SmallRig Amazon Prime Day Sale Starts Now. Save Up to 30%
SmallRig has activated its Amazon Prime Day promotion. Up to 30% off across more than 40 photo and video accessories, live on Amazon.com.

The verified price drops
PetaPixel published specific cuts on the Tribex support lineup. Six line items, all from the same source block:
- Carbon fiber video tripod, hydraulic legs, 4-step counterbalance fluid head: $800 → $560. A flat $240 cut — exactly 30%.
- Aluminum equivalent, same Tribex hydraulic quick-deploy system: $400 → $300. $100 off, 25%.
- Compact carbon fiber travel tripod, one-touch height adjustment: $200 → $150. $50 off, 25%.
- Fluid head tripod with DJI RS gimbal compatibility: $400 → $300. $100 off, 25%.
- Carbon fiber video monopod, 175cm, 360° fluid head, dual-mode quick release: $400 → $300. $100 off, 25%.
- Full-size aluminum video tripod with quick release plate: $160 → $112. $48 off, 30%.
Two of six hit the advertised 30% ceiling. The rest sit at 25%. Treat "up to 30%" as a marketing maximum, not a baseline yield.
What to verify before checkout
Discount depth is only useful when the baseline list price holds. Cross-check the SmallRig MSRP against B&H, Adorama, or the manufacturer's own storefront. A 30% cut on an inflated list does not equal 30% real savings — that's the tolerance that matters.
The Tribex carbon and aluminum tripods share the same hydraulic quick-deploy system and similar fluid head geometry. Pay for the material and load tolerance difference, not duplicate branding. If you already run a DJI RS-series gimbal, prioritize the RS-compatible fluid head tripod; otherwise its spec overlaps with the standalone Tribex models.
Amazon third-party seller stock fluctuates during Prime Day windows. Newsshooter explicitly noted that prices are subject to change and each product page should be re-confirmed at point of purchase. Hard add-to-cart, don't bookmark.
Caveat on provenance
Newsshooter disclosed this piece as sponsored content. The price figures are factual and reproduced directly from the sponsor's data sheet. The framing — "best time to get the gear you need" — originates from SmallRig, not editorial. Read it as a price event, not an endorsement.
Sale runs through the Prime Day window. If an item already on your kit list hits the 30% tier against a verified MSRP, it's a rational buy. If it's at 25%, pull the last 90-day Amazon price history before committing — that's the only benchmark that yields a defensible decision.