Media Production

How Much Does Video Production Cost in Dubai? (2026 Pricing by Type, Crew, and Hidden Fee)

SKIMBOX Team

Video production in Dubai runs AED 1,500 to 100,000+, with a corporate video averaging AED 10,000 to 30,000. Here is the real cost by type, the crew day rates nobody itemises, and the Arabic, footage, and revision fees that surprise buyers.

How Much Does Video Production Cost in Dubai? (2026 Pricing by Type, Crew, and Hidden Fee)

Video production in Dubai costs AED 1,500 to 100,000 and beyond, and a standard one to three minute corporate video averages AED 10,000 to 30,000 [1][2]. The reason quotes for the "same" video swing so wildly is that a freelancer with a camera and a full crew with cinema gear are selling completely different things. This guide gives you the real 2026 prices by video type, the crew day rates almost nobody itemises, and the Arabic, footage, and revision fees that ambush buyers after they sign.

We run media production out of our Dubai team with a local filming licence, and we quote itemised so clients see exactly where the money goes. For how to vet a production company before you hire, see our companion guide to choosing a video production company in Dubai. This piece is about the money.

How much does video production cost by type?

Here are the 2026 ranges by video type, synthesised across the major Dubai production guides [1][2][3]:

Video typeTypical AED
Social reel (15 to 60s)1,500 to 8,000
30-second promo5,000 to 10,000
Corporate (1 to 3 min)10,000 to 30,000
Enterprise film (multi-location)20,000 to 40,000
Brand film / cinematic25,000 to 100,000+
TV commercial30,000 to 60,000 (high-end 80,000+)
Product video3,000 to 30,000
Event coverage (per day)2,500 to 10,000
Real-estate walkthrough2,500 to 5,500

Straight talk: there is a real floor. Below about AED 10,000 for a one-day professional single-location shoot, you are buying a freelancer day, not a production [4]. That is fine for internal content; it is not fine for the brand film on your homepage.

Animation and 3D, priced per finished minute

Animation does not have a "shoot day," so it is priced per finished minute of output [5]:

Animation typeAED per finished minute
Simple 2D / motion graphics800 to 1,500
Character-driven 2D1,800 to 3,500
3D architectural walkthrough (1080p)1,800 to 3,000
3D architectural walkthrough (4K)2,500 to 4,000

For off-plan property, a 3D walkthrough often beats live-action because it can be built before the building exists. A one-minute villa walkthrough runs AED 1,800 to 3,500, a two-minute 4K version AED 9,000 to 11,000 [5]. We cover this in our animation and motion graphics services.

The crew day rates nobody itemises

Most cost guides stop at "two-person crew" or "full crew." Here are the actual per-role day rates that an honest quote is built from [6]:

RoleAED/day
Director of Photography2,500 to 10,000
Camera Operator1,500 to 3,000
Drone (aerial) Operator6,000 to 8,000
Gaffer (lighting)1,500 to 2,000
Sound Technician (with kit)1,800 to 3,000
Producer2,000 to 4,000
Production Assistant800 to 1,100

When a quote is one lump sum with no breakdown, this is the table the vendor does not want you comparing against. Ask for it.

What each component costs

Beyond crew, a video is a stack of separate deliverables, and knowing each one's price is how you read a quote properly [1][2][3]:

ComponentAED
Scriptwriting (standalone)from 999
Script plus storyboard3,000 to 10,000
Studio rental1,500 to 10,000 per session
Location fee (private)2,000 to 25,000 per day
Actor / model1,000 to 15,000 per person per day
Voice-over (English)500 to 8,000
Basic editing2,000 to 10,000
Colour grading1,000 to 3,000
Advanced edit / motion graphics / VFX5,000 to 25,000+
Drone footage (excl. permit)1,000 to 6,000

The actor line is the one that surprises people most. A model for a corporate piece sits at the low end, but talent for a TV commercial costs far more, because you are buying usage rights for broadcast and regional distribution, not just a day of their time [2]. When two quotes differ on talent, this is usually why.

The three fees that ambush Dubai buyers

These are the questions buyers wish they had asked, and the ones most pricing pages skip.

1. The Arabic version is a separate programme, not a free extra. Plan for Arabic voice-over at roughly AED 950 to 3,000, subtitling priced per minute, and a separate translation fee [7][8]. A full Arabic dub costs more than subtitles. The expensive mistake is deciding on Arabic late, because re-opening a finished edit and re-recording costs far more than planning the bilingual version from the start. In the UAE, Arabic is rarely optional, so budget it upfront.

