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Insta360 Built Its First Pocket Gimbal, and It Shoots 8K Through a Leica Lens

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Insta360 Luna Ultra

Insta360 has spent years dominating 360 cameras while leaving the compact gimbal category to DJI. That ends now.

Price: $769.99
Where to Buy: Amazon



The company launched the Luna Ultra, its first flagship dual-lens 8K pocket gimbal, co-engineered with Leica and priced from US$769.99. It’s a direct swing at the camera nearly every creator in this space already owns, and Insta360 built it to shoot in situations where a single-lens pocket cam runs out of room.

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What the Luna Ultra is

Insta360 Luna UltraStrip away the launch language and the Luna Ultra is a 3-axis stabilized handheld with two cameras packed into one body. The main camera pairs a Leica Summicron lens with a 1-inch 8K sensor at F1.8, which Insta360 rates for 14 stops of dynamic range. A Triple AI Chip system handles processing, and the whole thing weighs about 233g, so it drops into a jacket pocket about as easily as a phone.

The second lens is the real story

Most pocket gimbals give you one focal length and call it done. The Luna Ultra adds a dedicated telephoto lens built around a 1/1.3-inch sensor at F2.0, and that second camera opens up five focal lengths with up to 12x zoom, plus 6x that Insta360 says stays lossless. The payoff is reach and compression you can’t fake on a single-lens rig, from tighter portraits with real subject separation to subjects you’d otherwise have to walk toward.




Insta360 Luna Ultra

Both cameras record 8K up to 30 frames per second in Insta360’s 10-bit I-Log profile, and 4K climbs to 120 frames per second for slow motion. If you want the smoothest slow-mo, 1080p pushes to 240 frames per second, though the detail drops with it.

Battery, storage, and the detachable screen

Insta360 rates the 1550mAh battery for up to four hours, with fast charging to 80 percent in roughly 23 minutes, though real-world numbers land lower once you lean on 8K and slow motion. Storage is a real differentiator, with 47GB built in and microSD support up to 2TB.

The hardware trick people will talk about is the detachable 2-inch OLED touchscreen, which Insta360 calls an industry first, letting it pop off the body for wireless remote monitoring. For solo creators framing themselves, that screen is the feature that changes how you shoot.




Insta360 Luna Ultra

How it stacks up against DJI, and the lawsuit hanging over it

Insta360’s answer leans on the second lens, the removable screen, and that 1-inch main sensor, competing directly with the obvious rival on zoom range and low-light hardware. Field time will be the real judge.

DJI filed suit against Insta360 on June 11, the day after the Luna Ultra launched, alleging two design patents and four utility patents tied to the Osmo Pocket 3 were violated. Insta360 countersued the following day, asserting five of its own gimbal and stabilization patents against DJI.

Both companies withdrew their US filings in early July and shifted the dispute to China, where the cases are now active. For buyers, the practical takeaway is the same: the hardware is shipping worldwide, and the legal battle is a story to watch, not a reason to wait.




Insta360 Luna Ultra

Pricing, bundles, and where to buy

Insta360 Luna UltraInsta360 sells the Luna Ultra in three tiers, each in Cosmic Black or Stellar White. The Standard Bundle starts at US$769.99 and includes the camera, a protective cover, a wind guard, a 1/4-inch thread handle, and a wrist strap. The Creator Bundle at US$969.99 adds a Mic Pro transmitter, a wide-angle lens, a battery handle, and a carry bag, while the Endurance Bundle sits at US$879.99 for longer shoots.

Who should buy it

Buy the Luna Ultra if you’re a vlogger or mobile filmmaker who wants two focal lengths, real zoom, and a screen you can detach for solo work, all in something that fits a pocket. The 1-inch sensor and F1.8 lens make it a strong low-light pick, and the built-in 47GB means you can start shooting before you’ve even found a memory card.

Price: $769.99
Where to Buy: Amazon




Skip it if you already own a recent single-lens pocket gimbal and rarely miss the reach, because the telephoto and the price premium are the whole argument here. For everyone else weighing a first serious pocket camera, this is the most interesting option Insta360 has ever put in the category.



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