Hyperfocal Depth Chart Generator

Generate a complete hyperfocal distance table for every aperture and focal length

Produces a printable grid of hyperfocal distances for every standard aperture from f/1.4 to f/22 across a set of focal lengths for a chosen sensor format. A reference card for landscape photographers who want everything from foreground to infinity sharp. It runs free in your browser on Gera Tools, with nothing uploaded.

Last updated Source: Gera Tools

What is hyperfocal distance?

The hyperfocal distance is the closest focus point at which objects out to infinity remain acceptably sharp. Focusing at the hyperfocal distance maximises depth of field: the near limit becomes half the hyperfocal distance and the far limit is infinity.

This generator builds a complete hyperfocal distance table for your kit: pick a sensor format, list your focal lengths, and get a grid of focus distances for every standard aperture. Focus at the listed distance and everything from half that distance to infinity is acceptably sharp — the classic landscape technique for front-to-back sharpness.

How it works

The hyperfocal distance H is:

H = f² / (N × c)

where f is the focal length in millimetres, N is the f-number (aperture), and c is the circle of confusion for your sensor in millimetres. The result is in millimetres; divide by 1000 for metres. The formula technically adds one focal length (H + f) for the true focus point, but at landscape distances f is negligible, so the simplified form is used throughout.

The circle of confusion scales with sensor size. This tool uses the common d/1500 standard:

FormatCoC (mm)
Full frame (36×24)0.029
APS-C (≈24×16)0.019
Micro Four Thirds0.015
1-inch0.011

Worked example

A 24mm lens at f/8 on full frame:

H = 24² / (8 × 0.029) = 576 / 0.232 ≈ 2483mm ≈ 2.5m

Focus at 2.5m and everything from about 1.25m to infinity is sharp. Stop down to f/11 and the hyperfocal distance shrinks to about 1.8m, pulling the near limit even closer.

Tips and notes

  • Smaller sensors have a smaller circle of confusion, which partly cancels their apparent extra depth of field — compare like for like using this table.
  • Beware diffraction: past roughly f/11 on APS-C or f/16 on full frame, overall sharpness can drop even as depth of field grows.
  • Print the generated grid and tape it to your tripod leg — it is faster than recalculating in the field.
  • Focus at the hyperfocal distance, not at infinity; focusing at infinity wastes the entire near half of your depth of field.