Leica M3
IconicKnown as "The M3"

Widely regarded as the greatest rangefinder ever built; debuted the M mount and the finest viewfinder Leica ever made. The benchmark every M since has been measured against.
Famous for
- Henri Cartier-Bresson's camera of choice through much of his career
- Preferred by Vietnam-era photojournalists including Philip Jones Griffiths
- The M-mount's debut: the bayonet that replaced 28 years of screw mounts
When Leitz unveiled the M3 at Photokina 1954, it obsoleted every rangefinder on the market overnight — including Leica's own screw-mount bodies. It introduced the M bayonet mount (still used on the M11 seventy years later), a bright combined viewfinder/rangefinder with automatic parallax-corrected framelines, and a 0.91x magnification finder that has never been bettered in an M body since.
For newcomers: when people say "no digital M finder is as good as the M3's," this is the camera they mean. Over 220,000 were made, so clean users are still affordable — it's many collectors' first classic Leica. Early "double stroke" (DS) bodies need two advance strokes per frame; later "single stroke" (SS) bodies are the more usable pick. Buttondown early examples with Buddha-ear strap lugs command collector premiums.
Key specs
- type
- 35mm rangefinder
- finder magnification
- 0.91x
- framelines
- 50/90/135mm
- shutter
- cloth focal-plane, 1s–1/1000
- production
- ≈226,000 units (1954–1966)
Variants & finishes
Early M3 bodies need two short advance strokes per frame rather than one — a mechanical safeguard Leica removed in 1957. Collectors prize early double-stroke serials; everyday shooters usually prefer single stroke.
Revised film advance completes winding in a single smooth stroke. More ergonomic for rapid shooting and far more common on the used market.
Market value
Launch price: $447 (1954)
Used-market price (USD, estimated median)
Estimates from auction and dealer records — condition and completeness vary.
View data
| Date | Price | Source | Condition |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2016-01 | $700 | curated-estimate | user |
| 2017-01 | $750 | curated-estimate | user |
| 2018-01 | $800 | curated-estimate | user |
| 2019-01 | $900 | curated-estimate | user |
| 2020-01 | $1,050 | curated-estimate | user |
| 2021-01 | $1,350 | curated-estimate | user |
| 2022-01 | $1,650 | curated-estimate | user |
| 2023-01 | $1,800 | curated-estimate | user |
| 2024-01 | $1,900 | curated-estimate | user |
| 2025-01 | $2,000 | curated-estimate | user |
| 2026-01 | $2,050 | curated-estimate | user |
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