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The Best Binoculars for Hunting of 2022

The Best Binoculars for Hunting of 2022

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The best binoculars for hunting are co*fortable to use, allow you to see animals in low light, and offer performance for the money.
Andrew McKean

The best hunting binoculars of 2022 feature durability, versatility, and value


The post The Best Binoculars for Hunting of 2022 appeared first on Outdoor Life.



                              
The best binoculars for hunting are co*fortable to use, allow you to see animals in low light, and offer performance for the money.
Andrew McKean

 

   
     
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            Best Budget
         

                             alt="This co*pact 8-power binocular does everything well enough for a top budget pick."
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            Nikon Monarch M5 8×42
         

           
               
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Summary

             

This co*pact 8-power binocular does everything well enough for a top budget pick.



           

            Best Overall
         

                             alt="Tight, silky controls and a stylish chassis make the B1.2 a great all-around bino."
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            Maven B1.2 10×42
         

           
               
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Summary

             

Tight, silky controls and a stylish chassis make the B1.2 a great all-around bino.



           

            Best for Mule Deer
         

                             alt="These binoculars are easy to use with one hand, and offer a lot of optical horsepower for being so lightweight."
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            Sig Sauer ZULU 7 10×42
         

           
               
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Summary

             

These binoculars are easy to use with one hand, and offer a lot of optical horsepower for being so lightweight.



           

 





Hunting binoculars do more than magnify game animals. They help you read the landscape, locate other hunters, and can save you many miles of hiking by co*pressing the distance. The best binoculars for hunting also enable you to see into the darkness of early morning and late evening, the very times that animals are moving.





But not all hunting binoculars are equal. Some binoculars are cheap and flimsy, and their sub-standard glass can cause squinting headaches. On the other end of the spectrum are precise optical instruments that can cost several thousands of dollars. But between those poles are models that offer peak performance at an attainable price, and that’s where I’ve selected my top picks from.









I tested a dozen of the best mid-priced hunting binoculars by treating them the way you would: by strapping them to chest harnesses and hiking with them, sometimes in rainy and snowy weather, sometimes in dusty and sunny conditions. I handled them with gloves on and off, and then evaluated their optics, measuring brightness and clarity and field of view. Then I assessed their price and non-optical attributes, such as cases, lens caps, and warranties to bring you this review of the best hunting binoculars of 2022.





Things to Consider Before Buying Hunting Binoculars





Price and optical performance both matter when it co*es to figuring out how to choose binoculars, but the biggest factor to consider is co*fort: how well does a binocular fit your hands and your face, and how co*fortable is it to look through for extended sessions? If its frame is unbalanced or too big for your hands, you won’t reach for it. If its eyecups gouge your eyes, you won’t lift it. And if its image makes you squint, you won’t use it. The best binoculars are the ones you use, and you pick them by handling a bunch and figuring out which fits you. You look through a bunch and figure out which are easiest on your eyes. That, not price or the brand, is what makes the best hunting binocular for you.





Consider how a bino fits your hand and face before purchasing.
Consider how a bino fits your hand and face before purchasing. Andrew McKean




Magnification 





Your first consideration is magnification. In the tight woods of the East and Southeast, an 8-power is adequate, but in the open fields and mountains of the West, a 10x or even 12x is a better choice. Next, consider objective lens diameter. The standard for walk-about hunting binoculars is 42mm, but if you’ll be sitting in a blind or treestand, a smaller 32mm binocular may be a better fit.





Price





Next, how much do you want to spend? Given that binoculars range in price from around $200 up to more than $3,000, you’ll want to look at a number of models in your price range. Look for a co*fortable fit, both to your hands and to your face. Make sure the controls (focus wheel, diopter, eye cups, hinge) are tight and precise. And consider the warranty; the best binocular values are those with fully transferable lifetime warranties that protect you in case of breakage.





Image Quality 





Last—and most importantly—how does the image appear through the binoculars? After all, optics really have only one job: to make distant images appear clear, bright, and crisp. Does your binocular do that, or does the image make you squint and appear blurry? Do colors look vibrant, and do blacks look fully black or do you notice white fringing around the edges? Do you notice any distortion around the edges of the image? And how about color fringing, which is the presence of jags of colored light that dance across the image? Any image or color distortion is an indication of substandard glass or coatings.





Best Overall: Maven B1.2 10×42




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Maven



     

             


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Key Features





  • Magnification: 10 power
  • Objective diameter: 42 mm
  • Weight: 28.8 ounces
  • Short and co*pact (5.7 inches)
  • Excellent image and brightness
  • Three-tone styling is sharp and distinctive
  • Oversized focus knob turns with authority




Why It Made the Cut





The year’s best example of an all-around hunting binocular, the Maven has tight, silky controls in a stylish chassis that has just enough bling to separate it from the ranks of generic black binos.





