Moment Fisheye 8mm II vs Wide 16mm II - Which Wide Lens Is For you?

Updated

The 16mm Wide II and 8mm Fisheye II are Moment's most exciting wide lenses yet. But how do they actually compare to the 18mm and 14mm they're replacing — and is your iPhone's built-in ultrawide even worth using anymore?

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If you've been shooting with Moment lenses for a while, you probably already know what the 18mm Wide and 14mm Fisheye brought to the table. They were solid, dependable, and gave iPhone shooters a real alternative to just defaulting to whatever focal length Apple decided to bake in.

But Moment just dropped two new lenses - the 16mm Wide and the 8mm Fisheye - and they're worth talking about seriously, because these almost completely change the conversation.

Let's break down how all of these lenses actually compare, and more importantly, which one belongs in your kit.

Shot on Fisheye 14mm
Shot on Fisheye 14mm
Shot on Fisheye 8mm
Shot on Fisheye 8mm
Shot on Fisheye 8mm
Shot on Fisheye 8mm
Shot on Fisheye 14mm
Shot on Fisheye 14mm

Shooting on iPhone's Built-In Lenses

Before getting into the Moment lenses themselves, it's worth acknowledging the trade-off that every iPhone shooter knows too well. The main camera, your 24mm equivalent, is genuinely excellent. Great colors, great dynamic range, sharp across the frame. But the second you step over to the 13mm .5x ultra-wide, the image quality takes a noticeable dip. Colors shift. Low light performance drops off. It’s level of compromise that makes you question why that secondary camera isn't held to the same standard as the main one.

This is exactly the gap that Moment's wide lenses are designed to fill. By attaching to your main camera rather than switching to a secondary lens, both the 16mm Wide II and the 8mm Fisheye II let you work at wider focal lengths without sacrificing the image quality you're used to from your primary shooter.

iPhone 13mm .05 Camera
iPhone 13mm .05 Camera
Fisheye 8mm
Fisheye 8mm
iPhone 13mm .05 Camera
iPhone 13mm .05 Camera
Fisheye 8mm
Fisheye 8mm

Wide 18mm vs. Wide 16mm II

The original Wide 18mm built up a loyal following for good reason. It sits in a sweet spot… wide enough to open up a scene, tight enough to still feel grounded and intentional. If you've been shooting with it, you already know what it does well.

The new Wide 16mm II helps refine that level of scenery. The extra two millimeters of width might not sound like much on paper, but in practice it gives you just a bit more breathing room to make a real difference when you're vlogging handheld, shooting talking heads outdoors, or trying to shoot interiors without backing yourself into a wall.

What the Wide 16mm II also brings is noticeably nicer background separation. Even though you're shooting wider than 24mm, the larger main camera sensor does real work here, giving you a focus falloff that actually feels pleasing rather than clinical. It brings in more light than the ultra-wide, handles low light better, and just produces images that feel more like what you'd expect from a proper wide lens.

The Wide 16mm II accepts a 67mm filter thread adapter, which opens up a whole workflow for more serious mobile shooters. Diffusion filters, variable NDs, circular polarizers - if you're shooting Apple ProRes and want the most out of your glass, this is where the Wide 16mm II steps ahead of its predecessor and really earns its place as a pro-level video lens. Pair it with the Tele 58mm lens that takes the same adapter, and you've got a genuinely powerful two-lens kit.

That said, the Wide 18mm isn't obsolete. If you already own it, it still holds its own, especially as part of a multi-cam setup where you want distinct focal lengths for different angles. Both lenses can comfortably coexist in a kit, each serving a slightly different role.

Shot on Fisheye 8mm II
Shot on Fisheye 8mm II
Shot on iPhone 13mm .05 Camera
Shot on iPhone 13mm .05 Camera
Shot on Wide 16mm II
Shot on Wide 16mm II
Shot on iPhone 24mm 1x Camera
Shot on iPhone 24mm 1x Camera
iPhone 1x 24mm Camera
iPhone 1x 24mm Camera
Wide 16mm
Wide 16mm
iPhone 1x 24mm Camera
iPhone 1x 24mm Camera
Wide 16mm
Wide 16mm
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Wide 16mm
An image without an alt, whoops
Wide 18mm
An image without an alt, whoops
Wide 16mm
An image without an alt, whoops
Wide 18mm

Fisheye 14mm vs. Fisheye 8mm II

The jump from the Fisheye 14mm to the Fisheye 8mm II is much more dramatic than the Wide upgrade - and the Fisheye 8mm II surprised more than any other Moment lens in recent memory.

The Fisheye 14mm was already a capable, fun lens to shoot with. It gave you that characteristic fisheye distortion, wrapped a scene nicely, and produced solid results on the main iPhone camera. But the Fisheye 8mm II is noticeably way, way wider. You feel immediately when you look through the frame. It packs so much more into a single scene, especially when you're shooting low angle or getting close to a subject. The foreground effect it creates is genuinely wild in the best possible way.

More importantly, the image quality out of the Fisheye 8mm II is impressive in a way that's hard to overstate when you put it side by side with the iPhone's built-in 13mm ultra-wide. The colors are richer and more accurate straight out of camera. Low light performance is meaningfully better. It's the kind of comparison that makes you reconsider how much you've been settling for with the built-in ultrawide.

For video especially, the 8mm Fisheye II opens up creative possibilities that go well beyond just "wide angle." Mounting your iPhone inside a cardboard box, attaching it low to the ground, tucking it into tight spaces; the fisheye perspective turns all of those unconventional positions into genuinely compelling shots. It starts to shift how you think about camera placement entirely. You can put an iPhone somewhere a dedicated camera could never go, and with this lens attached, those shots actually look great.

Fisheye 8mm
Fisheye 8mm
Wide 16mm
Wide 16mm
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Fisheye 8mm
An image without an alt, whoops
Wide 16mm

Which Lens Do You Actually Need?

The Wide 16mm II is the everyday wide. It's the lens you reach for when you want cinematic width without the weirdness of a fisheye, when you're vlogging or shooting a talking head, when you need filter support for more controlled video work. If you want one wide lens that can do everything at a high level, this is it.

The Fisheye 8mm II is the creative weapon. It's the lens that changes how you think about shooting, pushes you into new angles and perspectives, and delivers image quality that genuinely outperforms what your iPhone gives you natively at ultra-wide focal lengths. It's also just a lot of fun — which matters more than people give it credit for.

The Wide 18mm still earns its place if you already own it, particularly for multi-cam setups or if you prefer the slightly tighter framing it offers compared to the 16mm.

The Fisheye 14mm is the one that's hardest to justify going forward, purely because the 8mm Fisheye II is such a meaningful step forward in both width and image quality.

If you can only pick one of the new lenses, think about your shooting style. Wide angle video and photography with filter flexibility? Go 16mm Wide II. Creative angles, low light ultra-wide, and a lens that genuinely changes how you frame a shot? Go 8mm Fisheye II.

If the budget allows, honestly, both are worth having, as they cover different enough ground that they won't be redundant sitting next to each other in your bag.

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