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Adapter compatibility · CanonLeica / Panasonic / Sigma

Canon RF to L-Mount adapter compatibility

Mounting a Canon RF lens on a L-Mount body — the feasibility verdict, AF / IS / aperture-control / infinity-focus outcome, image-circle relationship, official and reputable third-party adapter SKUs, and the caveats worth knowing before you buy.

Verdict at a glance

Speed booster
MFIS lens-onlyAp. wheel

Mount specs

Lens side

Canon RF

Flange distance
20 mm
Protocol
Canon RF
Type
mirrorless

Body side

L-Mount

Flange distance
20 mm
Protocol
L-Mount
Type
mirrorless

Flange-distance gap: only 0.00 mm (20 mm − 20 mm) — thinner than a rigid mechanical adapter can be built to reliably reach infinity focus. The verdict above recommends a focal reducer (Speed Booster) instead of a plain spacer.

Flange-distance schematic. Two rails share a sensor plane on the right. The L-Mount body register measures 20 millimetres; the Canon RF lens needs 20 millimetres. The orange region between their left edges is the 0.00 millimetre gap an adapter spans.Sensor planeL-Mount body · 20 mmCanon RF lens · 20 mmflush · 0.00 mm
Both distances right-aligned to the sensor. The gap is only 0.00 mm — thinner than a rigid adapter reliably builds to, so the verdict calls for a focal reducer instead of a plain spacer.

Adapter examples

  • Speed Booster / focal-reducer family

Caveats

  • Flange clearance is only 0.0 mm — a plain mechanical adapter cannot reach infinity focus; a focal reducer (Speed Booster) with optical glass is required.
  • Speed Boosters typically widen the effective focal length (~0.71×) and add ~1 stop of light, which can be desirable on crop bodies.

Common questions

Will Canon RF lenses autofocus on a L-Mount body through an adapter?
No — Canon RF → L-Mount adapters are mechanical only. Focus is fully manual; rely on the L-Mount body's focus peaking and magnify-to-focus aids to nail focus.
Does in-lens image stabilization (IS / VR / OS) still work through a Canon RF → L-Mount adapter?
Lens-side only — the Canon RF lens's IS / VR / OS unit operates, but it cannot synchronise with the L-Mount body's IBIS, so the dual-axis stabilisation native L-Mount lenses enjoy isn't available. Lens-side stabilisation still delivers most of the practical benefit.
What's the most-recommended Canon RF → L-Mount adapter?
No SKU in our curated catalogue covers Canon RF → L-Mount yet. Adapter examples photographers commonly use include the Speed Booster / focal-reducer family. Pair compatibility is mostly mechanical, so any well-built adapter at the correct flange distance should work — pick on build quality and tripod-foot integration.

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