Pros





  •  Excellent glass that delivers a bright, crisp image
  •  Tapered focus knob turns precisely, even with gloves
  •  Tight and durable chassis
  •  Direct-to-consumer model cuts middleman price




Cons





  • Silver and orange accents can spook close-in game
  • Relatively expensive for a hunting optic




Product Description 





The B1.2, which settles in a Goldilocks “just right” position between Maven’s small B.3 and its super-sized B.5, is surprisingly co*pact, measuring not quite 6 inches in length, and easily fits most aftermarket binocular harnesses. And at 27 ounces, it doesn’t weigh you down. 





Tight, silky controls and a stylish chassis make the B1.2 a great all-around bino.
Tight, silky controls and a stylish chassis—a great all-around bino. Andrew McKean




I enjoyed doing the testing for the Maven B Series review. I spent more time and miles—six weeks of Montana deer hunting—with the Maven than any other binoculars, and it’s a testament to the optic that even after all that time, it’s still the binocular I reach for above all others. It’s tight and durable. It’s bright and focuses both easily and precisely and has a wide field of view. It’s not quite as crisp or bright as my next-favorite, Swarovski’s NL Pure, but it’s also less than half the cost. So, for the balance of utility, style, and price, this is a great all-rounder.





Best Investment-Grade: Swarovski NL Pure 12×42




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Key Features









Why It Made the Cut





Inside the NL Pure’s revolutionary exterior design is the best glass in the category, delivering a stunningly bright and crisp image. The curvaceous lines allow users to lock the unit in hand, making our 12-power test sample as easily to stablize as a 10-power. It’s pricey, but the heirloom-grade Swarovski sets a new standard for premium binoculars.





Pros









Cons









Product Description 





A super-premium European binocular, the NL Pure is marketed to birders and wildlife viewers, but it has wonderful attributes for hunters, starting with its grippy hourglass design that makes operation with one—or both—hands a cinch. Its field of view is the widest in the category, and the oversized focus wheel is precise and silky. It has lovely balance, making its 29-ounce weight feel much less. The NL Pure ships with Swarovski’s proprietary neck strap and locking connectors.





Best for Long-Range Glassing: Tract TORIC UHD 15×56




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Key Features









Why It Made the Cut





The TORIC is a high-magnification binocular with good balance and top-notch glass at an appealing price.





Pros









Cons









Product Description 





High-magnification binoculars aren’t for everyone or for every type of hunt. But they are very capable optics for the sort of sit-all-day glassing that defines Coues deer hunting in the Southwest or ridgeline elk hunting in the Rockies. At 15-power, this offering from Tract splits the difference between a binocular and a co*pact spotting scope. You’ll need a tripod to stabilize the optic and get the best image, but the TORIC’s high-transmission glass makes those images bright and clear, and the focus is easy to ramp from close to infinity in just a single smooth revolution.





Best Budget Glass: Vortex Crossfire HD 8×42




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            A good option for a beginner hunter looking for an accessible price.
                     

                 

           

 

         

       

Vortex Optics



     

             


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Key Features









Why It Made the Cut





This is a good choice for a beginning hunter who wants field-worthy optics and enough money left over for a decent gun or bow.





Pros









Cons









Product Description 





It’s easy to spend upwards of $1,000 on hunting binoculars, and generally speaking the more you pay the better the durability of the optic, and the brighter and crisper the image it produces. But that’s a hefty price for most of us, which is why my review includes more accessibly-priced binoculars. 





The Crossfire is an adequate entry-level hunting binocular, it carries nicely and will perform most basic field tasks. Its construction may not take years of hard knocks, but Vortex’s fully transferable lifetime warranty will co*fort those who push it to the point of breaking. The no-click eyecups are a nice touch, and the Crossfire HD balances nicely in either one or both hands.





The Best for Treestand Hunting: Bushnell Forge 10×30




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Key Features









Why It Made the Cut





One of the few ultra-co*pact binoculars in the best binoculars for hunting lineup, the Forge stays out of the way until you need it.





Pros









Cons









Product Description 





This co*pact binocular hits way above its weight and size. The 10-power magnification is a lot of optical horsepower in a wee frame—although 8-power would be a better fit for whitetail woods. The 30mm tubes tuck out of the way and do a decent job of delivering images, but this is not a twilight optic; you’ll be disappointed in the dark image. But for a go-everywhere binocular that’s at home in a treestand, turkey vest, or ground blind, the Bushnell Forge is hard to beat.





Best for General Use: Burris Signature HD 10×42




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Key Features





  • Magnification: 10 power
  • Objective diameter: 42 mm
  • Weight: 23.2 ounces
  • Double-hinge, open-barrel design
  • Oversized focus control
  • Two-tone textured armor
  • Fiber-reinforced polymer chassis




Why It Made the Cut





A middle-of-the-road hunting optic, the Signature HD is co*pact enough to use in the tight quarters of a ground blind or tree stand but has enough horsepower to reach out across Western vistas. 





Pros





  •  Open design facilitates one-hand operation
  •  Polymer frame is light and durable
  •  Oversized hinge hardware easily acco*modates tripod mount
  •  Worthy successor to venerable Signature model




Cons





  •  Plastic armor feels flimsy
  •  Controls are imprecise
  •  Some edge distortion




Product Description 





A utilitarian all-round binocular priced right in the middle of the cost spectrum, Burris’s Signature HD got a design lift this year with an open-bridge configuration that enables one-hand operation. The controls are good, if a little sloppy, but the oversized hinges imply durability and long-wearing operation. The glass is adequate, but I noticed some peripheral distortion and color fringing.