2. You do not automatically own your footage. Many vendors keep the raw footage or charge extra to release it, and by default you are buying only the edited deliverable [9]. This is one of the most common regrets buyers report. Get ownership of the final video and access to the raw footage agreed in writing before the shoot, or you are locked into the same vendor for every future edit.

3. Revisions are capped, and the cap matters. Most quotes include two to three rounds. Extra rounds cost AED 500 to 1,500 at studios and AED 3,000 to 5,000 at agencies [1][2]. Common mistake: accepting "unlimited revisions." Uncapped changes are the silent budget-killer that can stretch a project by months. Agree the number of rounds and the per-round price in writing.

A fourth quiet trap: music. Stock tracks need a synchronisation licence cleared for your specific platforms, or you risk takedowns and surprise fees later [10]. Confirm any music is licensed for exactly how and where you will use the video.

What changes your quote, and how to cut it

Seven things move a video budget: crew size, equipment grade, number of locations and permits, talent and usage rights, post-production complexity, the number of deliverable formats, and language [3][1]. Two of these are worth planning around because they swing the total the most.

Post-production is the big one. Editing, grading, and motion graphics typically make up 30 to 40 percent of the whole budget, which is why an edit-heavy video costs far more than the shoot day alone implies [1][3]. The second is language, since a second-language version is a scope expansion, not a free add-on.

The single most effective way to cut cost is to batch. Because you pay for crew and gear once, shooting several videos in one organised day can save 40 to 50 percent, producing 8 to 12 pieces in a day instead of booking separate shoots [2]. Tight pre-production helps too: a clear script and storyboard cut shoot days, and planning Arabic and every format upfront avoids the expensive late changes. Going the other way, a rush or 48-hour turnaround usually adds a 50 to 100 percent premium.

Two more lines belong in the budget that quotes routinely leave out. Add a 10 to 15 percent contingency for scope creep, weather, or extra talent, and remember the 5 percent VAT sits on top of the quoted figure [2]. If the video also needs paid distribution, that is a separate media spend, often another 20 to 30 percent of production cost, and it is almost never inside the production quote. Budgeting these from the start is the difference between a project that lands on number and one that drifts past it.

How long it takes, by budget

Timelines scale with budget, and lead time is one of the cheapest ways to keep cost down [2][1]:

BudgetTimelineWhat it covers
AED 10,000 to 20,0002 to 3 weeksOne-day shoot, basic edit, stock music
AED 25,000 to 50,0004 to 6 weeks2 to 3 day shoot, grade, motion graphics, custom music
AED 60,000 to 100,000+8 to 12 weeksMulti-day shoot, advanced VFX, custom soundtrack

The AED 25,000 to 50,000 band is the sweet spot for most brand and recruitment films: enough budget for a proper grade and music without tipping into TVC-scale timelines. Booking with weeks of lead time, rather than demanding a rush, keeps you out of the 50 to 100 percent premium.

What permits actually cost

Permits are often excluded from the headline quote [11]. The Dubai Film and TV Commission application fee is AED 520 and covers multiple days and locations in one application. A public-location permit is around AED 2,520. Private locations range from free to a capped AED 25,000 a day at the owner's discretion. Drone filming needs separate DCAA and GCAA approval, a licensed pilot, and liability insurance. Foreign productions cannot apply directly; a UAE-licensed company must be the applicant, which is one reason a local licence matters.

How this played out for three clients

Real situations from our work. Names and details changed for privacy.

A retail brand. They approved an AED 18,000 corporate video, then discovered the Arabic version was a separate AED 6,000 they had not budgeted, because nobody raised it until the edit was locked. "We assumed bilingual was included in the UAE," the marketing lead says. "Now we scope Arabic on day one, every time."

A property developer. They paid a cheap operator for listing videos and later needed re-edits for a new campaign, only to learn the vendor had kept all the raw footage. "We owned nothing," the director says. "We had to reshoot. Get the footage ownership in writing, always."

A SaaS company. They batched a full year of social content into two organised shoot days instead of booking monthly shoots. The saving was close to half. "Same crew, same gear, paid once," their founder says. "We walked away with 11 videos."

