My favorite smart telescope is on sale for Cyber Monday – get 10% off the Dwarf 3 while you can
Photograph the night skies with ease thanks to this Cyber Monday deal
If, like me, you've dreamed of one day being an astronaut but have instead settled for photographing the stars, then here's the Cyber Monday deal for you.
Right now, the DwarfLab Dwarf 3 smart telescope is 10% off at Amazon, saving you $54 on this mini marvel. You can also get the same deal direct from DwarfLab, and at B&H Photo.
If you're in the UK, meanwhile, there's an even better deal: it's available for 11% off direct from DwarfLab or at Park Cameras (Amazon no longer has stock).
• Shop Amazon's full Cyber Monday sale
That's a fantastic deal on one of the best smart telescopes out there. See that photo above? I took it a few months ago, using this very telescope. Okay, so it has been stacked and processed – it wouldn't look quite like that straight out of the camera – but it shows what's possible with very little effort.
Like the look of it? You should. But act fast if you want to buy one – because the deals are due to end today.
(Not in the US or UK? See today's best deals in your region below)
Today's best DwarfLab Dwarf 3 Cyber Monday deal in the US
The DwarfLab Dwarf 3 smart telescope is one of the best smart telescopes, taking multiple photos of the night sky and then slowly building up impressive images over the course of the night. It's small, easy to use, and well priced – and right now it's even cheaper for Cyber Monday.
Today's best DwarfLab Dwarf III Cyber Monday deal in the UK
The UK gets a very similar deal for Cyber Monday, but it's actually slightly better, in that you save 11% rather than 10%. Lucky Brits!
I used this smart telescope extensively while testing it for my Dwarf 3 review, and have now decided it's my go-to astrophotography option, just beating the also excellent ZWO Seestar S50.
For starters, it's impressively small and light, to the extent that I was able to pack it in my carry-on luggage when I flew abroad this summer. Set up is a breeze, too; you can genuinely be snapping photos of exotically named nebulae such as the Elephant's Trunk, Wizard, and Eagle (the one pictured at the top of this page) within about five minutes of unboxing it. That's plenty of time to get in some stargazing, even if the clouds are regularly rolling in as they do where I'm based in the UK.
It doesn't come with a tripod, so if you don't have one, then you'll need to invest in one of those too, but it's so light – just 1.3kg / 2.6 pounds – that you don't need a really weighty one to do the job.
It shoots 4K images of the night sky using its 150mm main camera, and also has a wide-angle lens to help you find your targets in the first place. Not that it's tricky to do that, because it comes with a companion app that includes a star atlas, so you can tell it what you want to take photos of, and it will automatically move to its target and start snapping away.
It can also double as a long lens for taking photos of wildlife, but if you're anything like me, you'll be more excited about capturing the Pelican and Eagle Nebula rather than their avian equivalents. Either way, this Cyber Monday deal brings what is already a bargain smart telescope down to an even better price.
Shop more of today's best Cyber Monday sales
- Amazon: 45% off TVs, AirPods, air fryers & vacuums
- Apple: iPads, AirPods & MacBooks from $119
- Best Buy: $1,000 off TVs, laptops & headphones
- Dell: laptop deals from $249.99
- Home Depot: 40% off appliances, furniture, grills & tools
- Lenovo: 45% off laptops & tablets
- Lowe's: up to 30% off appliances, holiday decor & tools
- Samsung: up to $2,000 off appliances, TVs & phones
- Target: 40% off Christmas decor, clothing & furniture
- T-Mobile: up to $1,100 off latest iPhone 17
- Walmart: furniture, cheap TVs & vacs from $69
- Wayfair: 54% off Christmas, furniture & decor
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Marc is TechRadar’s Global Editor in Chief, the latest in a long line of senior editorial roles he’s held in a career that started the week that Google launched (nice of them to mark the occasion). Prior to joining TR, he was UK Editor in Chief on Tom’s Guide, where he oversaw all gaming, streaming, audio, TV, entertainment, how-to and cameras coverage. He's also a former editor of the tech website Stuff and spent five years at the music magazine NME, where his duties mainly involved spoiling other people’s fun. He’s based in London, and has tested and written about phones, tablets, wearables, streaming boxes, smart home devices, Bluetooth speakers, headphones, games, TVs, cameras and pretty much every other type of gadget you can think of. An avid photographer, Marc likes nothing better than taking pictures of very small things (bugs, his daughters) or very big things (distant galaxies). He also enjoys live music, gaming, cycling, and beating Wordle (he authors the daily Wordle today page).
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