
I have spent the better part of three years building, testing, and sometimes fighting follow focus rigs on everything from wedding shoots to short film sets. When you are trying to nail a rack focus between two actors at f/1.4, the quality of your follow focus matters more than almost any other piece of gear on your camera. That is why I put together this guide covering the best follow focus systems available in 2026.
Our team compared 12 follow focus units from Tilta, SmallRig, NEEWER, Movo, and Nitze. We tested manual units, wireless motor systems, and full FIZ controllers to see which ones hold up under real shooting conditions. Prices ranged from $55 budget units all the way up to a $1,299 professional cinema kit.
This guide covers both manual and wireless follow focus systems because the right choice depends entirely on how you shoot. Solo gimbal operators often need wireless. Shoulder rig shooters usually prefer the tactile feel of a manual unit. We break down which product fits which workflow so you can stop researching and start filming.
These three picks stood out across every test category. The Tilta Nucleus Nano II earned our Editor’s Choice for its touch screen interface and camera integration. The SmallRig Wireless Follow Focus Lite won Best Value with 21 hours of battery life and serious torque. The Tilta Pocket Follow Focus took Budget Pick for delivering pro-level damping at just $59.
Below is the full comparison table of all 12 systems we tested. Manual units sit at the top, followed by wireless kits, with the professional FIZ systems at the bottom. Check the features column to compare gearing, battery life, and rod compatibility at a glance.
| Product | Specs | Action |
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Tilta Pocket Follow Focus
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NEEWER Mini Follow Focus PG001
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SmallRig Mini Follow Focus 3010
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SmallRig Follow Focus F50
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SmallRig F60 Modular Follow Focus
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Movo F2X Precision Follow Focus
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SmallRig Wireless Follow Focus Lite
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Tilta Nucleus Nano II Base Kit
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Tilta Nucleus Nano II Control Handle Kit
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Tilta Nucleus-M Wireless FIZ System
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Weight: 1.1 lbs
Mount: Single 15mm rod
A/B Hard Stops
Model: FF-T07
2 Year Warranty
The Tilta Pocket Follow Focus was the first manual unit I added to my Sony A7S III cage, and it honestly changed how I felt about budget filmmaking gear. At just over a pound, it mounts to a single 15mm rod and delivers a focus pull that feels closer to a $300 unit than a $59 one. The simulated lens damping gives you real tactile feedback, which matters when you are doing a slow rack focus during a dialogue scene.
Over four months of use on corporate interviews and a short film shoot, the A/B hard stops proved reliable for repeatable focus marks. I marked my two talent positions, set the stops, and never had to think about missing the beat during a 30-second take. The quick release system also saved me time when swapping between my 35mm and 85mm lenses between setups.

Build quality is where Tilta consistently punches above its weight class. The composite material construction feels solid, the focus knob has genuine grip even when my hands were sweaty on a July outdoor shoot, and the included case keeps everything organized in my kit bag. One Reddit user on r/videography summed it up well: budget Tilta gear performs well and feels anything but cheap.
The main trade-off is the interchangeable gear system. The stock gear works fine, but several users in my filmmaking group recommend buying a seamless focus gear ring for tighter mesh and zero backlash. I picked one up for about $12 and the improvement was noticeable, especially on my Rokinon cine lenses. You may also need a base plate depending on your specific cage configuration.

This unit is ideal for solo shooters and small crews running DSLR or mirrorless cameras on a cage with 15mm rods. If you shoot interviews, corporate video, or narrative short films on a shoulder rig, the Tilta Pocket gives you professional focus control without eating your gear budget.
It is also a smart first follow focus for student filmmakers who want to learn focus pulling technique before investing in a wireless system. The tactile feel teaches you the muscle memory that translates directly to higher-end units later.
Gimbal users should look elsewhere because manual units do not work when the camera is operated remotely. The Tilta Pocket also lacks a marking disk for detailed focus marks, which will frustrate dedicated 1st ACs working on complex narrative productions.
If your lens has a very short focus throw, the single gear ratio may feel too sensitive. I noticed this on a Canon STM lens where a tiny rotation jumped past my target focus point repeatedly.
Weight: 10 oz
Mount: 15mm rod
138-degree tilt
Fits 114mm lenses
Silicone knob
The NEEWER PG001 surprised me during a two-day wedding shoot where I needed a backup follow focus for my second camera body. At 10 ounces, it is lighter than most competitors, and the 138-degree tilt adjustment let me position the focus wheel exactly where my hand naturally rested on the rig. The silicone rubber focus knob is comfortable enough for a 10-hour shoot day.
The A/B hard stops worked well for the first dance, where I needed to rack focus between the couple and the crowd repeatedly. Set the marks once, and every pull lands where it should. I also appreciate that Neewer includes the 15mm rod and rod clamp in the box, making this a true plug-and-play kit for anyone who does not already have a rod system.

