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Back Button Focusing – Easier than you think!

Great photography tip on back button focusing for sharper photos
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One of the most frequent questions I have received in the last month has been about back button focus and how to use it on Canon and Nikon DSLR cameras.  In this article you'll learn what back button focusing is, and how to back button focus for Canon and Nikon cameras.

What is back button focusing?

The camera usually focuses when the shutter button is pressed half way down, and then the photographer takes the picture when the button is pressed in fully.  Back button autfocus makes it so the shutter button doesn't control the focus activation at all, but instead assigns another button on the back of the camera (hence the name) to activate focusing on the camera.

What is the purpose of back button focus?

The best way to explain the benefits of back button focusing is through two examples.

Example number one

First, suppose you are shooting portraits.  The person who you are shooting is standing still and you want to take several different shots of the person.  You take your first shot, and then change your composition and need to move your focus point to be on the person's eye.  If your camera has 40+ focus points like many DSLRs do, you have to use the four-way selector to tediously move the focus point to the correct spot, focus, and then take the photo.  How annoying!

You can use back button focusing to solve this problem because the distance between the photographer and the subject stays the same between both shots, but the composition changes.  With back button focusing, the photographer activates focus for the first shot, and then is able to recompose infinite times as long as the distance between the camera and the subject remains exactly the same.

You'll note that there are other ways to solve this problem, such as focus and recompose (equally tedious, but sometimes it's your best bet), or holding the AF-L, AE-L button, but that is just plain annoying.  Back button focusing is superior in this instance as long as the photographer is careful not to change the distance between the camera and the subject (which would throw off the focus) when using shallow depth-of-field.

Example number two

While I was shooting wildlife in Yellowstone earlier this year (read about that trip here), I came amazingly close to a pack of wolves one morning (well, close as in it filled the frame with a giant 800mm lens… I wasn't THAT close…)  and I shot as fast and furious as possible as the famous Alpha 06 wolf played in the snow in front of me.

Just as I was shooting madly, another photographer scooted too close in front of me and my 800mm lens began to focus on the photographer's shoulder!  Focus on such a long lens can be somewhat slow, and by the time I readjusted my heavy tripod and lens, the wolf was running away and all I got was butt shots.

In the same situation, back button focus could have saved me.  When the photographer's shoulder appeared in the frame, my focus would have been locked on the wolf still and I could have shot to the side of the photographer and still got sharp shots as soon as I shewed him out of the frame.  Instead, I had to find focus again in low light with a plain white field of snow in front of me (meaning focus was tough to acquire).

Tutorial: Back Button Focus for Canon

Canon was the first camera manufacturer to implement back button focus in 1989 and has put the feature in all DSLR models made in the last 8 or 9 years (yes, even the Canon Rebel XT and XTi).

In the Canon camera menu, you'll look for an option called “Shutter/AE Lock Button” and then in that menu you'll see a whole host of options.  The one you're looking for is called “Metering Start / Meter + AF Start.”  Could they have possibly made that any more confusing for us photographers?  No… I think not.

The following is a cheat sheet from the Canon Learning center where you'll find the menu option on your Canon camera to set up back button focus.  If your camera isn't listed here, just poke around a bit and I'm sure you'll find it easy enough.

EOS Rebel T3: C.Fn 7 (option 1 or 3)
EOS Rebel T3i: C.Fn 9 (option 1 or 3)
EOS 50D: C.Fn IV-1 (option 2 or 3)
EOS 60D: C.Fn IV-1 (option 1, 2, 3, or 4)
EOS 7D: C.Fn IV-1 (Custom Controls — Shutter, AF-ON, AEL buttons)
EOS 5D Mark II: C.Fn IV-1 (option 2 or 3)
EOS-1Ds Mark III: C.Fn IV-1 (option 2 or 3)
EOS-1D Mark IV: C.Fn IV-1 (option 2 or 3)

More advanced Canon cameras have a dedicated button on the back of the camera that will be the button used to activate the focus on the camera, and other Canon cameras (such as Canon Rebels, Canon 60D, etc) will use the AF-L, AE-L button as the button that will activate focus after this option is selected.

how to back button focus your DSLR camera
Some advanced cameras (for both Canon and Nikon) like the 5D Mark III and the Nikon D800 have a dedicated button for AF-On. Other cameras (like a D7000 or a Canon Rebel) allow the photographer to program the AE-L, AF-L button to work for back button focusing.

Tutorial: Back Button Focus for Nikon

On a Nikon camera, it is a bit easier to set up back button focusing than it is on a Canon, but you still have to know exactly what to look for.

There are dozens and dozens of Nikon model DSLR cameras, so I can't go through each of them, but if you follow one of the tutorials below for a similar camera to your model, I'm sure you'll get it set up easy enough.

