scratches.

  5. 5. Run every dial, button and the mechanicals

    Cycle every mode dial position, command dials, the shutter button half/full press, the pop-up flash (if any), and the IBIS/stabilization. Fire continuous burst to confirm the buffer and card write. Listen to the shutter — a healthy shutter sounds consistent; a sluggish, double, or grinding sound is a failing shutter mechanism.

  6. 6. Check ports, battery door and weather seals

    Open the battery and card doors (broken door latches are common). Test the USB/HDMI/mic ports and the hot shoe with a flash/trigger. Inspect rubber grips for peeling and the body for impact dents. For weather-sealed bodies, check the seals around the doors aren't perished.

Red flags — walk away if you see these

Passed the test? Find a camera (DSLR / mirrorless) you can trust on the resale market:
See camera body listings on eBay → (affiliate)

FAQ

How do I check a used camera's shutter count?
Many cameras store the count in EXIF — shoot a JPEG and read it on a tool like camerashuttercount.com, or use a brand-specific utility. Compare it to the body's rated actuation life (entry ~100k, pro 300k-500k+).
How do I test a used camera sensor for dust and dead pixels?
Shoot a blank, evenly-lit surface at a small aperture (f/16-f/22) and look for dark blobs (dust) or bright stuck pixels. Then shoot a long exposure with the lens capped to find hot pixels.
Is a high shutter count on a used camera a dealbreaker?
Not by itself — shutters are rated for tens to hundreds of thousands of actuations and can be replaced. But a count near the rated life means the shutter may fail soon, so it's leverage to negotiate or a reason to look elsewhere.

These are practical buyer checks, not a professional appraisal. For high-value items, get an expert opinion before paying.