Compatibility is solid across most DSLR and mirrorless lenses up to 114mm diameter. I tested it on a Canon EF 50mm, a Sony 24-70mm, and a vintage Nikon AI-S lens, and it meshed cleanly with the included gear ring on all three. The focus wheel has a smooth resistance that feels professional, not plasticky like I expected at this price.
The trade-off is long-term durability. After about six months of regular use, I started noticing a faint internal rattle on fast focus rotations. It did not affect accuracy, but it did make me question how the internals would hold up after a year of heavy use. Some users on Amazon reported similar issues, while others have had flawless experiences.

The NEEWER PG001 is an excellent entry point for beginners building their first cinema rig. If you are shooting YouTube content, wedding videos, or small corporate projects on a tight budget, this unit gives you real A/B stops and smooth focus control for under $60.
It is also a great backup follow focus to keep in your kit. Having a second manual unit saved me when my primary follow focus developed a loose gear during a paid shoot.
Filmmakers who shoot daily or work on professional sets should invest in something more durable. The internal rattle issue suggests the bearings are not built for thousands of hours of use. You will also want to replace the included gear ring with a higher-quality seamless one for critical work.
If you use a matte box, be prepared to spend time positioning the follow focus so the gears do not interfere with your matte box rods. The clunky included gear ring can cause clearance issues on tighter rigs.
Weight: 195g
Mount: 15mm rod
Snap-on gear belt
Modular design
Model: 3010-SR
The SmallRig 3010 has been my daily driver manual follow focus for over a year, and with 942 reviews averaging 4.6 stars, I am clearly not the only one who trusts it on paid shoots. At just 195 grams, it is the lightest unit in this lineup, which matters when you are already carrying a heavy mirrorless camera, lens, cage, and monitor on a shoulder rig.
What sets the SmallRig apart is the near-zero backlash in the focus wheel. Every other budget follow focus I have tested has some play between forward and reverse rotation. The 3010 feels tight and precise, letting me make micro-adjustments during a take without overshooting my focus target. The modular design also means I can swap gears and configure the unit without tools.

The A/B hard stops use a quick-lock mechanism that is faster to set than the screw-down style on the Tilta Pocket. I can set my two focus marks in about five seconds, which adds up when you are doing it 40 times across a shoot day. SmallRig also includes a NATO rail to 15mm rod adapter, expanding your mounting options significantly.
The biggest complaint I have is the included snap-on gear ring belt. It works, but the zip-tie style fastener can slip on lenses with smooth focus rings. I replaced mine with a SmallRig seamless gear ring for about $15 and the accuracy improved immediately. Several Amazon reviewers mention the same upgrade path.

This is the best follow focus for run-and-gun shooters who need lightweight gear that does not compromise on precision. If you shoot documentaries, event coverage, or travel content where every ounce matters, the 195-gram SmallRig keeps your rig manageable.
It is also the strongest value pick in the manual category. You get modular design, interchangeable M0.8 gears, and a NATO rail adapter for under $80, which undercuts most competitors with similar features.
Users with compact lenses or small-diameter focus rings may struggle with gear alignment. The unit sits at a fixed height, and some pancake lenses simply do not line up correctly without shimming your rod system. Test your lens collection before committing.
Unlike the Tilta Pocket, no protective case is included. If you travel frequently, you will need to source your own storage solution to keep the gears and small parts organized.
Weight: 290g
Damping: 0.3-1.0 kgf
Mount: 15mm rod
Dual drive system
Model: 12417
The SmallRig F50 represents the newer generation of manual follow focus design, and after testing it for three weeks on a commercial project, I can say the zero-backlash claim is legitimate. The adjustable rotational play lets you dial in exactly how much resistance you want between direction changes, which is a feature usually reserved for units costing twice as much.
The dynamic damping adjustment range of 0.3 to 1.0 kgf is the standout feature. Different lenses have different focus ring resistances, and being able to match your follow focus damping to your lens makes a huge difference in how smooth your pulls feel. On my DZOFilm cinema prime, I set it to the heavier end. On a vintage Helios 44, I backed it off for the smoother focus ring.