How SKIMBOX prices video

We quote itemised, so you see crew, permits, location, post, and any Arabic version as separate lines. We assign you full ownership of the final video and the raw footage in writing from the start, and our Dubai licence means we handle DFTC permits inside pre-production. Where it saves you money, we plan batch shoots. See our media production services and animation and motion graphics services, or contact us for a clear, itemised proposal.

References

[1] Tanit Studio - video production cost Dubai, transparent breakdown 2026. tanit-studio.com/en/blog/video-production-cost-dubai-transparent-breakdown [2] JJ Agency - corporate video production cost in Dubai 2026, honest pricing guide. jjagency.co/video-production/corporate-video-production-cost-in-dubai-2026-honest-pricing-guide [3] People Perfect Media - video production cost in Dubai by type. peopleperfectmedia.com/video-production-cost-in-dubai [4] Panda Creations - corporate video production cost in the UAE, a reality check. pandacreations.ae/how-much-does-corporate-video-production-cost-in-the-uae-a-reality-check-for-enterprises [5] Chasing Illusions - 2D animation budget and 3D architectural walkthrough cost in Dubai. chasingillusions.com/blog/cost-of-3d-architectural-walkthrough-services-in-dubai [6] Icon Film Equipment Rental - Dubai crew day-rate card. iconfilmequiprental.com/crew-rates [7] WEEN Studio - Arabic voice-over recording rates. weenstudio.com/arabic-voice-over-recording [8] Studio 52 - voice-over and bilingual localisation. studio52.tv/audio/voice-over-artist [9] Mini Fridge Media / practitioner consensus - footage ownership in video contracts. minifridgemedia.com/blog/video-production-contracts [10] Chartlex / LWKS - sync licensing rate card and music-licensing guide 2026. chartlex.com/blog/business/sync-licensing-rate-card-2026 [11] Icon Art Production / UAE Film Permit - DFTC filming permit and location fees. iconartproduction.com/services/filming-permits/permit-fees [12] SKIMBOX - Internal experience producing licensed video in Dubai, 2026. skimbox.co

Frequently asked questions

  • How much does video production cost in Dubai?

    Most business videos in Dubai cost between AED 5,000 and AED 50,000, with a standard one to three minute corporate video averaging AED 10,000 to 30,000, and high-end brand films or TV commercials running AED 25,000 to 100,000 and beyond. A single social reel can be AED 1,500 to 8,000. The figure depends on crew size, gear grade, locations, talent, and how much post-production the video needs.

  • How much does a corporate video cost in Dubai?

    A one to three minute corporate video typically costs AED 10,000 to 30,000. The low end is a half-day single-location shoot with a small crew and basic edit, while the high end covers multiple locations, actors, and motion graphics. An internal or leadership message sits around AED 10,000 to 18,000, and a polished multi-location enterprise film runs AED 20,000 to 40,000.

  • How much does a social media reel or short video cost in Dubai?

    A single professional reel of 15 to 60 seconds costs AED 1,500 to 8,000. The smartest way to buy short content is a content day: one organised shoot of four to six hours producing 5 to 10 clips for AED 3,000 to 8,000 total. That batching is where short-form video gets affordable, because you pay for the crew and gear once and walk away with a month of content.

  • How much does a TV commercial cost in Dubai?

    A basic TV commercial starts around AED 10,000 to 25,000, the professional standard is AED 30,000 to 60,000, and high-end campaigns with named talent, multiple locations, and VFX run AED 80,000 to 500,000 and up. The biggest single driver at the top end is talent usage rights, because buying an actor's image for regional broadcast costs far more than a corporate appearance.

  • How much does an animation or explainer video cost in Dubai?

    Simple 2D motion-graphics explainers cost AED 800 to 1,500 per finished minute, character-driven animation is AED 1,800 to 3,500 per minute, and a full explainer project typically totals AED 5,000 to 30,000. 3D animation and CGI run AED 10,000 to 50,000 and up per project. Animation is priced per finished minute because the work is in the build, not a filming day.

  • How much does a 3D architectural walkthrough cost in Dubai?

    A 3D architectural or real-estate walkthrough runs AED 1,800 to 6,500 per finished minute. A one-minute villa walkthrough is around AED 1,800 to 3,500, a two-minute 4K standard is AED 9,000 to 11,000, and a VR 360-degree version reaches AED 11,000 to 13,000. Resolution and realism are the main drivers, with 4K and photoreal lighting costing noticeably more than 1080p.

