The DJI RS 4 Mini is the gimbal we recommend most often to UK photographers stepping up from a smartphone gimbal to support a mirrorless camera. It went on UK sale at £339 at Park Cameras, Wex Photo Video and DJI Store UK, with the larger DJI RS 4 at £439 and the RS 4 Pro at £799 for buyers carrying heavier rigs. Choosing between them is not just about budget — the wrong gimbal for your camera weight will leave you with shake you cannot edit out, balance problems that ruin a day’s filming, and a piece of kit that sits in the bag. This guide pulls the three DJI mirrorless gimbals apart against the genuine UK alternatives (Zhiyun Crane M3, Hohem iSteady V3), explains who each one is for, and recommends the right buy for the camera you already own.
Aimed at UK videographers, wedding shooters, content creators and the growing community of UK travel-vlog professionals who shoot with Sony, Canon, Fuji and Nikon mirrorless bodies, the piece below is the buying guide we would give a friend asking which gimbal to take to Cornwall this summer. It uses real UK prices from current retailer listings, calls out the genuine trade-offs DJI does not mention in the marketing, and ends with a clear recommendation for each camera weight band.
Why mirrorless needs a different gimbal from a phone
A modern phone gimbal — the DJI Osmo Mobile 8P at £135, the Insta360 Flow 2 Pro at £159 — is designed for a single payload weight (a phone, around 200 grams) and a tightly constrained range of motion. A mirrorless camera adds a lens, a battery, sometimes a top-mounted microphone, sometimes a follow-focus motor. The combined weight is typically 800g to 1.7kg, and the centre of gravity shifts depending on which lens you mount. A phone gimbal will not balance a camera at all; even if you tried to lash one on with a clamp, the motors are not rated for the payload and would fail in minutes.

Mirrorless gimbals like the DJI RS 4 Mini are engineered specifically for the 200g to 2kg payload band, with stronger motors, separate balance adjustments on each axis, and quick-release plates that let you swap cameras without re-balancing every time. The cost is higher — £339 for the RS 4 Mini against £135 for the Osmo Mobile 8P — but the kit is doing genuinely more work. For UK creators producing wedding videos, property tours, music videos or social media content with a mirrorless body, the right answer is a mirrorless gimbal, not a phone gimbal pressed into service.
DJI RS 4 Mini vs RS 4 vs RS 4 Pro: where each one sits
The RS 4 Mini at £339 (Wex Photo Video UK list) is the entry point. Payload up to 2kg, which covers every Sony A7-series body with anything up to a 70-200mm f/4 lens, every Canon R-series body up to the R6 II with a 24-105mm, every Fuji X-T5 / X-H2 setup, and the Nikon Z6/Z7 family with a 24-70mm. Battery life around 13 hours of typical use. Weight 1.05kg without the camera. AI-assisted subject tracking via the optional ActiveTrack module (£99). The right buy for 80 percent of UK mirrorless owners.
The RS 4 at £439 (Park Cameras UK list) is the step up. Payload to 3kg, which adds cinema lenses (Sigma 18-35mm Cine, Canon CN-E primes), and heavier full-frame zoom combinations. Larger touchscreen, better focus wheel, longer battery life (15 hours). Weight 1.25kg without the camera. The right buy for UK creators shooting with cinema glass or who regularly use a follow-focus motor.
The RS 4 Pro at £799 (DJI Store UK list) is for working professionals. Payload to 4.5kg, which covers everything up to a fully-loaded Sony FX3, Canon C70 or Blackmagic Pocket Cinema 6K with cinema glass, follow-focus, wireless monitor and an on-camera light. Carbon-fibre construction, four-axis stabilisation (the fourth axis dampens up-and-down motion when walking), professional focus and zoom motors, and the LIDAR-assisted ActiveTrack Pro for hands-off subject tracking on a tripod. Weight 1.5kg without the camera. The right buy for UK wedding videographers, music video shooters and commercial filmmakers.
Which gimbal for your camera body
For Sony A7 IV with a 28-70mm or 24-105mm kit — RS 4 Mini. The body weighs 658g, the lens 426–663g, total under 1.4kg. Comfortably inside the RS 4 Mini’s 2kg payload with margin for an on-camera microphone.