The ability to switch between friction drive and gear drive is something I did not know I needed until I had it. For lenses without a gear ring, friction drive lets you pull focus directly on the focus ring without adding a gear belt. For cine lenses, switch to gear drive for precision. This dual-drive system makes the F50 one of the most versatile manual units on the market.
The quick-release AB stops use a two-step switch that disengages instantly when you need full rotation. I found this faster than the screw-style stops on older SmallRig models. The silicone gears are gentle on lens gear rings and quiet during operation, which matters when you are recording ambient audio near the camera.

The F50 is built for filmmakers who work with a mix of cine lenses and photography lenses. If you shoot on a set where you might switch between a DZOFilm prime and a Canon L-series zoom on the same camera, the dual-drive system saves you from constantly swapping gear rings.
It is also ideal for focus pullers who are particular about damping feel. The stepless adjustment gives you granular control that fixed-damping units simply cannot match.
Beginners may find the setup process overwhelming. The user manual has notoriously tiny font, and I ended up watching two YouTube tutorials before I fully understood the damping adjustment system. If you want something that works right out of the box, look at the SmallRig 3010 instead.
Some cameras require a cage for proper installation because the F50 needs rod clearance that bare camera bodies do not provide. Factor in the cost of a cage if you do not already have one.
Weight: 250g
Damping: 0.6-1.8 kgf
Mount: 15mm rod
Sapele wood knob
Model: F60
The SmallRig F60 is the follow focus I reach for when I want my rig to look and feel professional on client-facing shoots. The Sapele wood texture on the focus knob is not just aesthetic. It provides genuine anti-slip and anti-sweat properties that the rubber knobs on cheaper units cannot match. During a humid outdoor commercial shoot in August, the wood knob stayed grippy while my backup unit’s rubber knob became slippery.
The wide damping range of 0.6 to 1.8 kgf is noticeably broader than the F50, giving you more headroom for stiff cinema lenses. I tested it with a heavy Cooke S4 prime and the F50 maxed out before the F60 did. The three-step reversal on the AB marks also allows for more complex focus pull sequences than the two-step systems on smaller units.

Modularity is a core selling point. Every component from the gear to the marking disk to the arm can be reconfigured without tools, which meant I could adapt the unit to three different camera rigs during a single production day. SmallRig includes a carrying bag with compartments for every piece, which is a nice touch at this price point.
The trade-off is some gear play that affects micro-precision. At 137 reviews and a 4.1-star average, the F60 has more critical reviews than the 3010. Several users report a small amount of rotational play that makes sub-millimeter focus adjustments difficult. The white marking ring also feels like cheap plastic compared to the otherwise premium build.

The F60 suits working professionals who want a follow focus that looks the part on set while delivering a wide damping range. If you shoot commercials, music videos, or branded content where your gear is visible to clients, the wood texture adds a premium touch that does not go unnoticed.
Filmmakers working with heavier cinema lenses will appreciate the higher damping ceiling. The 1.8 kgf maximum handles lenses that would stall cheaper units.
If you need absolute zero-backlash precision for critical narrative work, the F60’s gear play will frustrate you. The SmallRig F50 is a better choice in that scenario despite its lower damping range. The tightening knob also has limited rotation on certain lens configurations, making setup finicky.
At $139, it sits in an awkward middle ground between budget picks and wireless systems. If you are spending this much, consider whether a wireless unit like the SmallRig Lite might serve you better long-term.
Mount: 15mm rod
0.8 pitch gear
Magnetic marking disc
Aluminum construction
Includes 3 gear rings
The Movo F2X has a devoted following among filmmakers who prioritize build quality over modern conveniences, and after using it on a documentary shoot, I understand why. This thing weighs more than some cameras, and the aluminum construction genuinely feels like professional cinema gear. The Arri FF1-style design is no accident, and the arm action uses real rosettes that lock securely without slipping.
The gear precision is impressive with only 1 to 2 percent play, which is better than most sub-$200 follow focus units. The thick grease used for damping gives a deliberate, weighted feel that some focus pullers prefer over the lighter resistance of SmallRig units. It comes with three adjustable gear rings in 65mm, 75mm, and 85mm sizes, covering most lens diameters without needing aftermarket accessories.

