Voigtlander& Sohn Vitomatic II
The Voigtländer Vitomatic II is a 35mm film viewfinder camera from the German maker Voigtländer & Sohn, introduced in the late 1950s. It belongs to the Vito family of fixed-lens compacts and was positioned as a mid-tier rangefinder-equipped model with a coupled selenium light meter.
Sales data for the Vitomatic II is extremely thin: a single UK auction record from May 2003 shows a hammer price of £479, and no more recent results are available to confirm what the camera is worth today. With only one wholesale saleroom datapoint on file, any current price guidance would be speculative, and buyers in 2026 should treat that figure as historical rather than indicative of what the model now sells for.
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: May 2003
| Date | Price | Source | |
|---|---|---|---|
| May 2003 | EUR 479 | Leitz Auction | |
|
Auction: Leitz Auction 2-3 (Lot AI_2_22299) Title: Voigtländer Vitomatic II
Description:
engraved with laurel wreath for a 50th anniversary, dated '22.05.1959', hood, filter and case Estimate: EUR 4 - EUR 2 |
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Frequently asked questions
What is a Voigtländer Vitomatic II worth today?
There is too little recent UK auction data to give a reliable current value; the only hammer result on file is £479 from 2003, which cannot be assumed to reflect the price the camera sells for in 2026.
How much does a Vitomatic II sell for at auction?
Only one verified UK saleroom result is recorded (£479 in 2003), so a meaningful current price range cannot be quoted from the available data.
What should I check when buying one?
Prioritise a working selenium meter, accurate shutter speeds across the range, a clear rangefinder patch and a clean lens, as these are the costliest items to put right.