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Best Wide-Angle Lenses for Landscape, Astro, and Interiors

The best wide-angle lenses pair sharp corners with bright apertures for landscapes, astrophotography, and tight interiors. Here are our picks across systems and budgets.

Updated Jun 29, 20265 min readResearch backed6 picks
A compact wide-angle prime lens on a clean surface with a landscape reflection

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Top picks

A wide-angle lens takes in more of the scene than your eye frames naturally, which makes it the core tool for landscape photography, astrophotography, real estate interiors, and any shot where you want sweep and a strong foreground. The wider you go, the more a near subject looms and the more the scene stretches behind it, so a wide lens rewards getting close and building depth.

If you are weighing fixed focal lengths against zooms here, our prime vs zoom lenses guide lays out the trade, and understanding depth of field explains why wide lenses keep so much of the frame sharp.

How to choose

Three things matter most for wide glass. Focal length and field of view set how much you take in: 24mm is a natural wide, 16mm to 18mm sweeps dramatically, and below that the perspective stretches hard. Maximum aperture decides astro and low-light use; an f/1.4 or f/1.8 prime gathers the light stars need, while an f/2.8 zoom trades a little speed for flexibility. Corner sharpness and distortion matter more here than with longer lenses, because straight lines near the frame edge show every flaw, which is critical for interiors and architecture.

After that, weigh prime against zoom. A prime is faster and often sharper for the money; a zoom lets you reframe without moving, which is invaluable in tight interiors where you cannot step back.

The picks

The Tamron 17-28mm f/2.8 Di III RXD is the wide zoom most Sony landscape shooters should start with. It is small, light, and sharp across the frame, with a constant f/2.8 that handles dusk and indoor work, all at a price well below the first-party wide zooms. The range is a touch shorter than a 16-35mm, but for the size and value it is hard to beat as a daily wide.

The Viltrox AF 16mm f/1.8 is the astro and night pick. The bright f/1.8 aperture pulls in the light stars need, the 16mm field of view sweeps the Milky Way across the frame, and it does this at a price that undercuts the premium primes badly. It even includes a small screen on the barrel for settings. For a landscape shooter who also wants to shoot the night sky, this one lens covers both.

The Viltrox 13mm f/1.4 goes wider and faster still. The 13mm view is dramatic for interiors, cramped real estate rooms, and expansive night skies, and the f/1.4 aperture is genuinely fast for a lens this wide. It is the pick when you need to take in as much as possible from a fixed spot, or when you want the brightest possible wide prime for astro.

The Sigma 18-50mm f/2.8 DC DN is the crop-sensor standout, and arguably the best value zoom in its class. On an APS-C body it covers a useful wide-to-normal range at a constant f/2.8 in a tiny, light package. For interiors, travel, and walk-around shooting on a crop body, it is the one zoom many shooters never take off. It is not a true ultra-wide, but it is the most versatile lens here for the money.

The Fujifilm XF 23mm f/1.4 R LM WR is the wide prime for Fujifilm shooters. At a 35mm equivalent it is a natural, slightly wide field of view, weather-sealed, fast-focusing, and sharp wide open. It is less an ultra-wide and more a versatile environmental lens for street, travel, and interiors where you want context around your subject without obvious distortion.

The Fujifilm XF 16-55mm f/2.8 R LM WR is the pro standard zoom for the X system, and its wide end covers landscapes and interiors well. The constant f/2.8, weather sealing, and even sharpness make it a do-everything lens for a Fujifilm shooter who wants one weather-sealed zoom for travel and architecture. It is larger than the primes, but the range earns its place.

Common mistakes

The most common one is shooting a wide lens with an empty foreground. Wide angles exaggerate near-far relationships, so a strong close foreground (a rock, a flower, a leading line) is what gives the shot depth; without it the scene looks distant and flat. The second is ignoring corner softness and distortion, which show badly on interiors and any frame with straight edges; stop down a little and check the corners. The third is keeping the horizon dead center; place it on a third instead, and use the exposure triangle to balance a bright sky against a darker foreground. For long-exposure water and clouds, pair a wide lens with a filter from our best ND filters guide.

Prime or zoom for landscapes?

Either works. A zoom like the 17-28mm lets you reframe without moving, which helps when a cliff or a fence fixes your position. A prime like the 16mm f/1.8 is faster and often sharper for the money, which matters most for astrophotography. If you also shoot the night sky, a fast prime earns its place; if you want one flexible daytime lens, a wide zoom is the practical choice.

What makes a lens good for astrophotography?

A bright maximum aperture (f/2.8 or faster, ideally f/1.8 or f/1.4) so you can gather star light without dragging the shutter long enough to trail the stars, plus clean corner performance so points of light stay points and do not smear into commas. A wide field of view helps you frame the Milky Way. The fast wide primes here are built for exactly this.

How wide do I need for real estate interiors?

For most rooms, a full-frame equivalent of 16mm to 24mm covers it. Wider than 16mm can stretch the perspective unnaturally and bow straight walls, so very wide lenses ask for careful leveling and sometimes correction in editing. A 13mm to 16mm option gives you room to work in tight spaces; just keep the camera level to keep verticals straight.

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Researched, not personally tested: picks come from specs, verified-owner reviews, and expert sources, scored into the Aperture Score. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. We may earn a commission from links here, at no extra cost to you. How we research →