  • How much does a product video cost in Dubai?

    Basic e-commerce or social product videos cost AED 3,000 to 7,000, while polished promotional product films run AED 10,000 to 30,000, and cinematic product films with VFX reach AED 40,000 to 80,000. The difference is studio time, lighting, and post-production. A clean white-background product clip is cheap; a hero film with effects and a story is not.

  • How much does event or conference videography cost in Dubai?

    Event coverage costs AED 2,500 to 10,000 per day. A half-day with a solo shooter and a highlights reel is AED 1,800 to 3,800, a full day with a second camera is AED 2,800 to 6,000, and premium full-day coverage with same-day editing reaches AED 12,000 and up. Same-day edits and multiple cameras are the main things that move the price.

  • How much does a real estate property video cost in Dubai?

    A real-estate walkthrough video costs AED 2,500 to 5,500, with budget operators starting near AED 1,000. Adding drone footage, twilight shots, or lifestyle scenes with talent pushes it to the top of the range. For off-plan or luxury listings, a 3D walkthrough is often better value than live-action, since it can be produced before the property physically exists.

  • What is a videographer's day rate in Dubai?

    A solo videographer charges AED 1,500 to 5,000 a day, a two-person crew of shooter plus assistant is AED 5,000 to 8,000, and a full production team with director, DP, sound, and lighting runs AED 10,000 to 50,000 a day. Freelance hourly work is roughly AED 200 to 400 an hour for a minimal-kit shooter, though most professionals price by half-day or full-day.

  • What do individual film crew roles cost per day in Dubai?

    Per-role day rates in 2026: Director of Photography AED 2,500 to 10,000, camera operator AED 1,500 to 3,000, drone operator AED 6,000 to 8,000, gaffer AED 1,500 to 2,000, sound technician with kit AED 1,800 to 3,000, and producer AED 2,000 to 4,000. A production assistant is AED 800 to 1,100. These line items are what an itemised crew quote is built from.

  • How much does a one-minute video cost in Dubai?

    A fully produced one-minute video typically costs AED 3,000 to 8,000. If you only need editing, that is AED 1,000 to 5,000 per finished minute, rising with motion graphics. Some studios use a per-minute decay model, charging full rate for the first finished minute and dropping it around 30 percent for each additional minute on the same project, since the setup is already paid for.

  • How much does video editing cost per minute in Dubai?

    Basic editing costs AED 1,000 to 5,000 per finished minute, advanced editing with motion graphics runs AED 2,000 to 10,000 per minute, and colour grading is AED 1,000 to 3,000 per video. Post-production is not a small line item: it typically makes up 30 to 40 percent of a video's total budget, which is why edit-heavy projects cost more than the shoot day alone suggests.

  • How much does a freelance videographer cost versus an agency in Dubai?

    Freelancers start from AED 500 to 5,000 per job or day, while agencies usually carry project minimums around AED 10,000 but include a full crew, structure, and accountability. A freelancer fits internal or quick social content. For anything that represents your brand publicly, a company with proper pre-production and a contract is usually worth the higher cost.

  • What is included in a Dubai video production quote?

    A standard quote usually covers pre-production planning and scripting, the shoot day, basic editing, and two to three revision rounds. What is often not included: drone, permits, location fees, talent, voice-over, music licensing, extra formats, and an Arabic version. Always get the quote itemised so you can see exactly where production ends and the add-ons begin.

  • What costs extra in a Dubai video shoot?

    Common add-ons billed on top of the base quote are extra revision rounds, multi-format re-edits, shoot overtime at AED 500 to 1,500 an hour, drone footage, location and permit fees, talent, voice-over, music licensing, travel outside Dubai, and any Arabic version. The 5 percent VAT also sits on top. These extras are exactly why an itemised quote matters before you sign.

  • Does the video price include filming permits in Dubai?

    Often not. The Dubai Film and TV Commission application fee is AED 520 and covers multiple days and locations in one application, a public-location permit is around AED 2,520, and private-location fees range from AED 0 to a capped AED 25,000 a day. Drone filming needs separate DCAA and GCAA approval. Always ask whether permits are inside the quote or billed separately.

  • How many revisions are included, and what does an extra revision cost?

