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The best polarizing filters in 2024 | Digital Camera World

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The best polarizing filters are a must for landscape shoots – reducing reflections and giving color and contrast a big boost Ocular Lens In Microscope

The best polarizing filters in 2024 | Digital Camera World

The quick list 1. Best all round 2. Best value 3. Best money can buy 4. Best with NX-filter holder 5. Best for versatility 6. Best for most users 7. Best for Cokin P-series 8. Best for high-end glass How to choose How we test FAQs

The best polarizing filters are a practically essential tool for outdoor photography. Polarizing filters, or polarizers as they're commonly known, boost the vibrancy and contrast in your images by reducing unwanted reflections from surfaces and cutting out haze in the sky. It's an effect that can't be replicated easily with digital tools, which is why a polarizer is such a good buy for pretty much any photographer.

Essentially, a polarizer cuts out certain light waves (see the bottom of this page for a fuller explanation), reducing the level of glare and haze from sunlight, and thereby resulting in richer colours and better clarity. By cutting out reflected light, it also allows you to capture the character and color of water with much more depth, which is hugely useful for photographing rivers, lakes and seas.

Even if you're using some of the best photo editing software, this is a difficult effect to achieve digitally. Much like the best neutral density filters, polarizers have stayed enduring popular in the digital age because they do something unique that happens at the moment of capture. In this guide, we've picked out the polarizers that have truly impressed our testing team – read on to see our picks.

Ben is the Imaging Labs manager, responsible for all the testing on Digital Camera World and across the entire photography portfolio at Future. Our go-to guy for technical insight, Ben is an expert at assessing the quality of photographic filters.

This HD Nano Mk II filter is a simply superb circular polarizer. Build quality is epic, the glass is toughened and the nano structure coatings are hard as nails. 

Marumi offers four ranges of circular polarizers. The DHG Super range gets a water and oil-repellent coating, which beads away droplets and resists fingerprints.

Best money can buy

The best money can buy

For a long time, LEE Filters were only available as part of a holder system. Now, they've produced this superb screw-in polarizer, well worth the wait – and the money.

Best with NX filter holder

If you're already using the Cokin NX slot-in filter system, picking up this polariser is a no-brainer. It can be used with super-wide lenses, and has an intuitive control system.

Working as part of the LEE100 filter system, this circular polarizer can be clipped to the front of a square LEE holder via an adapter, allowing for simple stacking.

Best for most users

Best for most users 

Cheaper than many others, and available in a range of sizes, Tiffen's Circular Polarizing Filter offers good transmission and sharpness, with just a slight cool cast.

Cokin's P-series is a great way to build up an interchangeable system of filters, and the P164 is an excellent polarizer to have in the rotation.

Best for high-end glass

If you're using top-quality lenses, you don't want to ruin them with a poor filter. Hoya's Fusion One Next Cir-PL is an excellent choice, delivering great sharpness.

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This HD nano Mk II filter is a simply superb circular polarizer. Build quality is epic, the glass is toughened and the nano structure coatings are hard as nails. In our tests we found that there’s actually less of a darkening effect than usual. Compared with most circular polarizers, this Hoya delivers 25 per cent more light transmission, which equates to about half an f/stop. 

It’s not only a bonus when using the optical viewfinder of a DSLR, but also when you need to retain speedy shutter speeds under low lighting. It’s available in a wide range of popular sizes, overall performance is spectacular and it’s well worth the investment. 

See our full Hoya HD Nano Mk II CIR-PL review.

Marumi offers a slightly confusing four distinct ranges of circular polarizers, each with different glass/coating combinations. The DHG Super range gets a water and oil-repellent coating, which works well, easily beading away droplets and resisting fingerprints, albeit not quite as well as the Lee Polariser.

However, DHG Super polarizers don’t incorporate high light transmission glass, as found in Marumi’s EXUS polarizers, which may explain why our sample filter restricted light by half-a-stop more than the best filters on test. Otherwise, optical performance is excellent, with no drop in image sharpness, and no sign of color casts or vignetting. The latter is mainly thanks to a slim frame design that’s a whisker under 5mm thick. It screws very smoothly into your lens’ filter thread, and the polarizer’s front element rotation is also slick.

With filter thread diameters available in all common sizes from 37mm through to 95mm (and even an elusive 105mm option, if you can find it), there’s a DHG Super polarizer for almost any lens, and most are very well priced, in the UK at least.