The removable magnetic marking disc is a feature I wish every follow focus had. You can pop it off, write your focus marks with a dry erase marker, and snap it back on in seconds. For repeated takes with multiple focus points, this is faster and more reliable than trying to remember arbitrary positions on the wheel.
The major drawback is that the gear cannot be reversed. If you shoot on Canon lenses, the focus direction operates backwards, which is disorienting if you are used to standard rotation. The bottom locking mechanism is also awkward to fasten, especially when your rig is mounted on a tripod plate. At 3.8 stars across 53 reviews, this is a polarizing unit that works brilliantly for some and frustrates others.

The Movo F2X is ideal for filmmakers who want professional-grade build quality without paying Arri prices. If you shoot narrative work on Sony, Nikon, or Panasonic bodies and value a weighted, tactile focus pull, this unit delivers a feel that budget plastic units cannot replicate.
It is also a strong choice for filmmakers who need multiple gear ring sizes. The included 65mm, 75mm, and 85mm rings cover a wide range of lenses out of the box.
Canon shooters should avoid this unit due to the non-reversible gear direction. You will be pulling focus backwards, which breaks muscle memory and increases the chance of missed takes. The weight is also a dealbreaker for gimbal or drone work.
Filmmakers who prefer smooth, light damping will find the thick grease resistance fatiguing over long shoot days. This unit demands more physical effort than the SmallRig or Tilta alternatives.
Torque: 4.3 kgf.cm
Battery: 21 hours
Mount: 15mm rod
Weight: 325g
Model: 4296
The SmallRig Wireless Follow Focus Lite is the unit that made me stop recommending $500-plus wireless systems to most filmmakers. At $169.99, it delivers 4.3 kgf.cm of torque and a 21-hour battery life, which is genuinely competitive with units costing three times as much. I ran it for an entire two-day wedding shoot on a single charge, which is something my old Cinegears unit could never do.
The handwheel controller connects to the receiver motor via a stable wireless link, and the red and blue indicator lights make it obvious when you have a solid connection. The built-in 1400mAh battery uses smart sleep technology to extend runtime, and it supports both PD and QC fast charging protocols. I topped it up from my laptop USB-C port between ceremony and reception.

What impressed me most was the smooth ease-in and ease-out functionality. Budget wireless systems often deliver jerky, linear focus pulls that look robotic. The SmallRig Lite adds a subtle acceleration curve to each pull, making focus transitions look like a human did them. For documentary and wedding work, this is the difference between professional and amateur-looking footage.
The motor is impressively quiet. I tested it with a Rode VideoMic NTG positioned about 18 inches from the camera body, and the motor noise was not picked up in the audio recording. This matters for run-and-gun shooters who do not have a dedicated sound person monitoring levels. The one-click A/B dotting feature stores focus limits in memory, even after power loss.

This is the best wireless follow focus for solo filmmakers and small crews who need remote focus control without breaking the bank. If you shoot on a gimbal, jib, or stabilizer where you cannot reach the camera, the SmallRig Lite solves that problem for under $170.
Wedding and event videographers will love the 21-hour battery life. You can shoot an entire event without worrying about charging, which eliminates a major point of failure during paid work.
Fast-paced music video shooters who need lightning-quick rack focuses will find the motor jerky at maximum speed. The ease-in curve helps slow pulls but cannot fully mask the motor limitations during aggressive focus snaps.
The auto calibration feature struggles with lenses that have very long focus throws or inconsistent focus ring resistance. I had to manually calibrate on my vintage Nikon 50mm because the auto mode kept overshooting the focus limits.
Weight: 2.43 lbs
Connectivity: WiFi Bluetooth USB-C
Touch screen
Motor expansion up to 4
Model: WLC-T05
The Tilta Nucleus Nano II Base Kit earned our Editor’s Choice because it brings features from $2,000-plus professional systems into a $299 package. The touch screen display immediately sets it apart from every other wireless follow focus in this price range. You can navigate menus, adjust motor settings, and access camera control features without digging through a confusing button-based interface.
I tested the Nano II on a DJI RS3 Pro gimbal with a Canon R5 C, and the camera communication via USB-C let me control ISO, shutter speed, and frame rate directly from the handwheel. This is a workflow improvement that sounds minor until you experience it. Instead of touching the camera body and risking gimbal shake, you adjust exposure from the handwheel while operating.

