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The best microscopes in 2024 | Digital Camera World

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Explore inner space, educate your children, and shoot macro images with the best microscopes Industrial Camera Usb

The best microscopes in 2024 | Digital Camera World

The Quick List ↩ 1. Best for beginners 2. Best for photography 3. Best for students 4. Best for children 5. Best for inner space 6. Best stereoscopic 7. Best with in-built camera 8. Best budget USB 9. Best for young kids How to choose How we test

The best microscope allows you to experience the wonders of nature, beyond what the naked eye can detect. Just as the best telescopes let you explore outer space, microscopes give you access to inner space.

In our article below, you'll find a range of the best microscopes, for a range of uses and at a variety of prices. You'll find the best microscopes for kids and adults,  beginners and experienced users, and we'll give to the facts and figures you need, such as how they're powered, the level of magnification they offer, and any special features they offer. 

But how do you choose the right one for you? Well, just as if you were choosing a camera or phone, ask yourself what you want to use it for, and how much you have to spend on it. Once you've decided all that, you're sure to find the perfect candidate in our list below.

Just get started with microscopes? Then you'll want the Bresser Biolux NV 20x-1280x, which is our choice as the best microscope for beginners (and it's suitable for advanced users too.) Read more below

Want to shoot pictures with your microscope? This slick, multi-purpose microscope offers 2,500x magnification and the ability to attach a camera via its trinocular head.  Read more below

The Celestron  CM800 Compound Microscope is a great choice for college and university students. It comes with 10 prepared slides included out of the box, plus a sturdy all-metal build.  Read more below

This is our top recommendation for eight to 12-year-olds. They can use the supplied blank slides to explore their own specimens, and there's hatchery experiment to create slides. Read more below

Best for inner space

This microscope offers 2,000x magnification, you can explore the structure of fungi and protozoa, the details of cell walls, membranes, organelles, and even the nucleus in cells.  Read more below

Want to view everything in three dimensions? This upright, 2x AA battery-powered microscope does a great job It comes with 20x power and 10x adjustable stereo all-glass eyepieces. Read more below

Why you can trust Digital Camera World Our expert reviewers spend hours testing and comparing products and services so you can choose the best for you. Find out how we test.

Just get started with microscopes? Then you'll want the Bresser Biolux NV 20x-1280x, which is the best microscope for beginners – although it aims to be suitable for advanced users too. 

This device comes with plenty of accessories, including an LED lamp offering eight steps of variable brightness, a filter wheel with five colors, and various filters. More excitingly still, this mid-priced metal- and plastic-built microscope from German brand Bresser also features a built-in camera, enabling you to preserve and study your microscopic examinations at leisure. 

There's a broad selectable magnification range from 20x to 1280x, and power (and portability) is delivered via three AA batteries. To get you started, there are five prepared slides and five blank slides included out of the box. 

The resolution from the camera is limited to 1280x720 pixels, but this is fine for recording results, or showing your images on your computer screen using the supplied Windows software. In short, this is ideal for anyone taking their first steps into microscopic worlds.

Read our full Bresser Biolux NV 20x-1280x review

Want to shoot pictures with your microscope? The Swift SW380T is our top pick. This slick, multi-purpose ‘research grade’ microscope is aimed at everyone from hobbyists to clinicians. And for a price, you get a huge 2500x magnification and the ability to attach a camera via its trinocular head/camera port. 

Its two 10x and 25x glass eyepieces have been set at a 30-degree angle that aims to combat neck strain when viewing specimens, while the focusing system offers precision. You get to choose from no fewer than six levels of magnification, including 40x, 100x, 250x, 400x, 1000x, and 2500x. An LED bulb controlled via a dimmer wheel provides the necessary illumination, while the large mechanical stage is similarly adjustable. Power comes courtesy of the mains.

The Celestron CM800 Compound Microscope is an affordable option that's marketed as ‘lab grade’, making it a great choice for college and university students. It comes with 10 prepared slides included out of the box, plus a sturdy all-metal build. 