See our full Marumi DHG Super Circular PL review

For a long time, LEE Filters were only available as part of a holder system, requiring an extra attachment to get on and off the front of the lens. However, in 2021, the company finally relented and came out with the Elements series – circular filters designed to be quickly attached and detached from a lens without the need for a holder. 

Made from premium glass, the Elements Polarizer also has a useful adjustment ring to allow you to fine-tine the polarizing effect. It won't fit all lenses as its minimum thread size is 67mm, but it covers a range that includes a lot of optics. If you don't mind a slightly higher asking price, we would say that the Elements Polarizer is absolutely worth it. 

See full Lee Filters Elements Circular Polariser review

The NX-Series is Cokin's latest slot-in filter system, taking 100mm wide filters. The NX CPL has been specifically designed to fit into this frame system - so is best suited to those who want a range of different filters to use with their cameras, rather than just a polarizer. 

In our tests, we were impressed that the smart, low-profile aluminum holder is compatible with wide lenses (up to an EFL of 16mm). Cokin sells the NX-Series Holder and CPL filter separately, but they are also available together in a number of kits, including the NX-Series Starter kit which includes 72mm, 77mm and 82mm adapter ring plus a 100x100mm frame and a 100x143.5mm frame for holding Cokin Nuance square or rectangular filters (or other filters of the same size and 2mm thickness). See our full Cokin NX CPL review.

Lee’s Polariser works in conjunction with the LEE100 100mm filter system. This is based around the LEE100 holder that attaches to your lens via a suitably sized adapter ring. The polarizer then clips to the front of the holder, leaving space for additional square filters to slide in behind.

This system means the polarizer is large at 105mm in diameter, allowing it to cover numerous different lens diameters. It’s also very easy to rotate, and it clips into the holder much more easily than trying to screw a conventional polarizer onto your lens. However, the clip-in mechanism is surprisingly difficult to detach again, requiring more squeeze than is comfortable. Another consideration is the combined filter, holder and adapter ring cost, which is significant.

But that said, you get what you pay for. Lee’s glass has no negative impact on image sharpness, it only reduces light transmission by just over 1-stop, and you needn’t worry about any sign of color casts. This is also easily the best filter for resisting fingerprints and repelling water, with droplets beading away perfectly. Lee even includes a high quality zippered pouch in which to store the filter.

See our full Lee Filters LEE100 Polariser review

Tiffen's hugely reliable filters are known among photographers for being a good affordable option, and so it goes for the firm's Circular Polarizer range. These filters are cheaper than most, and come in a good range of sizes from 25mm right up to 92mm. 

There's a slight cool cast to them, but it's not too pronounced, and light transmission and sharpness are generally very good. The high-quality ColorCore Glass construction is what gives the filters their excellent overall quality.

They're a little thicker than some of the others on this list, but not enough to really be a problem. 

Read our full Tiffen Circular Polarizer review

The well-established Cokin P-series range of filters is known for being affordable and offering a wide range of creative effects, including polarizers. Most of the range is square or rectangular, fitting into the mount via a P-series filter holder. This filter holder attaches to your lens with an adaptor ring, which is available for lenses with attachment threads of between 48mm and 82mm. 

The filter holder has three slots for filters. One fits circular filters, such as the Cokin P164 polarizer. However, there are also two central slots that fit square or rectangular shaped filters as well. The knurled outer edge of the P164 polarizer is designed to ergonomically allow easy rotation.

While the Cokin P-series is affordable, we did feel that the plastic holder felt a little flimsy in comparison to the Lee Filters holder, or the newer Cokin NX System. We also found that there was a slight warm color cast and some muddiness in darker areas. 

Designed to update the original Fusion One series, Hoya's Fusion One Next filters are premium, high-quality polarizers for those demanding the best in terms of optical quality. Constructed from 18 coated layers of glass to provide ultra-high light transmission, these filters also have a low-profile filter ring to make them useful even for super-wide shooting. They have a front screw too, so you can stack the polarizer with a UV or protection filter if so desired.

The best polarizing filters in 2024 | Digital Camera World

Long Pass Filters In our tests we noted that the Fusion One Next Cir-PL cuts out up to around 1.3EV of light so the camera settings need to be adjusted accordingly. We also like that this filter is available in such a wide variety of filter threads - with 13 different options currently available. See full