Nocs Field Issue 10×32
All Nocs reviews: Standard Issue 8×25 Standard Issue 10×25 Field Issue 8×32 Field Issue 10×32 Field Issue 8×42 Pro Issue 10×42
🦅
Reviewed by Marcus Hale · Founder, WildView · 18 years field birding · 200+ binoculars evaluated
📅 Updated April 2026
Affiliate disclosure: We earn a commission if you purchase through our links.

The Nocs Provisions Field Issue 10×32 is the more powerful sibling of the Field Issue 8×32 — same compact body, same $150 price, same No-Matter-What lifetime warranty, but with 10× magnification for birders who primarily watch in open habitats and want more reach in a packable format. At roughly 17oz, it gives you 10× power without the weight of a full 42mm binocular.

The honest trade-off: 10× at 32mm produces a 3.2mm exit pupil, which means noticeably less light than the 8×32's 4.0mm in anything less than bright conditions. For open-habitat birding in sunshine — shorebirds, waterfowl, raptors — the extra reach is valuable and the exit pupil limitation rarely matters. For woodland and dawn birding, the 8×32 is the smarter choice. Know your use case before choosing between them.

Shop at Nocs Provisions →
$150 current price
7.8
/10
Overall Score

✓ What We Loved

  • 10× reach in a compact 17oz body — unique on the market
  • 342ft FOV — wider than many 10×42 binoculars costing far more
  • IPX7 waterproof and nitrogen fogproof
  • No-Matter-What lifetime warranty at $150
  • ~7ft close focus — handles most field encounters
  • BaK4 prisms deliver solid image quality

✗ Limitations to Know

  • 3.2mm exit pupil — challenging in shade and low light
  • 10× amplifies hand shake more than 8× in compact format
  • Narrower FOV than the 8×32 sibling (342ft vs 429ft)
  • Not ideal for forest birding or dawn/dusk use

Technical Specifications

Magnification10×
Objective lens32mm
Field of view342 ft at 1,000 yds
Exit pupil3.2mm
Eye relief~14mm
Close focus~7 ft
Weight~17 oz
Prism typeBaK4 roof prism
Lens coatingFully multi-coated
WaterproofingIPX7 submersible 3ft/30min
Purge gasNitrogen fogproof
WarrantyNo-Matter-What Lifetime

WildView Scores (out of 10)

Optical clarity
7.8
Light transmission
7.0
Field of view
8.0
Close focus
8.0
Focus speed
8.0
Ergonomics
8.4
Weather resistance
9.0
Value for money
8.9

Who Actually Needs a 10×32?

The 10×32 occupies a specific niche: the birder who wants the reach of 10× magnification but also needs their binoculars to fit in a daypack, a travel bag, or a coat pocket. This is a more common requirement than the market might suggest. Pelagic birders who want a compact backup pair. Hawk watchers at exposed ridge sites who want a lightweight second pair. Travelers birding in open tropical habitats where every bird seems to be far away.

For anyone doing primarily forest, woodland, or feeder birding — where close focus, wide field of view, and low-light performance matter most — the 8×32 is the right choice. The 10×32 is purpose-built for open habitats in good light.

"I take these to coastal hotspots when I don't want to carry my big glass. The reach is genuinely useful for scanning distant mudflats, and they weigh almost nothing."

342 Feet at 10×: Putting the Field of View in Context

At 342 feet at 1,000 yards, the Field Issue 10×32's field of view is actually comparable to some full-size 10×42 binoculars — the Nocs Pro Issue 10×42 has the same 342-foot field, and the Vortex Viper HD 10×42 has a slightly narrower 310ft. The Field Issue achieves this in a significantly lighter and more compact package.

📊 Field of View Comparison at 10×: Field Issue 10×32 = 342ft · Nocs Pro Issue 10×42 = 342ft · Vortex Viper HD 10×42 = 310ft · Nikon Monarch M7 10×42 = 314ft. The compact Nocs matches or beats full-size competitors on this critical spec.

The caveat is exit pupil: the 10×32's 3.2mm is smaller than any 10×42 (which delivers 4.2mm). In bright conditions this is irrelevant. In shade, forest, or low light, the 10×42 alternatives deliver a meaningfully brighter image.

The Field Issue 10×32 in the Nocs Lineup

The Field Issue 10×32 and 8×32 are priced identically at $150, with the same body, the same warranty, and nearly the same weight. The choice between them comes down entirely to how you bird: choose 8× for versatility, brightness, and wide field; choose 10× for reach in open habitats. Neither is universally better.

Stepping up to the Pro Issue 10×42 adds $149 but delivers phase-coated prisms, a larger 42mm objective (4.2mm exit pupil vs. 3.2mm), and the same 342ft field in a heavier package. For serious birders who can justify the weight, the Pro Issue 10×42 is a meaningful optical upgrade. For casual and travel birders who prioritize portability, the Field Issue 10×32 is the smarter compact solution.

See the Full Nocs Lineup Compared

Every Nocs model reviewed side-by-side — find the right one for your style of birding.

View All Nocs Reviews →