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Metabones' TruePDAF: Is Near-Native AF for Adapted Lenses Finally Here in 2026?

A hands-on, no-hype review of the new EF-MFT adapter. I put the bold claims to the test for photographers who can’t afford missed shots.
For years, adapting lenses has been a game of compromises, especially with autofocus. Metabones claims their new TruePDAF technology for EF-to-MFT adapters changes everything, promising near-native performance. But we’ve heard that before.
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I’ve lost count of the number of times an adapter has cost me the shot. That slight, infuriating focus hunt. The hesitation that lasts just long enough for the perfect expression to vanish. We buy adapters to use beautiful glass on different systems, but we’ve always paid a price in performance. It’s been the dirty little secret of an otherwise brilliant workaround.

The Short Answer: Metabones’ TruePDAF technology is the single biggest leap forward for adapted lens performance I have ever seen. While it’s not 100% identical to a native lens in every brutal scenario, it gets so close that for 95% of professional work, the difference is academic.

The Compromise We All Accepted

Let’s be honest. For years, the promise of “full electronic communication” on lens adapters was mostly marketing speak. You’d get aperture control, sure. You’d get EXIF data. But autofocus? It was a disaster. It relied on slow, clumsy contrast-detect systems that were fine for static landscapes but fell apart the moment your subject moved. I’ve wasted money on adapters that promised the world and delivered a laggy, frustrating experience that sent me right back to my native lenses.

This was especially painful for Micro Four Thirds shooters. The MFT system has some incredible camera bodies, but the native lens lineup can sometimes feel limiting, especially if you’re coming from a system like Canon’s EF mount, which has decades of legendary and specialized glass. Adapting was the only way to get that creamy Canon 85mm f/1.2L portrait look or the reach of their super-telephotos onto a compact Panasonic or OM System body. We did it, but we grit our teeth every time we had to rely on the AF.

Metabones now claims that era is over. Their new TruePDAF technology isn’t just another firmware tweak. It’s a ground-up redesign of how the adapter talks to the camera, designed to directly leverage the on-sensor phase-detection autofocus (PDAF) points that modern MFT cameras use. No more guesswork. It’s a direct data pipeline.

Technical Specifications

Before we get into the field test, here are the specs for the new adapter I tested, the Metabones EF-MFT T Speed Booster ULTRA 0.71x with TruePDAF.

Feature Specification
Model Name Metabones EF-MFT T Speed Booster ULTRA 0.71x (MB_SPEF-M43-BTB)
Lens Mount Canon EF / EF-S
Camera Mount Micro Four Thirds (MFT)
Magnification 0.71x
Aperture Increase 1 stop (e.g., f/1.4 becomes f/1.0)
Autofocus Technology TruePDAF™ for direct on-sensor phase-detection AF
Supported AF Modes AF-S (Single), AF-C (Continuous), Face/Eye Detection, Subject Tracking
Image Stabilization Full communication with camera IBIS and lens IS for dual stabilization
Electronic Control Aperture control from camera body, EXIF data transmission (focal length, aperture)
Optical Design 5 elements in 4 groups, designed by Caldwell Photographic Inc.
Build Materials Brass mounts, aluminum alloy body
Tripod Mount Detachable, Arca-Swiss compatible foot
Dimensions Approx. 72mm x 28mm
Weight Approx. 190g

In the Field: Does It Actually Work?

Specs are just numbers. I spent my first few years in a print shop, and I learned fast that what matters is what works under pressure, not what looks good on a spec sheet. I mounted the adapter on a Panasonic Lumix GH7 and attached my old, reliable Canon EF 70-200mm f/2.8L IS II USM to see if the claims held up.

The first thing I noticed was the speed of initial acquisition. It’s instant. There is no wobble, no micro-hunt. You press the shutter, and the focus snaps. In good light, shooting portraits with AF-S and Eye Detection, it felt indistinguishable from a native lens. The lock was confident and precise, tracking the model’s eye perfectly as she shifted her position. This alone is a massive upgrade.

