CameraWorth.com

Kodak Super Six-20

The Kodak Super Six-20 is a folding roll-film camera produced by Kodak for the 620 format. It dates to the late 1930s and was positioned at the upper end of Kodak's consumer folding range when new.

Sales evidence for the Super Six-20 is thin, but UK auction hammer results to date span roughly £650 to £2,000, with the small sample sitting at a £1,300 midpoint. As of 2026, what a Super Six-20 is worth at saleroom level depends heavily on cosmetic condition and whether the shutter and rangefinder coupling are working; clean, functional examples sit toward the upper end of that range while incomplete ones sell for considerably less.

Sales History

Prices shown are UK auction hammer results — the wholesale level achieved in the saleroom. Neither buyer’s nor seller’s commission is included. Dealer and retail asking prices are typically higher.

Prices updated: November 2015

Date Price Source
Nov 2015 EUR 650 Leitz Auction
Nov 2014 EUR 2,000 Leitz Auction
Nov 2014 EUR 800 Leitz Auction
Nov 2013 EUR 1,500 Leitz Auction
Nov 2013 EUR 1,000 Leitz Auction
Dec 2009 EUR 2,200 Leitz Auction
Nov 2008 EUR 2,000 Leitz Auction
May 2006 EUR 1,650 Leitz Auction
Mar 2004 £1,015 Christie's
Nov 1998 £1,495 Christie's

Frequently asked questions

What is a Kodak Super Six-20 worth today?

Based on the limited UK auction record, hammer prices have ranged from around £650 to £2,000, so the value of any given example depends strongly on condition and completeness.

How much does a Kodak Super Six-20 sell for at auction?

Recorded UK hammer sales sit between £650 and £2,000, but with only a couple of data points the price a specific camera sells for can fall outside that band.

Is the Kodak Super Six-20 a usable camera today?

It takes 620 roll film, which is no longer manufactured, so users typically respool 120 film onto 620 spools to shoot with it.