Leica M6
IconicKnown as "M6 Classic"

The M6 is the camera most responsible for the film photography revival of the 2010s and 2020s. Its balance of TTL metering and a fully mechanical shutter made it the most usable and practical film M ever built, and its cultural pull was strong enough that Leica reissued it in 2022.
Famous for
- Sebastião Salgado shot much of his Genesis-era work on M6 bodies
- The default 'first film Leica' recommendation for decades
- TTL flash metering brought the M into the professional studio era
Introduced in 1984, the Leica M6 solved the one complaint photographers had about earlier M bodies: there was no reliable built-in light meter. The M6 added a TTL (through-the-lens) meter with LED indicators in the viewfinder — just two arrows and a dot — without sacrificing the fully mechanical shutter that makes the camera work without batteries in a pinch. It was the right camera at the right time, and it stayed in production for fourteen years.
For newcomers to film photography: the M6 is the reason the Leica M system has a second life in the 21st century. When the film revival began in the 2010s, a generation of photographers discovered that the M6 was the most practical entry point into classic Leica shooting — metered, reliable, and still fully mechanical if the batteries die. Used prices climbed from a few hundred dollars to well over $2,000 as demand outpaced supply. Leica noticed: they reissued the M6 in 2022. The original 1984–1998 production run is the camera that made film cool again, and it did it by being genuinely excellent rather than merely fashionable.
Key specs
- type
- 35mm rangefinder
- metering
- TTL center-weighted, LED in finder
- shutter
- cloth focal-plane, 1s–1/1000 + B (mechanical)
- finder magnification
- 0.72x
- framelines
- 28+90 / 35+135 / 50+75mm
- production
- ≈173,000 units (1984–1998)
Variants & finishes
The standard M6 in its most-produced finish. Black chrome is electroplated — more durable than black paint and the version most people mean when they say 'M6'.
The bright-chrome M6 — less common than black but equally capable. Popular with photographers who prefer the traditional silver Leica aesthetic.
Limited production run with a titanium-coated top plate. Cosmetic distinction only — mechanically identical to the standard M6, but rarer and commands a collector premium.
Market value
Launch price: $1,074 (1984)
Used-market price (USD, estimated median)
Estimates from auction and dealer records — condition and completeness vary.
View data
| Date | Price | Source | Condition |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2016-01 | $1,200 | curated-estimate | user |
| 2017-01 | $1,300 | curated-estimate | user |
| 2018-01 | $1,500 | curated-estimate | user |
| 2019-01 | $1,800 | curated-estimate | user |
| 2020-01 | $2,500 | curated-estimate | user |
| 2021-01 | $3,200 | curated-estimate | user |
| 2022-01 | $3,800 | curated-estimate | user |
| 2023-01 | $4,200 | curated-estimate | user |
| 2024-01 | $4,000 | curated-estimate | user |
| 2025-01 | $3,900 | curated-estimate | user |
| 2026-01 | $4,000 | curated-estimate | user |
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