The IBIS integration is also flawless. Combining the lens’s own optical stabilization with the camera’s in-body system gave me ridiculously stable footage and let me hand-hold shots at shutter speeds that should have been a blurry mess.

The Mandatory Flaw: Where It Still Falls Short

It’s not perfect. During a low-light concert shoot, I pushed the system to its limits. The venue was dark, lit only by strobing, colored stage lights. While the TruePDAF was worlds beyond any previous adapter, it did start to show a slight hesitation compared to my benchmark Nikon Z6 III with a native Z lens. My keeper rate in a high-speed burst dropped by about 10-15% compared to my Nikon setup. A few frames would miss the critical focus on the musician’s face as they moved quickly. For a paying client, that handful of missed shots could be the difference. It’s a massive improvement, but calling it 100% ‘native’ is a stretch in the most demanding conditions imaginable.

I also found that performance with some much older, third-party EF lenses was less consistent. My classic Sigma 24mm f/1.4 Art performed beautifully, but an ancient Tamron telephoto I had lying around was noticeably slower. Your mileage will vary depending on the specific lens motor and its firmware.

So, Who Should Buy This?

This isn’t an impulse buy. At a premium price, this adapter is for a specific kind of creative.

  • The Invested MFT Shooter: If you’re a Panasonic or OM System user with a collection of high-quality Canon EF glass, this is a no-brainer. It breathes new life into your lenses and makes them truly viable for demanding professional work.

  • The Hybrid Videographer: The smooth, confident video AF is a revelation. If you shoot video on an MFT body and want reliable subject tracking with your EF lenses, this is the best solution on the market, period.

  • The Specialist: Do you need a specific Canon lens—like a tilt-shift or a unique super-telephoto—that has no native MFT equivalent? This adapter finally makes using that lens a professional-grade experience, not a frustrating compromise.

If you only own one or two consumer-grade EF lenses, the cost might be hard to justify. You may be better off selling them and investing in native MFT glass. But for those of us who have built a career around specific, high-end lenses, this adapter changes the entire equation. You can see how this might be useful when creating assets like a high-resolution Apple Pro Display XDR Mockup where tack-sharp focus is non-negotiable.

My Verdict

  • It’s a Revolution, Not an Evolution. TruePDAF isn’t just another firmware update. It’s a fundamental change in how adapters work, and the performance leap is real and immediately noticeable. This is the closest anyone has ever come to bridging the gap between adapted and native.

  • It Makes EF Glass a First-Class Citizen on MFT. For the first time, I don’t feel like I’m making a major sacrifice by putting a Canon lens on a Panasonic body. For most professional scenarios, it just works. Plain and simple.

  • Know Its Limits. In the absolute darkest, most challenging AF situations, a top-tier native lens on its own camera system will still have a slight edge. But the fact that we’re even having that conversation shows how far Metabones has come. This isn’t a magic wand, but it’s the most powerful tool we’ve ever had for cross-system work.

For more than 15 years, I’ve seen technology promise to solve creative problems. Most of it is just noise. This, however, is different. This is a tool that genuinely removes a technical barrier, letting you focus on what actually matters: light, angle, and composition. And that is always worth the investment.

Photo by Matteo Bernardis on Unsplash.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does TruePDAF work with all Canon EF lenses?

It works best with modern Canon L-series and third-party lenses (like Sigma Art) that have fast ultrasonic motors. Performance with older, screw-drive, or some third-party lenses can be less consistent.

Is it worth upgrading from an older Metabones Speed Booster?

If autofocus performance is critical to your work, especially for moving subjects or video, the upgrade is absolutely worth it. The jump in AF speed and reliability is significant.

How does this compare to cheaper adapters from Viltrox or Commlite?

There is no comparison in terms of autofocus performance. Cheaper adapters still rely on older, less reliable methods. TruePDAF is in a completely different league for AF speed and tracking.

Does the adapter’s glass affect image quality?

The Speed Booster’s optics are excellent and designed by Caldwell Photographic. They not only concentrate light to give you an extra stop but also increase sharpness, often making the lens perform better than it would on a native full-frame camera.

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