The motor strength is genuinely impressive. My vintage Helios 44 has one of the stiffest focus rings of any lens I own, and the Nano II drives it smoothly without stalling. The original Nucleus Nano struggled with this lens, so the upgraded motor torque in the Nano II is a meaningful improvement. Lens mapping shows real-time focal distance on the screen, which helps you understand where your focus sits without looking at a separate monitor.
Compatibility extends to Nucleus M motors, original Nano motors, and even DJI motors, making this a flexible upgrade path if you already own Tilta gear. The Khronos iPhone kit integration is a nice bonus for mobile filmmakers who want pro-level focus control on smartphone shoots.

The Nano II Base Kit is perfect for solo gimbal operators who want camera control alongside focus pulling in one device. If you shoot weddings, real estate walkthroughs, or commercial content on a stabilizer, this unit replaces multiple accessories with a single handwheel.
Filmmakers who work with vintage or adapted lenses with stiff focus rings will appreciate the motor torque that cheaper wireless units cannot match.
Filmmakers who plan to expand to three or four motors should be cautious. Multiple Amazon reviewers report reliability issues when running multiple motors simultaneously, with sporadic connectivity and inconsistent performance. For full FIZ control, the Nucleus-M remains the more reliable choice.
The firmware update process has caused problems for some users, with updates occasionally breaking functionality. If you are not comfortable troubleshooting tech issues on set, the simpler SmallRig Lite may be a safer choice.
Weight: 9.6 oz
Motors: 2 included
F970 battery plate
Touch screen
Expandable to 4 motors
The Nucleus Nano II Control Handle Kit builds on the Base Kit by adding a control handle, a second motor, an F970 battery plate, and 15mm rods. This configuration is designed for shoulder-mounted operation where you need both focus and zoom control accessible from a single hand position. The included advanced soft carrying case keeps everything organized for transport.
I tested this kit on a narrative short film where I needed to pull focus and zoom simultaneously on a documentary-style interview. The control handle puts both functions within thumb reach, which is a genuine ergonomic advantage over handheld handwheel controllers. The touch screen inherited from the Base Kit gives you camera control access without reaching for the camera body.
However, the dual-motor reliability issues that affect the Nano II ecosystem are amplified here. Multiple professional users on Reddit and Amazon report that running two motors simultaneously leads to inconsistent performance. Motors drop connection, the system occasionally needs a restart mid-shoot, and the learning curve to get everything stable is significant. One user mentioned spending 8 to 10 hours learning the system before it was production-ready.
This kit suits shoulder rig operators who need integrated focus and zoom control for documentary, ENG-style, or live event coverage. The control handle design is genuinely well-thought-out for single-operator shoulder work where you cannot take your hand off the rig.
Filmmakers transitioning from a single-motor setup to dual control will appreciate the included accessories and carrying case that make the upgrade path straightforward.
If you need bulletproof reliability for paid professional work, the dual-motor issues are a real concern. The original Nucleus-M system has better track record for multi-motor consistency despite being older technology. Consider that option if reliability is your top priority.
The steep learning curve means this is not a plug-and-play solution. Budget significant setup time before your first shoot, and have a backup manual follow focus ready in case the wireless system fails.
Weight: 10.1 lbs
Wireless range: 1000 feet
Motors: 2 brushless
FIZ hand unit plus dual grips
Model: WLC-T03
The Tilta Nucleus-M is the system that disrupted the professional wireless follow focus market, and it remains the community consensus pick for indie and student film sets. On Reddit, users consistently describe it as the most popular low-budget wireless follow focus because it performs well and costs a fraction of Preston or Arri equivalents. Features that cost $10,000 a decade ago are available here for about $1,100.
I used the Nucleus-M on a 12-day short film shoot where we needed full FIZ control on a Sony FX9 with a Cooke cinema lens. The FIZ hand unit controls focus, iris, and zoom from a single controller, and the dual hand grips with finger wheels let my 1st AC pull focus from a comfortable position away from the camera. The 1000-foot wireless range meant we never lost signal even when operating from around corners.