Back Button Focus on a Nikon D7000

1) You need to assign the AE-L, AF-L button (yes, that button that you've never used before and always wondered what it does) on the back of the camera to be AF-On. To do this, go to your camera menu and look in the custom setting menu (the pencil).  In the custom setting menu, go to Controls, and then choose F5 “Assign AE-L/AF-L button.”  Within this menu, choose “AF-On.”
2) Now you need to set up the camera so it will take a picture even when focus has not been achieved.  This is preferable in most situations because you may have focused and recomposed the shot.  To do this, go to your Custom Setting Menu and choose Autofocus.  Within this menu, select A1 “AF-C priority selection” and set it to “release.”  Then set AF-S priority selection to “release” as well.

Back Button Focus on a Nikon D3100, D3200, or a D5100

Check out this video tutorial that explains step-by-step how to do it.

Should all photographers use back button focus?

Definitely not!  If you're not yet 100% comfortable with operating your camera or if you don't quite understand how focus works, then head for the hills, hide yourself in the corner, and grab a teddy bear for protection.  Back button focusing will only make using your camera more complicated–which is why camera manufacturers for decades have used the half-press shutter method of focusing.

If, however, you're a confident photographer and you're ready to try an advanced technique that can definitely improve your focus in some situations, then meet back button focus.

I thought back focus was a bad thing!

Back focus and back button focusing are two very different things.  Back focus is when the lens focuses behind the intended target, and back button focusing is a technique used by advanced photographers to focus by separating the focus and shutter activation of the shutter button.

Before you run off, I want to share with you some of my very best Youtube videos.  These are all on-location videos where you can see how I'm using the color in sunsets, choosing my compositions, etc.  Enjoy, and don't forget to hit subscribe so you can see my future Youtube vids!

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210 thoughts on “Back Button Focusing – Easier than you think!”

  1. I can`t understand it when you say : 2)”Now you need to set up the camera so it will take a picture even when focus has not been achieved. This is preferable in most situations because you may have focused and recomposed the shot. To do this, go to your Custom Setting Menu and choose Autofocus. Within this menu, select A1 “AF-C priority selection” and set it to “release.” Then set AF-S priority selection to “release” as well.”
    Surely if you have focussed on whatever and immediately released the back button and then recomposed the initial focus would be locked in. Is this not so or am I missing something here?
    Thanks,
    Ian

  2. Thanks so much for your article! I read about using the back button to focus a little while ago, and I did my first shoot today in a primary school on their sports day, so lots of action to capture, and lots of practice with the back focus button. Your article has confirmed that I was doing the right thing, and the photos turned out good. I understand this better now. I’m using a Canon 60D. Thanks again

  3. Awesome article Jim. I’ve owned the Canon Xti for three years and never realized. Thanks for the great info and I’m sure it’ll be handy for next weeks wedding.

  4. Rosemary

    Thanks Jim,

    Got to the back button process . . . I’m not sure I’ve reset my defaults. How do I reset to defaults?

  5. Hi, I am looking for the bbf option on my t2i and I found the ae/af lock but not “Metering Start / Meter + AF Start.”. can you help?

  6. Tiberman Sajiwan Ramyead

    Jim – I use the BBF quite often now. You have omitted to mention that in BBF mode the shutter release does the metering only. But BBFing on one point and recomposing may result in a different metering to that on the point of focus. So when time is my side, I note the meter settings on my point of focus,switch to manual exposure and maintain the meter values, recompose and shoot. Am I talking sense? I am 2.5 yrs beginner.
    Best Regards from Mauritius.

  7. Anyone know if back-button focus on a Nikon D3200 affect all modes or only the PSAM modes? Hoping it still keeps shutter focus active on Auto mode since that way I can give it to others to still act as their p&s does. Will try it out this weekend.

  8. I have a Sony a500 any tips on back button focusing or anything else I should know that my camera has hiding?

  9. This is very interesting but I would think this would only be good using say a F/8 or higher setting. You already said using a low F-stop can be in or out of focus with in an inch. By the time they change position it would not take much to move an inch right? Especially with portraits where you really need the eyes in focus.

  10. Assuming the AF lens has MF override, would back button focusing be the same as just flicking the AF switch off on the lens before pressing the shutter button again? Pros/Cons?

  11. Awesome. I love this feature. On my d5000 it seems to have protection built in so if I recompose with a shallow depth of field, it won’t allow the shot. (I’m assuming the rangefinder is responsible) Preventing me from firing off a series of out of focus shots. Great info. Thanks.

  12. I just used your instructions on my new D7000 to set up back button focusing. I always had my (now dead) D200 set up like this and was having trouble getting it set up on the D7000. I followed your instructions but the camera was still stopping me from taking a photo when the centre was out-of-focus.

    I discovered that the auto-focus also needs to be set to AF-S or AF-C, and not the default AF-A. At least on my new D7000, AF-A prevents me from taking a photo with back button focusing then reframing.

  13. Help!! I have a Canon t1i and cant find this feature. I have read everything!! All articles I find says it should be there but I am not finding it!! Help! Please 🙂 Thank you!

  14. I’m with Fredo, why not just switch the lens from AF to MF once you’ve acquired the target. I don’t see why that wouldn’t do the exact same thing, plus you don’t have to keep your finger on the button.

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