Tracking, audio and portrait tools
DJI has also pushed harder on automation. Intelligent Follow 7.0 now supports subject tracking at up to 4x zoom, while ”Lock Subject Tracking” and ”Priority Subject Registration” are meant to keep framing steadier and less random. Gesture controls round things out, so you can start or stop tracking and recording without stabbing at the screen mid-shot.
For portrait users, DJI says the camera has been tuned for more natural skin tones in different lighting conditions, and there is a built-in beauty filter with adjustable smoothing, whitening, and tone settings. An external fill light is supported too, which is a sensible addition for a camera that is clearly trying to replace a bagful of small accessories with one neat handheld device.
Osmo Pocket 4 price and bundles
The Osmo Pocket 4 is already open for pre-orders, with deliveries set to begin on April 22. DJI is selling it in three bundles, from a bare-bones entry kit to a creator package that pulls in accessories from across the company’s ecosystem, including the Mic 3 transmitter and a fill light.
- Essential Combo: £429 / from €479
- Standard Combo: £445 / from €499
- Creator Combo: £549 / from €619
The pricing ladder is pretty transparent: pay a little more for the basics, or jump to the Creator Combo and get something much closer to a ready-to-shoot package. The real question is whether DJI can keep the Pocket line feeling portable while steadily stuffing it with enough features to tempt people away from phone gimbals and action cams alike.
Tracking, audio and portrait tools
DJI has also pushed harder on automation. Intelligent Follow 7.0 now supports subject tracking at up to 4x zoom, while ”Lock Subject Tracking” and ”Priority Subject Registration” are meant to keep framing steadier and less random. Gesture controls round things out, so you can start or stop tracking and recording without stabbing at the screen mid-shot.
For portrait users, DJI says the camera has been tuned for more natural skin tones in different lighting conditions, and there is a built-in beauty filter with adjustable smoothing, whitening, and tone settings. An external fill light is supported too, which is a sensible addition for a camera that is clearly trying to replace a bagful of small accessories with one neat handheld device.
Osmo Pocket 4 price and bundles
The Osmo Pocket 4 is already open for pre-orders, with deliveries set to begin on April 22. DJI is selling it in three bundles, from a bare-bones entry kit to a creator package that pulls in accessories from across the company’s ecosystem, including the Mic 3 transmitter and a fill light.
- Essential Combo: £429 / from €479
- Standard Combo: £445 / from €499
- Creator Combo: £549 / from €619
The pricing ladder is pretty transparent: pay a little more for the basics, or jump to the Creator Combo and get something much closer to a ready-to-shoot package. The real question is whether DJI can keep the Pocket line feeling portable while steadily stuffing it with enough features to tempt people away from phone gimbals and action cams alike.
Tracking, audio and portrait tools
DJI has also pushed harder on automation. Intelligent Follow 7.0 now supports subject tracking at up to 4x zoom, while ”Lock Subject Tracking” and ”Priority Subject Registration” are meant to keep framing steadier and less random. Gesture controls round things out, so you can start or stop tracking and recording without stabbing at the screen mid-shot.
For portrait users, DJI says the camera has been tuned for more natural skin tones in different lighting conditions, and there is a built-in beauty filter with adjustable smoothing, whitening, and tone settings. An external fill light is supported too, which is a sensible addition for a camera that is clearly trying to replace a bagful of small accessories with one neat handheld device.
Osmo Pocket 4 price and bundles
The Osmo Pocket 4 is already open for pre-orders, with deliveries set to begin on April 22. DJI is selling it in three bundles, from a bare-bones entry kit to a creator package that pulls in accessories from across the company’s ecosystem, including the Mic 3 transmitter and a fill light.
- Essential Combo: £429 / from €479
- Standard Combo: £445 / from €499
- Creator Combo: £549 / from €619
The pricing ladder is pretty transparent: pay a little more for the basics, or jump to the Creator Combo and get something much closer to a ready-to-shoot package. The real question is whether DJI can keep the Pocket line feeling portable while steadily stuffing it with enough features to tempt people away from phone gimbals and action cams alike.