The combination of two eyepieces and three objective lenses allows for magnified observation at 40x, 80x, 100x, 200x, 400x, and even a whopping 800x, and the built-in LED illumination is adjustable. While a mains adapter is provided, it's also suitable to take out-and-about for field use. It can be powered by three AA batteries (included), and metal clips ensure whichever slide you're examining stays firmly in place. 

A single focus dial maintains ease of use, and the microscope itself remains cool to the touch when in use. Even out of the classroom, this one exudes class.

While more expensive than some microscopes aimed at kids, this is a thoughtful bundle, supplied with 35 ready-prepared slides that mean young scientists can get started right away. Once the 8-12-year-olds (recommended ages) have had their enthusiasm engaged, they can use the supplied blank slides to explore their own specimens. There is even a brine shrimp egg hatchery experiment from which they can create slides.

Not only is all this inspiration included, but the microscope itself has a pleasingly adult feel with adult manufacture and binocular optics. We would prefer the option of higher magnification, but this set is more about revealing the potential to kids and binocular microscopes offer a 3D perspective. 

The lighting means examining rocks and quartz is easy. It’s also much appreciated that a slide storage box is amongst the accessories, not to mention the detailed learning guide.

Do you or your kids want to delve deep into the microscopic world? Amscope's OMAX 40x-2000x Lab LED Binocular Microscope offers 2,000x magnification, you can explore the structure of fungi and protozoa, see the details of cell walls, membranes, organelles, and even view the nucleus in cells. 

This microscope is mainly constructed from metal, with some plastic parts, and comes fully assembled. Perfect for home and school use, it features a sliding binocular viewing head, two pairs of widefield eyepieces, along with LED lighting and dimmer controls to help you see everything clearly. 

The device is powered from the mains, and you can connect it to a camera via USB. You also get 100 glass slides and cover slips and 100-sheet lens cleaning papers with your purchase.

New to the microscopic world, and want to view it in three dimensions? This stereo microscope for beginners makes doing so easy and affordable.

This upright, 2x AA battery-powered microscope, with a robust metal head is nice and portable. It comes with 20x power and 10x adjustable stereo all-glass eyepieces with two objective lenses. You'll also benefit from a large viewing stage that bigger objects, such as rocks and beetles, can be placed on for examination with the aid of built-in LED illumination. 

Two sample specimens are included and operation is made easy and straightforward via a single focus control. Also consider Celestron’s S10-60 device, which, as its name suggests, provides a wider magnification range of between 10x and 60x.

A microscope with a built-in camera is a great idea for keeping a record of your findings, and sharing them with your teachers, friends or fellow researchers. The PentaView as its name implies has five different optical magnifications, ranging from 4x to 60x. But thanks to the four-inch LCD touchscreen what you actually see is a magnification of 40-600x, so you can get a clear view of your observed sample – and there is even a digital zoom option if you want to magnify further (although this will sacrifice quality). 

Images can be recorded onto an SD card at a reasonable, but unremarkable five megapixel resolution, with video captured at 640x480 pixels at 30fps. The LCD has a more limited 480 x 272 pixels resolution, however.

This is a cost-effective and portable alternative to a traditional microscope which can take advantage of your phone, tablet, or computer screen to give a close look without needing an eyepiece. The 2MP camera feeds 1080P video to the phone wirelessly (or, oddly, 720P over USB). This makes it very portable.

The Max-See viewing achieves what it promises, too. There is no password on the Wi-Fi so it isn’t a difficult setup, but younger kids will need help. On the computer, the device appears as a camera just as when connecting a webcam.

The best microscopes in 2024 | Digital Camera World

Live Cell Microscope The resulting video feed feels a bit more like a using macro camera (a feature that is included with some phones) – it wouldn’t please a serious biologist. It does, however, provide good detail for a similar investment as a basic kids' microscope without so much prep being required. You could even get some interesting stills for social media.