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Caira camera: one-minute review
TechRadar AI Week 2025
This article is part of TechRadar’s AI Week 2025. Covering the basics of artificial intelligence, we’ll show you how to get the most from the likes of ChatGPT, Gemini, or Claude, alongside in-depth features, news, and the main talking points in the world of AI.
The hardware is the real deal: a Micro Four Thirds mount and (Sony) sensor, a CNCâd aluminium chassis. It accepts proper lenses from Panasonic, Olympus, Sigma, and Leica – so this isnât a toy pretending to be a camera. Its in a similar mold to the open source Alice Camera â a previous project from the makers of Caira.
Inside, Qualcommâs Snapdragon chip and Googleâs Edge TPU AI processor run three flagship tricks: voice control, smart styles and generative editing.
With voice control you can say âtake a photoâ and Caira actually does. Smart Styles are six tasteful AI-trained color profiles that make your footage look deliberate. Generative Editing â the headline feature â uses natural language prompts to restyle photos instantly, no laptop required.
Yes, the real party trick is Googleâs âNano Bananaâ generative AI â which sounds like a smoothie but is actually a powerful on-device editor. You can tell the camera to âturn this daylight shot into nightâ or âmake my blazer burgundy,â and itâll do it in seconds. Itâs astonishing. Itâs the first time Iâve seen Lightroom sulk because itâs now redundant.
The result is a camera designed to skip the âimport – edit – export – screamâ routine. Some will say that skipping that part also skips the soul of photography. Iâm not one of them. Iâm in favor of anything that lets you spend more time shooting and less time staring at a progress bar â Iâll leave the hand-wringing to other creators.
But before you start packing your MacBook away forever, that magical AI is only available if you pay $7 a month for the âCaira Proâ plan (about ÂŁ6 / AU$11). Because nothing screams modern camera like a monthly sub.
However, for every tinfoil hat wearing critic out there screaming for the days of old and terrified of AI, go back to shooting on film and paying $35 a month for every roll you develop. My Lightroom subscription costs a lot more than Caira Pro, and I will use it a lot less.
Caira camera: price and availability
- Priced at $995 (ÂŁ760 / AU$1,500 approx)
- Available to early crowdfunding backers for $695 (ÂŁ529 / AU$1,070 approx)
- First deliveries expected from January 2026
Caira is available through Camera Intelligence’s Kickstarter campaign, which runs from November 4 to November 30. As always, back crowdfunding campaigns at your own risk!
The campaign lists the camera (body only) price for $995 (around ÂŁ760 / AU$1,500), while optimistic Super Early Bird backers can bag one for $695 (about ÂŁ529 / AU$1,070).
According to its makers, the Caira delivery window is January to February 2026, (assuming no global crises intervene).
To get the most out of Caira’s AI skills, you’ll want the Caira pro subscription, which costs $7 per month. Backers get six months free, nine if funding hits its goals.
Caira camera specs
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Sensor: |
11MP Micro Four Thirds, quad-bayer HDR and dual ISO |
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Mount: |
Micro Four Thirds |
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Processor: |
Qualcomm Snapdragon with 8 – core CPU, GPU, DSP |
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AI Chip: |
Google Edge TPU |
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Video: |
4K 30fps & 1080p 60fps |
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Battery: |
5,000 mAh |
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Storage: |
Internal 64GB + SSD External storage via USB-C, straight onto Apple photos |
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Connectivity: |
iPhone MagSafe connector, WiFi |
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Dimensions: |
112.5mm (W) x 85mm (H) x 21.5mm (D). Handle depth is 42.5mm |
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Weight: |
10.2oz / 290g (w/out lens) |
Caira camera: Design
- No screen â you MagSafe your iPhone instead
- Premium CNC-milled aluminum body
- 64GB internal memory
Imagine if Leica built a GoPro after a long lunch – thatâs the Caira. There’s Sigma BF vibes, too. A sleek, screen-less slab of CNC-milled metal that looks premium and feels it too.
The design strips away almost all buttons, because the company says creators are âoverwhelmed by controls.â Fair. Now youâll be overwhelmed by menus instead.
The MFT mount opens a vast lens ecosystem, from affordable pancakes to glass that costs more than your phone. And the 5,000 mAh battery means you can actually use it all day.
Best of all, there are no memory cards. You shoot, and the files appear in your iPhoneâs Photos app almost instantly. Itâs dangerously convenient.
Cair camera: Performance
- 11MP Four Thirds sensor with dual base ISO
- Basic video specs â 4K video up to 30fps
- Really effective Nano Banana voice control and generative edits
The Caira behaves like two products; a legitimate camera, and an unashamed AI experiment.
The camera hardware delivers â the 11MP Sony sensor combined with proper MFT glass (I used several of my Lumix lenses, including the 12-60mm f/2.8-4 lens) is an obvious leap from a smartphone, particularly in low light. Depth, sharpness, and texture all feel natural. The AI-tuned colour profile leans a little toward âInstagram – ready,â but never offensively so.
Caira’s Smart Styles are surprisingly tasteful presets, that make you look more competent than you are. You can get a feel in the examples in the gallery below.
The Caira’s show piece is its AI features. Voice Control is genuinely handy when both hands are busy, or sticky with espresso, but Generative Editing is the main event.
Prompts like âmake it nighttimeâ or âchange his navy blazer to burgundyâ return results in seconds â clean, convincing, a bit spooky.
Generative Editing is the feature that flattens the learning curve and streamlines the creative workflow. Itâs powerful, fast, and feels like magic.
Watch On
To its credit, the company has guardrails in place: no altering skin tone or facial features. I tried. It refused, nicely.
The Caira is a bold step. Itâs a bet that the next generation of creators values AI-powered speed and flexibility as much as â or perhaps more than â traditional photographic purity. And based on what Iâve seen, itâs a bet they just might win.
The Caira feels like a product born out of collective exhaustion. Someone, somewhere, finally admitted that no one actually enjoys editing – they just enjoy pretending they do. Itâs bold, a little absurd, and far more capable than it has any right to be.
It wonât replace your main camera, and it wonât replace your phone either – but it might just replace your willpower to open Lightroom ever again.
Itâs the perfect tool for those of us who still like the idea of photography – the ritual, the gear, the illusion of artistry – but who secretly just want the photo to look brilliant the moment we take it.
And truthfully? Thatâs probably the entire modern photographer.
Should you buy the Caira camera?
Buy it if…
Don’t buy it if…
How I tested the Caira camera
- I tested Caira for two weeks
- I paired it with Lumix lenses, including the 12â60mm f/2.8-4 lens
- I connected my iPhone and made use of the various Nano Banana features
Camera Intelligence sent me one of just 50 pre-production units for a two week trial. I used it mostly to photograph things that didnât deserve this much computing power.
It locks to the iPhone via MagSafe and connects over Wi-Fi through the Caira iOS app. Setup takes seconds, and then youâre in. I paired it with a Lumix 12â60mm f/2.8-4 â a brilliant lens that I immediately wasted on photographing coffee cups, pool balls, and other cameras.
- First reviewed November 2025
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