Settings guides · low-light photography · Nikon Z6 II
Best Nikon Z6 II settings for low-light photography
Low light is a balancing act between three levers: open the aperture, slow the shutter as far as you safely can, then raise ISO for the rest. Shoot RAW to recover the most. Here it's tuned to the Nikon Z6 II.
Recommended Nikon Z6 II settings for low-light photography
Tuned for your Nikon Z6 II
- Sensor: full-frame, so focal lengths are as marked and you get the shallowest depth of field and the best high-ISO headroom.
- Clean ISO: modern full-frame bodies like the Nikon Z6 II stay usable up to about ISO 12800 — cap Auto ISO there so your shutter stays fast without over-cooking noise.
- Autofocus: use AF-C with subject/eye detection; it locks on reliably for low-light photography.
- Stabilization: the Nikon Z6 II has in-body stabilization, so you can handhold a few stops slower for static subjects (and turn it off on a tripod).
Set up your Nikon Z6 II for low-light photography
- Back-button focus: set the AF-ON button to AF-ON and switch the shutter to release-only (Custom Setting a) — separating focus from shutter.
- For action: use AF-C with Auto-area or Wide-area AF.
- Eyes & animals: enable subject detection (Auto / Animal) in the AF menu.
- Burst: set the release mode to Continuous High (CH).
Exact menu wording can vary by firmware.
Why these settings
There's simply less light to work with, so you spend your aperture and a safe slow shutter first, and only then accept higher ISO. Underexposing to keep ISO low backfires — lifting a dark file adds more noise than the higher ISO would have.
Common mistakes
- Underexposing to protect ISO, then brightening later and amplifying noise.
- Letting the shutter fall below 1/60s handheld and getting shake.
FAQ
What ISO for low light?
Whatever it takes after you've opened the aperture and reached your slowest safe shutter. A correctly exposed high-ISO shot beats an underexposed low-ISO one.
How do I avoid blur in low light?
Open the aperture and keep the shutter above your handheld floor (around 1/60–1/160s). Add light or stabilization rather than dropping the shutter further.
Does the Nikon Z6 II have good autofocus for low-light photography?
Yes — the Nikon Z6 II has strong continuous autofocus with subject/eye detection, which is exactly what low-light photography needs. Use AF-C and enable eye/animal detection.
Is the Nikon Z6 II good for low-light photography?
Yes. With the settings above and its full-frame sensor and in-body stabilization, the Nikon Z6 II is well suited to low-light photography. Dial the settings in for your exact lens with the coach.