– Leica SL3-P is rumored for June 2026 release with a €5,900 price and a 44 MP full-frame sensor, positioned between the SL3-S (24 MP, €5,190) and SL3 (60 MP, €6,990).
– The camera is reportedly based on the Panasonic Lumix S1RII architecture, not on the SL3-S or SL3, with Leica-like menu/RAW adaptations but a premium price.
– Expected tradeoffs: higher resolution and faster autofocus than SL3-S, but worse video performance; operating concept said to resemble Panasonic cameras more than typical Leica bodies.
Rumors swirling since March about Leica’s next big release, the SL3-P, have now found some firmer footing as LeicaRumors reports fresh details. The anticipated launch window points to June 2026, with a suggested retail price hovering around €5,900 and a 44-megapixel full-frame sensor aboard. The revelation frames the camera as a midpoint in the SL3 lineup, straddling performance and price in intriguing ways.
New specs emerge
The leaked specs place the SL3-P squarely between the SL3-S and the SL3. The SL3-S offers 24 MP for €5,190, while the SL3 sports a beefier 60 MP sensor for €6,990. Yet insiders claim the SL3-P isn’t simply a rehash of either model. Instead, it purportedly borrows its core from the Panasonic Lumix S1RII, which debuted in February 2025 and currently sells for around $2,997 in the U.S. market. This mix suggests Leica is pursuing a unique cross-brand approach with this release.
Branding and design choices
Historically, Leica has tweaked menus, controls, and RAW files in DNG format to fit its own ecosystem, even when underlying hardware originates elsewhere—seen in the D-Lux 8’s basis on the Panasonic LX100 II. For the SL3-P, buyers might still encounter Leica’s signature look in UI and processing, but the hardware performance could align closely with its Panasonic counterpart, raising questions about premium pricing for essentially similar image quality.
In terms of target audience, the information from LeicaRumors hints that the SL3-P will edge ahead in resolution and autofocus speed relative to the SL3-S, while potentially sacrificing some video capabilities. This positioning suggests a camera aimed more at stills shooters, with an operating concept that leans toward Panasonic-like ergonomics rather than a pure Leica experience. If accurate, the pricing premium over the S1RII will be a hot topic for early buyers and analysts alike.
Market positioning
The overall strategy appears to be a blend of premium branding and pragmatic hardware sourcing. If the SL3-P uses the Lumix S1RII’s sensor and processing backbone, Leica would be leveraging established tech while charging a higher price due to its name and post-processing pipeline. The expected June 2026 launch supports a staggered rollout that could test consumer appetite for a Leica-branded camera built on another brand’s core tech.






