Pentax K-3 uses Pentax D-LI90P. 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 Pentax K-3 take?
Pentax K-3 uses Dual SD/SDHC/SDXC. The current buyer-facing maximum is Up to 2TB per slot (dual SDXC); 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 Pentax K-3 worth buying used?
It can be worth buying if you want a 24 MP Pentax digital camera from 2013 with APS-C CMOS Processor Prime III. Check power, lens movement, screen condition, and storage access before paying. Run the used digital camera checklist before buying. For nearby Pentax options, compare Pentax K-1 Mark II and Pentax K-3 II.
How do you transfer photos from the Pentax K-3?
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.
Pentax K-3 is worth judging as its own Pentax K-mount DSLR 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
Pentax K-3 works best when you want simple snapshots, direct flash, and the relaxed character people look for in older digital compacts rather than a technically perfect modern camera; its APS-C (23.5 x 15.6 mm) CMOS and interchangeable lens mount 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 Pentax K-50, Pentax K-500, Pentax Q7, Pentax K-01 to decide whether you want this exact body, a cheaper nearby compact, or a slightly more capable alternative.