    Most quotes include two to three revision rounds. Extra rounds cost AED 500 to 1,500 each at studios and AED 3,000 to 5,000 each at agencies. Avoid any contract promising unlimited revisions, because uncapped changes are the silent budget-killer that can stretch a project by months. Agree the number of rounds and the per-round cost in writing before the shoot.

  • Do I own the raw footage and final files after the shoot in Dubai?

    Not automatically. Many vendors keep the raw footage or charge extra to release it, and what you are buying by default is the edited deliverable, not the source files. This is one of the most common regrets buyers report. Get ownership of the final video and access to the raw footage agreed in writing upfront, so you are not locked in for future edits.

  • How much does an Arabic version of my video cost in Dubai?

    Plan for Arabic as a separate add-on, not a free extra. Arabic voice-over runs roughly AED 950 to 3,000, subtitling is priced per minute, and there is usually a separate translation fee on top. A full Arabic dub costs more than subtitles. Deciding on Arabic late is what makes it expensive, because re-opening the edit and re-recording costs more than planning the bilingual version from the start.

  • Does the price include music, and do I need a music licence?

    Stock or library music is often included, licensed commercial tracks cost AED 500 to 3,000, and a custom composition starts around AED 5,000 and reaches AED 25,000. The trap is the synchronisation licence: stock music must be cleared for your specific platforms, or you risk takedowns and surprise fees. Confirm in writing that any music is licensed for exactly how and where you will use the video.

  • Why is video production so expensive in Dubai?

    You are not paying for one filming day. You are paying for crew time across multiple roles, high-end cameras and lighting, permits and location fees, talent, and 15 to 40 hours of post-production per deliverable. Post alone is 30 to 40 percent of the budget. A polished video is a team of specialists and weeks of work, which is why a real quote looks higher than a freelancer's day rate.

  • Why is one video quote AED 1,500 and another AED 10,000 for the same brief?

    Because the two quotes describe very different productions. One is a single person with a camera and a quick edit; the other is a full crew, cinema-grade gear, proper lighting, scripted pre-production, and multiple edit rounds. The brief sounds the same, but the output is not. Get both quotes itemised, and the gap explains itself line by line.

  • How do I know if a Dubai video quote is fair and not overpriced?

    Demand an itemised breakdown split into pre-production, production, and post-production. A fair quote shows you crew, gear, location, edit hours, and any Arabic version as separate lines. A vendor who can only give a single lump sum, or who cannot explain where the money goes, is a red flag. Comparing itemised quotes, not headline totals, is how you spot both overpricing and corner-cutting.

  • Is a cheap video production quote in Dubai a red flag?

    Often yes. A cinematic brand film offered for AED 2,000 means corners are being cut on gear, talent, or editing, and cheap work frequently has to be redone, which costs more overall. There is a real floor: below roughly AED 10,000 for a one-day professional single-location shoot, you are buying a freelancer day, not a production. Match the price to what the brand actually needs to look like.

  • How can I reduce my video production cost in Dubai?

    Batch multiple videos into one shoot day. Because you pay for crew and gear once, batching can save 40 to 50 percent, producing 8 to 12 pieces in a single organised day instead of booking separate shoots. Tight pre-production also helps, since a clear script and storyboard cut shoot days. Planning Arabic and all formats upfront avoids the costliest add-ons, which come from changes made late.

  • How much is a monthly video or content retainer in Dubai?

    Ongoing video retainers run AED 4,000 to 30,000 a month depending on volume. A subscription model lowers the per-video cost compared with one-off projects and builds a steady content bank, which suits brands that need regular social and marketing video. It works best when paired with batch shoot days, so the retainer funds a predictable pipeline rather than scattered one-off bookings.

  • How long does video production take in Dubai?

    Timelines scale with budget. An AED 10,000 to 20,000 video takes two to three weeks, an AED 25,000 to 50,000 production takes four to six weeks, and an AED 60,000-plus brand film or TVC takes 8 to 12 weeks. A rush or 48-hour turnaround typically adds a 50 to 100 percent premium, so building in lead time is one of the cheapest ways to keep the budget down.

  • Should I hire a Dubai video production company or do it myself?

    For anything that represents your brand publicly, a commercial, brand film, or campaign, a professional company's structure, gear, and accountability are worth it. For quick internal updates or casual social clips, a freelancer or even in-house phone content can be fine. Match the production level to the stakes: the more the video carries your brand, the less sense DIY makes.

SKIMBOX Team

Tech Consultancy

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