Tracking, audio and portrait tools
DJI has also pushed harder on automation. Intelligent Follow 7.0 now supports subject tracking at up to 4x zoom, while ”Lock Subject Tracking” and ”Priority Subject Registration” are meant to keep framing steadier and less random. Gesture controls round things out, so you can start or stop tracking and recording without stabbing at the screen mid-shot.
For portrait users, DJI says the camera has been tuned for more natural skin tones in different lighting conditions, and there is a built-in beauty filter with adjustable smoothing, whitening, and tone settings. An external fill light is supported too, which is a sensible addition for a camera that is clearly trying to replace a bagful of small accessories with one neat handheld device.
Osmo Pocket 4 price and bundles
The Osmo Pocket 4 is already open for pre-orders, with deliveries set to begin on April 22. DJI is selling it in three bundles, from a bare-bones entry kit to a creator package that pulls in accessories from across the company’s ecosystem, including the Mic 3 transmitter and a fill light.
- Essential Combo: £429 / from €479
- Standard Combo: £445 / from €499
- Creator Combo: £549 / from €619
The pricing ladder is pretty transparent: pay a little more for the basics, or jump to the Creator Combo and get something much closer to a ready-to-shoot package. The real question is whether DJI can keep the Pocket line feeling portable while steadily stuffing it with enough features to tempt people away from phone gimbals and action cams alike.
Tracking, audio and portrait tools
DJI has also pushed harder on automation. Intelligent Follow 7.0 now supports subject tracking at up to 4x zoom, while ”Lock Subject Tracking” and ”Priority Subject Registration” are meant to keep framing steadier and less random. Gesture controls round things out, so you can start or stop tracking and recording without stabbing at the screen mid-shot.
For portrait users, DJI says the camera has been tuned for more natural skin tones in different lighting conditions, and there is a built-in beauty filter with adjustable smoothing, whitening, and tone settings. An external fill light is supported too, which is a sensible addition for a camera that is clearly trying to replace a bagful of small accessories with one neat handheld device.
Osmo Pocket 4 price and bundles
The Osmo Pocket 4 is already open for pre-orders, with deliveries set to begin on April 22. DJI is selling it in three bundles, from a bare-bones entry kit to a creator package that pulls in accessories from across the company’s ecosystem, including the Mic 3 transmitter and a fill light.
- Essential Combo: £429 / from €479
- Standard Combo: £445 / from €499
- Creator Combo: £549 / from €619
The pricing ladder is pretty transparent: pay a little more for the basics, or jump to the Creator Combo and get something much closer to a ready-to-shoot package. The real question is whether DJI can keep the Pocket line feeling portable while steadily stuffing it with enough features to tempt people away from phone gimbals and action cams alike.
Tracking, audio and portrait tools
DJI has also pushed harder on automation. Intelligent Follow 7.0 now supports subject tracking at up to 4x zoom, while ”Lock Subject Tracking” and ”Priority Subject Registration” are meant to keep framing steadier and less random. Gesture controls round things out, so you can start or stop tracking and recording without stabbing at the screen mid-shot.
For portrait users, DJI says the camera has been tuned for more natural skin tones in different lighting conditions, and there is a built-in beauty filter with adjustable smoothing, whitening, and tone settings. An external fill light is supported too, which is a sensible addition for a camera that is clearly trying to replace a bagful of small accessories with one neat handheld device.
Osmo Pocket 4 price and bundles
The Osmo Pocket 4 is already open for pre-orders, with deliveries set to begin on April 22. DJI is selling it in three bundles, from a bare-bones entry kit to a creator package that pulls in accessories from across the company’s ecosystem, including the Mic 3 transmitter and a fill light.
- Essential Combo: £429 / from €479
- Standard Combo: £445 / from €499
- Creator Combo: £549 / from €619
The pricing ladder is pretty transparent: pay a little more for the basics, or jump to the Creator Combo and get something much closer to a ready-to-shoot package. The real question is whether DJI can keep the Pocket line feeling portable while steadily stuffing it with enough features to tempt people away from phone gimbals and action cams alike.