Best for All-Around Hunting: Leupold BX-4 Pro Guide HD 10×42




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Leupold



     

             


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Key Features





  • Magnification: 10 power
  • Objective diameter: 42 mm
  • Weight: 24 ounces
  • Heavily textured graphite armor
  • Double-hinge, open-bridge design
  • Aggressively textured focus wheel
  • Ships with premium nylon case and strap system




Why It Made the Cut





Leupold’s BX-4 Pro Guide does everything: its open-bridge design enables one-hand operation, which is a key feature for bowhunters. It has tasty controls and good-enough image for most purposes. And its highly textured armor is stylish, in a running-shoe sort of way.





Pros





  •  Very handy and nimble open-bridge design
  •  Light and co*pact
  •  Overmolded armor is durable
  •  Nice balance
  •  Excellent transferable warranty




Cons





  •  Two-step eyecups are overly square
  •  Price is a little steep for image quality and build




Product Description 





I love these open-bridge binocular builds, largely because they enable one-hand operation, a key feature for bowhunters and anyone else whose other hand is otherwise occupied. The highly-tactile texture is easy to hold, even with wet gloves, and the focus riffs from close to infinity with a single turn of the wheel. Leupold’s best-in-class warranty gives this a nod for all-around hunting.





Best Budget: Nikon Monarch M5 8×42




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Key Features





  • Magnification: 8 power
  • Objective diameter: 42 mm
  • Weight: 22.2 ounces
  • Length: 5.7 inches
  • Protective overmolded armor
  • Tapered eyecups
  • Excellent price/value




Why It Made the Cut





The glass and coatings on the Monarch M5 are among the best on the market for this price point. The controls are tight and precise. And the balance and handling are adequate for just about any sort of hunting or field sports.





Pros





  •  Best eyecups at this price point
  •  Excellent glass and coatings
  •  Cushy armor protects chassis




Cons





  •  Plasticky feel
  •  Disappointing non-transferable warranty
  •  Relatively heavy around-neck feel




The Monarch M5 has some of the best budget glass and coatings.
The Monarch M5 has some of the best budget glass and coatings. Andrew McKean




Product Description 





This co*pact 8-power binocular does everything well enough that it wins my budget bino nod. It’s not a high-end optic; its glass is good but not great, and its build feels alternatively heavy and a little flimsy. But it brings a whale of a lot of horsepower to the field. It has very co*fortable tapered eyecups and nice balance.





The Best for Deer Hunting: Hawke Frontier APO 8×42




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Hawke Optics



     

             


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Key Features





  • Magnification: 8 power
  • Objective diameter: 42 mm
  • Weight: 26.1 ounces
  • Single-bridge, open-barrel design
  • Textured diopter and focus controls
  • Wide field of view
  • Extra-low dispersion (ED) glass




Why It Made the Cut





This is a great example of a mid-priced binocular that hits above its weight. The Euro-styled Frontier APO has premium ED glass in a magnesium-alloy chassis, very good coatings, and nicely contoured eyecups for a custom fit.





Pros





  •  Excellent image through ED glass
  •  Close-focus to 6 feet
  •  Ships with premium zippered case
  •  Excellent no-fault lifetime warranty




Cons





  •  Magnesium chassis is relatively heavy
  •  Tripod thread cover needs texturing




Product Description 





While Hawke is better known for its excellent riflescopes (particularly for airguns), the Frontier APO line of binoculars is worth a look. They have a good quality of glass, image-sharpening apochromatic lenses, and color-enhancing coatings. The mid-priced 8×42 version is capable of any hunting task, but is best suited for whitetail hunting, and the unflashy warranty is one of the best in the business.





Best for Elk Hunting: Meopta MeoPro Air 10×42




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Key Features





  • Magnification: 10 power
  • Objective diameter: 42 mm
  • Weight: 29.2 ounces
  • Double-hinge, open-barrel design
  • Oversized focus wheel
  • Center-dial diopter control
  • Magnetic objective lens caps




Why It Made the Cut





The MeoPro Air is a first-rate hunting binocular, with good glass and excellent coatings in a durable, functional package.





Pros





  •  Oversized textured focus knob easy to use with gloves
  •  Double hinge keeps barrels aligned
  •  Rubber-coated eyecups fit most faces




Cons





  •  Unlocking diopter dial can move off plumb
  •  Magnetic lens covers are wonky




Product Description 





What you get from the MeoPro Air is a high-performing bino at a much lower price than similar products. Thanks to lower operating costs in the Czech Republic, Meopta brings European glass, style, and optical performance at about half the prices of models from Leica, Zeiss, and Swarovski.





One of the field tests I subject all binoculars to is ease of use with a single hand. That’s especially an important consideration for bowhunters.The Meopta’s open-barrel design is one of the m