Sensor type1/2.7-inch CCD sensor, approx. 1.32 MP total
Specs
Release year
2001
Megapixels
1.25 MP effective
Sensor
1/2.7-inch CCD sensor, approx. 1.32 MP total
Lens
5.4-16.2 mm 3x zoom; 35-105mm; f/2.8-f/4.8
Memory card
CompactFlash Type I card
Max memory
Up to 2GB (CompactFlash)
Battery
4x AA batteries (NiMH rechargeable recommended)
Size
110.3 × 71.0 × 37.6 mm excluding protrusions
Weight
Approx. 250 g excluding batteries and CF card
Canon PowerShot A10 FAQ
What battery does the Canon PowerShot A10 use?
Canon PowerShot A10 uses 4x AA batteries (NiMH rechargeable recommended). When buying used, confirm the seller includes a working charger or plan to add one. See the battery guide for charger and spare-battery checks.
What memory card does the Canon PowerShot A10 take?
Canon PowerShot A10 uses CompactFlash Type I card. The current buyer-facing maximum is Up to 2GB (CompactFlash); for older or unusual formats, stay within that limit and avoid oversized cards. See the memory card guide before buying cards for older cameras.
Is the Canon PowerShot A10 worth buying used?
It can be worth buying if you want a 1.25 MP effective Canon digital camera from 2001 with 1/2.7-inch CCD sensor, approx. 1.32 MP total. Check power, lens movement, screen condition, and storage access before paying. Run the used digital camera checklist before buying. For nearby Canon options, compare Canon PowerShot 600N and Canon PowerShot A100.
How do you transfer photos from the Canon PowerShot A10?
The simplest transfer path is usually to remove the memory card and use a compatible card reader. If the camera uses internal storage or a rare card format, confirm the cable or reader before buying. The card reader guide and photo transfer guide cover the common options.
Canon PowerShot A10 is worth judging as its own Canon entry compact body, not just as a generic old compact. Start with condition, the exact battery/card setup, and whether its look fits what you want to shoot.
What owners like
Canon PowerShot A10 works best when you want starter-friendly simple snapshots, direct flash, and low-pressure learning rather than a technically perfect modern camera; its 1/2.7″ CCD and 35-105 mm are the main character of the look.
Common complaints
Check the lens movement, flash, screen, buttons, and card door calmly before relying on it; older compact bodies can need a little patience without being a bad buy.
What to compare
Compare it with Canon PowerShot A20, Canon PowerShot A75, Canon PowerShot G2, Canon PowerShot Pro90 IS to decide whether you want this exact body, a cheaper nearby compact, or a slightly more capable alternative.