Videography near you in Australia
Known locally as videographer. Compare researched prices and get free quotes from pros wherever you are in Australia.
Typical price: A$600–A$14,000
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What videography costs in Australia
| Job size | Low | Typical | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| Half-day event coverage Single videographer, a few hours of filming plus basic edit | A$600 | A$1,000 | A$2,000 |
| Full-day shoot (single videographer) Full day of filming with an edited highlight video | A$1,300 | A$2,500 | A$5,000 |
| Corporate / promo video (edited deliverable) Scripted shoot with crew and a polished edited video | A$3,000 | A$6,000 | A$14,000 |
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How to hire a videography pro in Australia
- Watch full sample videos in your style
- Get deliverables spec'd: number and length of edited videos, revision rounds
- Confirm usage rights and whether raw footage is included
- If using aerial footage, confirm a CASA-licensed drone operator
- Agree music licensing
- Check insurance and get a written contract with a deposit
Frequently asked questions
Why does editing cost so much?
Because it's where most of the hours go. A day of filming can take several days to edit — cutting, colour grading, sound, motion graphics and revisions. When comparing quotes, check how much edited footage you get and how many revision rounds are included, not just the shoot day rate.
Do I need a licensed drone operator?
If your video includes aerial footage, yes — commercial drone flying requires a licensed/certified operator in most countries, plus insurance and airspace permissions. Don't let someone fly a drone for paid work without the right certification; it's a legal and safety risk.
How much does videography cost?
It scales with crew, kit and post-production. A half-day single-videographer event shoot is the entry point; a full day costs more; a scripted corporate or promo video with a crew, multi-camera setup and edited deliverable is the top of the range. Editing time is often a large, separate part of the bill.
Who owns the footage and the final video?
Clarify this in writing. Usually the videographer licenses the final edit to you for agreed uses, and raw footage is extra or retained. If you need full ownership or broad usage rights (ads, broadcast), say so up front — it affects price and the contract.
One videographer or a full crew?
A single videographer suits interviews, small events and social content. A crew (second camera, dedicated audio, lighting) is worth it for multi-location shoots, live events you can't re-shoot, and high-production promos. Match the crew to the stakes of the footage.
What should a videography quote include?
Shoot time, crew size, equipment (cameras, audio, lighting, drone if used), number of edited deliverables and their length, revision rounds, music licensing, usage rights, and delivery format and timeline. A one-line day rate with no deliverable spec is a red flag.
How many revisions are normal?
Two rounds is the industry standard, stated in the contract. 'Unlimited revisions' sounds generous but signals weak scope and often stalls projects. Consolidate your feedback into each round rather than drip-feeding changes, which burns paid time.
What does a videographer cost in Australia?
Half-day shoots typically run AUD 600-2,000, full days AUD 1,300-5,000, and corporate videos AUD 3,000-14,000.
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Planning a budget?
See the full videography cost guide or browse all Australia price guides.
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