Nitecore EDC27 Review: Honest Carry Notes (May 2026)

Flashlight Review · May 2026
Nitecore EDC27 Review: Honest Carry Notes After a Month
The Nitecore EDC27 is a flat-bodied EDC flashlight with a 3000-lumen turbo, an OLED display showing battery level and active mode, a built-in 1700 mAh lithium-ion cell, and USB-C charging. It launched in 2023 and has been the value benchmark in the flat-light category since.
If the Arkfeld convinced you on flat-flashlights and then you saw the price, the EDC27 is your move. It’s brighter, the OLED is genuinely useful, and the USB-C charging is universal instead of proprietary. It’s a millimeter or two thicker, doesn’t have a laser, and the brand cachet is lower. For pure utility-per-dollar in this category, May 2026, nothing else is close.
Specs
What we liked
- The OLED display is the killer feature. Battery percentage to the digit, runtime estimate, current mode — it solves the eternal flashlight problem of not knowing how much juice is left.
- USB-C charging means you charge it with the same cable as everything else. Sounds boring, matters daily.
- 3000-lumen turbo is genuinely impressive in this size. Sustained output is much lower, but for a quick burst it lights up the whole back yard.
What we didn’t
- It’s noticeably thicker than the Arkfeld. Still flat, but you feel it more in a slim pocket.
- Like the Arkfeld, the cell is non-replaceable. Plan on a 3–4 year usable life and recycle responsibly.
- The OLED screen is small and the menu is a few clicks deep. There’s a small learning curve to lockout, ramping, and timer modes.
Verdict
The Nitecore EDC27 is the best sub-$100 flashlight you can put in a front pocket today. The OLED display is the genuine differentiator and the USB-C charging is the practical one. If you can stomach a flashlight without a brand name on the cap, this is the better light for less money. Best under-$100 EDC light, May 2026.
EverydayCarryGuy is reader-supported. We may earn an affiliate commission when you buy through links on our site, at no extra cost to you. We only recommend gear we’d carry ourselves.