The motors are incredibly quiet. We recorded dialogue with a boom mic positioned about three feet from the camera, and the motor operation was completely inaudible in the final audio track. This is where cheaper wireless systems often fail, and it is a critical advantage for narrative filmmaking. The auto calibration worked well with our hard-stop cinema lenses, mapping the full focus throw accurately.
The feel of the focus wheel is genuinely professional. The tension is right, the resistance is consistent across the full rotation, and the marking discs let my AC set precise focus marks for complex pulls. The included hard shell waterproof case is professional-grade and protects the entire system during transport.

The Nucleus-M is the best choice for narrative filmmakers, indie production companies, and rental houses that need professional FIZ control without the Arri price tag. If you have a dedicated focus puller on your crew, this system gives them the tools they need at a price that makes sense for productions under $100,000.
Documentary filmmakers who need quiet motor operation during interviews will also benefit. The whisper-quiet motors mean you can pull focus during a take without contaminating your audio.
Solo gimbal operators will find this system overkill. The motors are heavy enough to require gimbal counterweighting, and the FIZ hand unit is designed for a dedicated operator, not single-person run-and-gun work. Look at the Nano II or SmallRig Lite instead.
The finicky menu system is a known frustration. Settings occasionally disappear after power cycling, and the motors sometimes need a restart to recalibrate. Have your AC practice with the system before relying on it for critical takes.
Motors: 2
FIZ hand unit
Dual hand grips
Gear pitch: 0.8 and 0.5
Model: WLC-T06
The Nucleus-M II Ultimate Kit represents Tilta’s latest evolution of their professional FIZ system, adding lens mapping, wireless camera control, and ND motor support to the already capable Nucleus-M platform. This is the kit that brings features previously reserved for Preston and Arri systems into a price range that mid-budget productions can actually afford.
The multi-motor control supports focus, iris, zoom, and ND motors simultaneously, which is a meaningful upgrade for productions shooting with variable ND filters on mirrorless cameras. Lens mapping saves and displays focus, iris, and zoom information in real time, giving your focus puller the same visual feedback they would get from a $5,000-plus professional system.
Camera control lets you wirelessly adjust ISO, white balance, and shutter speed from the FIZ hand unit, eliminating the need to touch the camera during a take. The ecosystem integration means the M II works with motors and accessories from both the original Nucleus-M and the Nano II, protecting your investment if you are upgrading from an older Tilta system.
The comprehensive kit includes everything: two motors, motor gears in both 0.8 and 0.5 pitch, 15mm and 19mm rod mounts, connection cables, a P-Tap power cable, dual hand grips with Arri rosette adapters, a zoom module, the FIZ hand unit with marking disks, a monitor mounting bracket, and a hard shell waterproof case. This is a turnkey professional package.
The M II Ultimate Kit is designed for professional production companies and rental houses that need a complete FIZ solution ready to deploy. If you are outfitting a camera package for indie features, commercials, or episodic content, this kit covers every lens control scenario without requiring additional purchases.
Filmmakers upgrading from the original Nucleus-M will appreciate the backward compatibility, which lets them use existing motors and accessories while gaining the new lens mapping and camera control features.
With only 3 reviews at the time of writing, this is a very new product with limited real-world validation. Filmmakers who need proven reliability should stick with the original Nucleus-M, which has years of field testing and community feedback behind it.
The high price and limited stock availability mean this is not an impulse purchase. Factor in the learning curve for the new features, especially if your crew is already comfortable with the original Nucleus-M workflow.
Weight: 274g
Mount: 15mm rod
3 reversible gears
Dual marking disks
Model: MF15C
The Nitze MF15C is the follow focus I recommend to filmmakers who want maximum accessory value in a single purchase. The kit includes three reversible drive gears in 38, 43, and 65 teeth configurations, plus two snap-on magnetic marking disks, a 15mm aluminum rod, and a NATO rail clamp. At $59.99, the accessory package alone is worth most of the asking price.
I tested the MF15C alongside the Tilta Pocket and SmallRig 3010 during a comparative shoot, and the Nitze held its own on build quality. The aluminum construction has a solid, machined feel that belies the budget price. The adjustable mounting angle let me position the unit at the exact angle my wrist preferred, which reduced hand fatigue during a six-hour shoot day.

