Photographer in Worthing
Compare local photographer pros in Worthing and get free quotes — no obligation, no call-backs you didn't ask for.
Typical price: £70–£3,200
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Photographer prices in Worthing
| Job size | Low | Typical | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mini session 20-30 min, 5-15 edited images | £70 | £110 | £160 |
| Portrait / family session 60-90 min, 20-50 edited images | £140 | £280 | £460 |
| Event coverage (half day) 3-4 hours, full gallery | £320 | £550 | £1,000 |
| Wedding (full day) 8+ hours coverage | £1,100 | £1,650 | £3,200 |
How to hire a photographer pro in United Kingdom
- Ask for full delivered galleries from sessions similar to yours
- Get a written contract covering hours, image count, turnaround and reschedule terms
- Check public liability insurance — most venues and many councils require it for organised shoots
- For drone photography, the operator needs CAA registration (operator ID) and, for most paid work, a GVC or A2 CofC qualification
- Confirm the usage licence: personal use is standard; commercial use is priced separately
- Pay a deposit (20-50%) against the signed contract; check the cancellation ladder
- For shoots on National Trust, royal parks or council land, confirm who obtains the photography permit
Photography is unregulated in the UK, but paid drone work falls under CAA rules (operator ID plus a qualification such as the GVC for most commercial flying). Many parks and estates — including royal parks and National Trust properties — require permits for organised shoots. Copyright stays with the photographer under the CDPA 1988 unless assigned.
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See the full breakdown of what drives photographer prices — job sizes, unit rates, and how to save.
Frequently asked questions
How far in advance should I book a photographer?
Portrait and family sessions: 2-4 weeks. Newborn sessions: book in the second trimester, since timing depends on the birth. Weddings: 6-12 months for in-demand photographers. Seasonal peaks (spring blossom, autumn colour, pre-holiday family shoots) fill up fastest.
Do I need a permit for a photoshoot in a park or public place?
Casual portrait shoots in public are usually fine, but many formal gardens, national parks, heritage sites and city landmarks require commercial photography permits — even for family sessions — with fees from token to substantial. Your photographer should know local rules; ask who is responsible for arranging and paying for permits.
How much does a photographer cost per hour?
Hobbyists and newcomers charge roughly a third of what established professionals do. Expect a 1-hour portrait or family session to cost about one to three hours of a skilled trade's labour in your country, with editing time built into the price. Event and commercial work costs more per hour because of prep, gear and licensing.
What's the difference between a mini session and a full session?
Mini sessions are 15-30 minutes at a location the photographer chose, often back-to-back with other clients, delivering 5-15 images at roughly half the price or less. Full sessions are 60-120 minutes, at your choice of location, with more posing variety and 20-50+ images. Minis suit updated family photos; milestones deserve a full session.
How much should I expect to pay for a headshot?
Headshot pricing is usually per person or per finished image rather than per hour: studio sessions delivering 1-5 retouched images sit well below a full portrait session's price, while premium personal-branding shoots cost several times more. For teams, per-person rates drop sharply from about 5 people up — ask for a group rate.
How much does a photographer cost in the UK?
Typical hourly rates run £70-£300 depending on experience and region, with London at the top. A one-hour family or portrait session commonly totals £150-£500 including editing; mini sessions run £75-£150. Full-day wedding coverage clusters at £1,200-£2,500.
Do I need permission to shoot in UK parks or on the street?
Street photography in public is legal, but organised shoots with paid photographers on managed land — royal parks, National Trust properties, many council parks — usually need a permit with a fee. Your photographer should know which locations near you require one; ask who pays.
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