OPL (Foca) Focaflex II
The Focaflex II is a 35mm SLR camera made by OPL (Foca) in France. It was part of the Focaflex line, OPL's attempt to enter the single-lens reflex market, and was produced in relatively small numbers compared with mainstream Japanese SLRs of the same era.
Sales data for the Focaflex II is very thin: a single UK auction hammer result of £1,400 in 2017 is the only reference point available, so any current value estimate today is indicative rather than a true median. With only one wholesale auction price to work from, what a Focaflex II is worth in 2026 will hinge heavily on condition, completeness and how many bidders happen to be chasing French SLR rarities on the day, and clean examples can sell for a wide range around that figure.
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: June 2017
| Date | Price | Source | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jun 2017 | EUR 1,400 | Leitz Auction | |
|
Auction: Leitz Auction 31 (Lot AI_31_35615) Title: O.P.L. Foca Focaflex II outfit
Description:
rare outfit, including near mint camera in good working condition with Neoplex 2.8/5cm no.11614, Retroplex 4/3.5cm no.17022 (cond. B/A, caps B/C), Teleoplex 4/9cm no.15070 (cond. A/B, caps B/C) Estimate: EUR 1,400 - EUR 1,600 |
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Frequently asked questions
What is a Focaflex II worth today?
Based on the limited UK auction record available, a Focaflex II has sold for around £1,400 at hammer, but with only one data point the true market value in 2026 is uncertain and condition-dependent.
How much does a Focaflex II sell for at auction?
The only verified UK auction hammer price on record is £1,400, which reflects a wholesale saleroom result before commissions rather than a retail dealer price.
Why is the Focaflex II priced higher than common 35mm SLRs?
It was made in small numbers by a French manufacturer outside the Japanese SLR mainstream, so collector demand for a relatively scarce model tends to support stronger prices than for mass-produced contemporaries.