The three reversible drive gears are the standout feature. Different lenses have different focus ring diameters and gear pitch requirements, and having three options in the box means you are covered for almost any lens without buying aftermarket accessories. The magnetic marking disks snap on and off quickly, letting you swap between pre-marked disks for different lenses or scenes.
The main complaint is the focus stopper system. Unlike the quick-release A/B stops on SmallRig and Tilta units, the Nitze uses an older double-disk system that requires tedious screwing and unscrewing to adjust. Some users also report that certain units arrive with outrageously stiff rotation, suggesting quality control inconsistencies across production batches.

The Nitze MF15C is perfect for filmmakers who want a complete accessory kit without buying add-ons. If you are building your first follow focus rig and do not already own gears, marking disks, or rods, this kit includes everything you need to start pulling focus immediately.
Adaptable cinema glass users will appreciate the three gear options, which cover a wide range of lens diameters and pitch requirements out of the box.
Filmmakers who frequently adjust A/B stops between takes will find the screw-down system frustratingly slow compared to quick-release alternatives. The SmallRig 3010 or Tilta Pocket are better choices if you change focus marks regularly during a shoot.
Quality control appears inconsistent between units. Read recent reviews carefully and buy from a seller with a good return policy in case you receive a stiff unit.
Choosing between manual and wireless follow focus systems is the first and most important decision you will make. Each type serves different workflows, and picking the wrong one wastes money and frustrates you on set. I learned this the hard way when I bought a wireless system for a shoulder rig shoot where a manual unit would have been faster and more reliable.
Manual follow focus systems attach directly to your camera rig via 15mm or 19mm rods. You turn a physical wheel that meshes with a gear on your lens focus ring. There is no motor, no battery, no wireless signal, and no calibration required. Manual units are lighter, cheaper, more reliable, and provide better tactile feedback than wireless systems.
Wireless follow focus systems use a motor that attaches to your lens, controlled remotely by a handwheel or app. This allows you to pull focus from anywhere on set, which is essential for gimbal, jib, drone, and stabilizer work. Wireless systems cost more, require batteries, and introduce potential points of failure, but they solve problems that manual units fundamentally cannot address.
The vast majority of follow focus systems use 15mm rods, which is the standard for DSLR and mirrorless cinema rigs. If you shoot on a larger cinema camera like a RED or ARRI Alexa Mini, you may need 19mm rod compatibility, which limits your options significantly. The Tilta Nucleus-M II includes both 15mm and 19mm rod mounts, making it one of the few systems that works across both standards.
Check your camera cage or baseplate before buying. Some cages have proprietary rod systems that are not standard 15mm, which means you need an adapter or a follow focus designed specifically for that cage. SmallRig cages are the most common and use standard 15mm rods, which is why most of the products in this guide work seamlessly with them.
For wireless systems, motor torque determines which lenses you can drive. Photography lenses with smooth focus rings need only 1 to 2 kgf.cm of torque. Cinema lenses and vintage lenses with stiff focus rings may need 4 kgf.cm or more. The SmallRig Wireless Lite delivers 4.3 kgf.cm, which handles most lenses including stiff vintage glass. The Tilta Nucleus Nano II also has strong motors that can drive a Helios 44 without stalling.
For manual systems, the relevant metric is damping range, which controls how much resistance the focus wheel provides. The SmallRig F50 offers a 0.3 to 1.0 kgf range, while the F60 extends to 0.6 to 1.8 kgf. Match your damping to your lens for the most natural feel.
Professional cinema lenses use 0.8 MOD gear pitch, which is the industry standard. Most follow focus systems in this guide use 0.8 pitch gears. However, some newer lenses use 0.5 MOD pitch, and the Tilta Nucleus-M II includes both 0.8 and 0.5 pitch gears to cover both standards.
For photography lenses without built-in gear rings, you need an add-on gear ring that wraps around the focus ring. These come in snap-on, zip-tie, and seamless styles. Seamless gear rings are the most precise and least likely to slip, but they cost more. The Nitze MF15C includes the most gear options with three reversible drive gears in the box.
For wireless systems, battery life directly impacts your shoot day. The SmallRig Wireless Follow Focus Lite leads the category with 21 hours of runtime from its built-in 1400mAh battery. The Tilta Nucleus-M uses external batteries, which means you need to purchase them separately but can swap them out during long shoots. Look for systems that support D-Tap or P-Tap power input, which lets you run the motor from your camera battery or V-mount plate.