For Sony A7S III or FX3 with cinema glass — RS 4 or RS 4 Pro. The FX3 weighs 715g, but a Sigma 18-35mm Cine lens at 810g puts the total above 1.5kg. The RS 4 Mini will technically handle this but you will be at the edge of the rated payload, with shorter battery life and less margin for follow-focus motors. Step up.
For Canon R6 II with a 24-105mm — RS 4 Mini. R6 II at 670g plus the RF 24-105mm at 700g is 1.37kg, well within the Mini’s rating.
For Canon EOS R5 II or C70 with cinema glass — RS 4 Pro. The C70 alone is 1.17kg, and a cine-zoom lens often adds another kilogram. The Pro is the right buy.
For Fuji X-T5 or X-H2 with kit zoom — RS 4 Mini. Both bodies are under 700g.
For Nikon Z8 or Z9 — RS 4. The Z9 alone is 1.34kg before adding glass; the Mini’s 2kg rating is too tight a margin for the Z9 + 24-70mm f/2.8 (1.05kg lens). Step up to the RS 4.
Zhiyun and Hohem alternatives: are they worth considering
Zhiyun Crane M3 at £319 (Wex) is the closest direct competitor to the RS 4 Mini. Slightly lighter, slightly lower payload (1.8kg vs 2kg), no AI-assisted subject tracking module at this price point. Build quality is good but not at DJI’s level. We recommend the RS 4 Mini for £20 more — the active tracking, larger ecosystem of accessories, and the better firmware update cadence make the difference.
Hohem iSteady V3 at £259 (Amazon UK) is cheaper but the payload is only 1.5kg and the motors are visibly less robust. We would only recommend this for buyers using a small mirrorless (Sony ZV-E10, Fuji X-S20) and only as a budget entry point — the longer-term frustration of bumping into the payload limit is worth the extra £80 for the DJI RS 4 Mini.
For buyers carrying a heavy cinema rig (above 3kg total), the DJI is the only credible option in the UK market at the price point. Movi Pro and Freefly Movi rigs exist but cost £3,000+ and are aimed at pro broadcast crews.
Where to buy DJI gimbals in the UK
- DJI Store UK (store.dji.com/uk): Full range with the DJI Care Refresh extended warranty (£59 for one year on the RS 4 Mini, £79 on the RS 4, £109 on the RS 4 Pro). Free delivery and 14-day return window. The right buyer for buyers who want the latest stock and the option to bundle ActiveTrack and other DJI accessories.
- Wex Photo Video (wexphotovideo.com): The leading UK photography specialist, with knowledgeable staff who can advise on payload calculations and lens compatibility. Slightly faster delivery than DJI direct in our test. Wex’s six-month price-match policy applies. Best for buyers who want expert pre-sale advice.
- Park Cameras (parkcameras.com): Strong stockholding on the RS 4 line at competitive pricing. Park’s London store offers in-person demo of the gimbals balanced with your own camera — extremely useful before a £400+ purchase. Worth the trip if you live near Burgess Hill or central London.
- Camera Centre UK (cameracentre.co.uk): Cardiff-based specialist with strong DJI stock and competitive pricing. Often the cheapest UK option on the RS 4 by £10–£30 versus Wex or Park.
- Currys (currys.co.uk): Stocks the entry RS 4 Mini and the consumer DJI gimbal range. Better for click-and-collect convenience than specialist advice. Trade-in promotions on older DJI gear sometimes available.
- Amazon UK (amazon.co.uk): Carries DJI but stick to “Sold and Shipped by Amazon” listings. Third-party DJI sellers on Amazon have a history of selling grey-import stock without UK warranty. Returns under Amazon’s policy are 30 days.
- John Lewis (johnlewis.com): Selective stocking of DJI consumer gear; not always the RS line in stock. Two-year guarantee applies where stocked.
DJI Care Refresh is worth buying on any of these gimbals if you regularly travel with the kit. Theft, accidental damage, water damage from a North Cornwall summer thunderstorm — all are scenarios the DJI Care Refresh covers up to two replacement claims per year. At £59 for the RS 4 Mini, it is the right add-on for working creators.
