AKASO EK7000 Review: Cheap 4K That Actually Works — With Limits
A £60 action cam that gives usable 4K, two batteries and a full mount kit — great for weekends, not for pro-level stabilization.
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AKASO EK7000 Review: Cheap 4K That Actually Works — With Limits
By Tech Editorial | April 2026
Intro The AKASO EK7000 is our pick if you want an affordable action camera that arrives ready to use. For £59.99 it bundles usable 4K capture, two spare batteries and a full GoPro‑style mount kit — everything a weekend adventurer needs to shoot surf, bike or family outings without buying extras.
Our pick: AKASO EK7000
AKASO EK7000 — £59.99
This camera solves the basic problem: get decent-looking 4K clips off the bike or in the water without spending £200+. The EK7000 scores 7.6 in our grading because it balances resolution, battery life and an accessory bundle into a package that’s ready to run.
Why it works:
- 4K/30fps plus 20MP stills mean you can crop and stabilise footage for social posts and light edits without losing too much detail.
- Two 1050mAh batteries (about 90 minutes each in real use) and a dual-charging setup keep you recording all day without hunting for outlets.
- Full GoPro‑style accessory kit, wrist remote and IP68 housing (30m/98ft) let you mount the camera anywhere and use it in the sea or rain straight away.
The honest trade-off: the EK7000’s 4K is largely interpolated, and its stabilization and low‑light performance trail pricier GoPro/DJI rivals — don’t expect pro-grade footage.
If you want to buy one and get filming fast, grab the AKASO EK7000 here: AKASO EK7000.
Best upgrade: GoPro HERO12 Black
GoPro HERO12 Black — ~£235
Paying the premium gets you true high-resolution capture, industry-leading HyperSmooth stabilization, much better low-light performance and a tougher, waterproof body that doesn’t need an external case for most activities. If you plan to use action footage for travel, client work or fast-moving sports, the HERO12 is worth the jump.
Worth it if: you need native high-frame 4K (or higher), class-leading stabilization and reliable low-light results.
(Price checked against major UK retailers; example listing: Currys.)
Best budget pick: Campark ACT74
Campark ACT74 — often found under £70
If your sole aim is the lowest possible price while still getting 4K, the Campark ACT74 delivers basic 4K/30 capture, a wide-angle lens and an accessory pack similar to the EK7000. Expect lower-quality stabilization, older sensors and fewer software updates — but it’s fine as a throwaway helmet cam or a backup.
Worth it if: you want the cheapest working 4K action cam for occasional use or risky stunts where you won’t cry if it gets trashed.
How we chose
We prioritised real-world criteria that matter for action cams: native vs interpolated 4K, stabilization quality, waterproofing, battery life and what’s included in the box (mounts, remote, spare batteries). Our picks are based on AKASO’s specs, hands‑on notes from multiple reviews and current UK retail prices.
Frequently asked questions
Is the EK7000’s 4K “real” 4K? No — AKASO achieves 4K by interpolation from a smaller sensor rather than a high-end native 4K sensor. For social clips and light edits it’s fine; for pixel‑perfect large crops or pro work, it’s not.
Is £59.99 a good price for this camera? Yes, if what you want is a ready-to-run kit: two batteries, a remote and lots of mounts. If you prioritise stabilization, low‑light or native high‑frame 4K, the GoPro (or DJI) is worth the extra cash.
How long do the batteries last and are spares included? AKASO bundles two 1050mAh batteries; expect about 90 minutes per battery in typical use, and the kit includes charging so you can carry spares and keep shooting.
Named verdict If you want an inexpensive, ready‑to‑use 4K action camera with spare batteries and a full mount kit for weekend adventures, buy the AKASO EK7000. Skip it if you need market‑leading stabilization, native high‑frame 4K or pro low‑light performance — then buy a GoPro.
Want one now? Grab the AKASO EK7000 and start recording.