Fast charging support is a newer feature worth having. The SmallRig Lite supports PD and QC protocols, meaning you can top up from a USB-C power bank between takes. This is a lifesaver during all-day shoots where wall power is unavailable.
Wireless range matters more than you might think. The Tilta Nucleus-M boasts 1000 feet of range, which is overkill for most situations but provides a safety margin on large sets where signal interference is common. The SmallRig Wireless Lite has a shorter range that is perfectly adequate for gimbal and shoulder rig work where the operator stays within 10 to 15 feet of the camera.
Reliability is harder to quantify but critical. The Nucleus-M has years of community validation and is widely considered the most reliable wireless follow focus in its price range. The Nucleus Nano II has more features but reports of connectivity issues when running multiple motors. Read recent reviews and check firmware update history before committing to any wireless system.
A/B hard stops let you set two focus limit points for repeatable rack focuses between two subjects. Every product in this guide includes some form of A/B stops, but the implementation varies. Quick-release stops, like those on the SmallRig 3010 and Tilta Pocket, can be set in seconds. Screw-down stops, like those on the Nitze MF15C and Movo F2X, take longer to adjust but lock more securely.
Marking disks let you write focus positions for complex pulls with multiple focus points. The Movo F2X includes a magnetic marking disk that pops on and off for easy marking. Most other units include fixed marking disks that you write on directly with a dry erase marker.
Under $100, you get manual follow focus systems with basic A/B stops and single gear options. The Tilta Pocket and NEEWER PG001 are the strongest picks here. Between $100 and $200, manual units add dynamic damping, modular design, and multiple gears. The SmallRig F50 and F60 sit in this tier.
Between $170 and $350, wireless systems enter the picture. The SmallRig Wireless Lite at $170 is the standout value, while the Tilta Nucleus Nano II Base Kit at $299 adds touch screen and camera control. Above $1,000, you enter professional FIZ territory with the Tilta Nucleus-M and M II, which offer multi-motor control, long-range wireless, and cinema-grade reliability.
A follow focus system is a precision filmmaking tool that attaches to your camera rig via rods and uses a geared wheel to control lens focus smoothly and accurately. Turning the focus wheel rotates a gear that meshes with a gear ring on your lens, letting you pull focus without touching the lens directly. Wireless systems add a motor and remote controller for operation from a distance.
You need a follow focus if you shoot at wide apertures with shallow depth of field, use a gimbal or stabilizer where you cannot reach the camera, work with a dedicated focus puller, or need repeatable focus marks for multiple takes. Run-and-gun shooters and content creators using autofocus may not need one.
Manual follow focus systems use a physical geared wheel attached directly to your camera rig with no batteries or motors. Wireless systems use a motor on the lens controlled remotely by a handwheel or app. Manual units are cheaper, lighter, and more tactile. Wireless units enable remote focus pulling for gimbal, jib, and multi-operator work.
For manual follow focus, the Tilta Pocket Follow Focus at $59 and the SmallRig Mini Follow Focus 3010 at $79 are the best beginner options. For wireless, the SmallRig Wireless Follow Focus Lite Kit at $170 offers the easiest entry point with 21 hours of battery life and one-click calibration.
Budget manual follow focus systems cost between $55 and $100. Mid-range manual units with dynamic damping run $100 to $150. Entry-level wireless systems start around $170. Professional wireless FIZ systems range from $1,100 to $1,300. High-end cinema systems from Preston and Arri cost $5,000 to $15,000 or more.
The Tilta Nucleus Nano II Base Kit is the best wireless follow focus for gimbal users because it combines a lightweight design, strong motor torque for stiff lenses, touch screen control, and camera communication via USB-C. The SmallRig Wireless Follow Focus Lite is a strong budget alternative with excellent battery life.
After testing 12 systems across months of real production work, our top recommendation for the best follow focus systems in 2026 depends on your workflow. For gimbal operators and solo shooters, the Tilta Nucleus Nano II Base Kit delivers professional features at an accessible price. For budget-conscious filmmakers, the Tilta Pocket Follow Focus and SmallRig Wireless Lite cover both manual and wireless needs under $170. For professional narrative work, the Tilta Nucleus-M remains the community standard for reliable multi-motor FIZ control.
Whatever you choose, invest time in learning your system before relying on it for paid work. Focus pulling is a skill that takes practice, and the right follow focus is only as good as the person operating it.