Nikon SLR Cameras

Is the Nikon D3000 lenses compatible with the D5000?

Jon M
Jon M

I've got a Nikon D3000 and am looking to change up to a Nikon D5000. I've got what I hope is a compatible lens, just wondering what people think.

Lens: Nikon 18-55mm 1:3.5-5.6G VR AF-S DX NIKKOR

I've heard there might be a problem with a focus motor, but I think the AF-S means it should work with the D5000?

Any ideas/suggestions/explanations would be great.

Veato
Veato

Yes. If you buy either of those cameras as a 'kit' they both come with that lens anyway.

thephotographer
thephotographer

Yes, it is fully compatible with the D5000, and any other Nikon DX DSLR for that matter.

The problem with the focus motor only applies to lenses without a built-in motor. You don't have to worry about AFS lenses as they have the autofocus motor needed to autofocus with the entry-level Nikon DSLRs.

Instead of the D5000, you may also want to consider the D3100.It lacks the swivel/tilting screen, but it makes up for that with a newer and improved sensor, and plus the ability to shoot full 1080p movies with autofocus (the D5000 only shoots at 720p and is manual focus only in video mode).

fhotoace
fhotoace

All Nikkor AF-S lenses work on ANY Nikon dSLR camera.

The AF-S lenses you have now will work just fine.

Don't listen to people who talk about focus motor "problems".

Way, way back when the first Nikon entry level cameras were introduced, the reason they could be sold at prices under $1, 000 was because the did not include an auto-focus motor in the camera. This is NOT a big deal since all Nikkor lenses will eventually All be AF-S lenses, that is to say, super fast auto-focus lenses with the motors built into the lenses.

What people were not told is that the Canon system had perhaps a more glaring problem. NONE of the APS-C lenses called EF-S, can be used on any of the full frame Canon bodies. This means if you have a cool Canon system base on a Rebel or other APS-C sensored camera, if you ever do buy a full frame 1D or 5D body, you will have to replace all those EF-S lenses with EF equivalents.

NOTE: Rather than upgrading to a D5000 (unless you need the articulated LCD), buy the new D3100 and enjoy not only more features than your D3000, but Full HD video and auto-focus when in the video mode

Take a look at all the AF-S lenses that are available right now.

http://www.nikonusa.com/...index.page

Except for the manual focus and perspective control lenses, all the remaining AF lenses will be AF-S lenses in the next few years