Should you buy now or wait for the RS 5
The DJI RS 4 product line launched in mid-2024 with the Mini following in early 2025. Based on DJI’s typical 24-month product cycle, an RS 5 announcement is plausible in late 2026. For buyers who can wait six to eight months, the choice is between the current RS 4 Mini at £339 today or a likely RS 5 Mini at around £369 in late 2026 with iterative improvements.

For UK creators with paid work this summer — weddings, travel content, commercial shoots — buy now. The RS 4 Mini is mature, well-supported and will be in service for at least the next four years before becoming unsupported.
For hobbyists who can wait, the RS 5 announcement window is the right reason to hold. Watch DJI Store UK and Wex for stock-out signals on the RS 4 Mini — those typically precede a new product reveal by three to six weeks.
The MTW verdict
For 80 percent of UK mirrorless owners, the DJI RS 4 Mini at £339 from Wex Photo Video or Park Cameras is the right gimbal. Light, balanced, robust enough for daily wedding and commercial use, and well-supported across DJI’s ecosystem. For Sony A7S III / FX3 or Canon C70 owners with cinema glass, step up to the RS 4 at £439. For full professional rigs, the RS 4 Pro at £799 is the working tool. Skip the cheaper Zhiyun and Hohem alternatives unless your camera body is under 700g and your budget is hard-capped — the DJI is worth the extra outlay. Add DJI Care Refresh if you carry the kit to client jobs. Do not bother with a phone gimbal pressed into service for a mirrorless camera; you will regret it on the first day’s filming.
| Model | UK price | Payload | Best for UK buyer |
|---|---|---|---|
| DJI RS 4 Mini | £329 | Up to 2kg | Sony A7, Canon R6, hybrid shooters |
| DJI RS 4 | £419 | Up to 3kg | Full-frame + heavier lenses |
| DJI RS 4 Pro | £839 | Up to 4.5kg | RED, Cinema cameras, pros |
| Zhiyun Crane M3S | £329 | Up to 2kg | Budget pro alternative |
| Hohem iSteady MT2 | £399 | Up to 1.2kg | Vlogger crossover |
What we like, what we’d watch
| What we like | What we’d watch |
|---|---|
| RS 4 Mini at £329 hits the sweet spot for UK Sony A7 and Canon R6 shooters — proper payload, real torque | 12-month DJI UK warranty is shorter than Zhiyun’s 24-month — UK Consumer Rights Act fills the gap |
| Quick-release plate Arca-Swiss compatibility removes ecosystem lock-in for UK videographers | RS 4 Mini does not include a follow focus motor — UK pro buyers will spend another £99 for the DJI Focus Motor |
| DJI Mimo app on iOS finally handles long takes without dropping connection — fixed since RS 4 launch | Battery life under heavy load is ~7 hours — UK location shoots need spare batteries at £45 each |
UK reader FAQ
How much does the DJI RS 4 Mini cost in the UK?
Is the DJI RS 4 Mini better than the Zhiyun Crane M3S?
Can the DJI RS 4 Mini support a Sony a7 IV or Canon R6 Mark II?
What is the warranty on the DJI RS 4 Mini in the UK?
Where can I rent a DJI RS 4 Mini in the UK?
Should mirrorless content creators buy the RS 4 Mini or the RS 4 Pro?
Is the DJI RS 4 Mini eligible for VAT relief through HMRC for UK freelancers?
Does the RS 4 Mini work with Sony A7 IV and Canon R5?
How long is the DJI UK warranty on the RS 4 Mini?
Further reading: UK sources we used
- DJI RS 4 Mini UK product page
- HMRC Annual Investment Allowance
- Consumer Rights Act 2015
- Wex Photo Video DJI range
- Park Cameras DJI gimbals
Related on MTW
How we pick
Final verdict
DJI RS 4 Mini UK gimbal guide for mirrorless cameras: which DJI gimbal fits your camera, Zhiyun and Hohem alternatives, retailer prices and whether to wait for the RS 5.













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