- 1-inch CMOS sensor
- f/2.0 aperture
- 10-bit D-Log support
- 4K slow motion up to 240fps
- Up to 14 stops of dynamic range
Tracking, audio and portrait tools
DJI has also pushed harder on automation. Intelligent Follow 7.0 now supports subject tracking at up to 4x zoom, while ”Lock Subject Tracking” and ”Priority Subject Registration” are meant to keep framing steadier and less random. Gesture controls round things out, so you can start or stop tracking and recording without stabbing at the screen mid-shot.
For portrait users, DJI says the camera has been tuned for more natural skin tones in different lighting conditions, and there is a built-in beauty filter with adjustable smoothing, whitening, and tone settings. An external fill light is supported too, which is a sensible addition for a camera that is clearly trying to replace a bagful of small accessories with one neat handheld device.
Osmo Pocket 4 price and bundles
The Osmo Pocket 4 is already open for pre-orders, with deliveries set to begin on April 22. DJI is selling it in three bundles, from a bare-bones entry kit to a creator package that pulls in accessories from across the company’s ecosystem, including the Mic 3 transmitter and a fill light.
- Essential Combo: £429 / from €479
- Standard Combo: £445 / from €499
- Creator Combo: £549 / from €619
The pricing ladder is pretty transparent: pay a little more for the basics, or jump to the Creator Combo and get something much closer to a ready-to-shoot package. The real question is whether DJI can keep the Pocket line feeling portable while steadily stuffing it with enough features to tempt people away from phone gimbals and action cams alike.
DJI has refreshed its pocket gimbal line with the Osmo Pocket 4, and this one is aimed squarely at creators who want better image quality without lugging around a full camera rig. The headline upgrades are a larger 1-inch CMOS sensor, 10-bit D-Log capture, and 4K slow motion at up to 240fps, which pushes the tiny camera well beyond ”casual clip” territory.
That combination puts the DJI Osmo Pocket 4 in the same conversation as compact creator cameras from Sony and Insta360, even if DJI is still leaning hard on the stabilised one-hand form factor that made the series popular in the first place. The pitch is simple: more dynamic range, more grading latitude, and fewer excuses from people who keep saying their phone is ”good enough.”
Osmo Pocket 4 specifications
The Pocket 4 pairs the 1-inch sensor with an f/2.0 aperture and claims up to 14 stops of dynamic range. DJI says the camera also supports spatial audio recording, zoom audio pickup, and OsmoAudio direct connection to DJI microphone transmitters, with up to four-channel audio recording. That is the sort of spec sheet detail that matters if you shoot interviews, not just travel montages.
- 1-inch CMOS sensor
- f/2.0 aperture
- 10-bit D-Log support
- 4K slow motion up to 240fps
- Up to 14 stops of dynamic range
Tracking, audio and portrait tools
DJI has also pushed harder on automation. Intelligent Follow 7.0 now supports subject tracking at up to 4x zoom, while ”Lock Subject Tracking” and ”Priority Subject Registration” are meant to keep framing steadier and less random. Gesture controls round things out, so you can start or stop tracking and recording without stabbing at the screen mid-shot.
For portrait users, DJI says the camera has been tuned for more natural skin tones in different lighting conditions, and there is a built-in beauty filter with adjustable smoothing, whitening, and tone settings. An external fill light is supported too, which is a sensible addition for a camera that is clearly trying to replace a bagful of small accessories with one neat handheld device.
Osmo Pocket 4 price and bundles
The Osmo Pocket 4 is already open for pre-orders, with deliveries set to begin on April 22. DJI is selling it in three bundles, from a bare-bones entry kit to a creator package that pulls in accessories from across the company’s ecosystem, including the Mic 3 transmitter and a fill light.
- Essential Combo: £429 / from €479
- Standard Combo: £445 / from €499
- Creator Combo: £549 / from €619
The pricing ladder is pretty transparent: pay a little more for the basics, or jump to the Creator Combo and get something much closer to a ready-to-shoot package. The real question is whether DJI can keep the Pocket line feeling portable while steadily stuffing it with enough features to tempt people away from phone gimbals and action cams alike.

