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How Much Does Professional Video Editing Cost in 2026?



If you’re googling video editing costs, you’re probably at one of two stages: you’ve been editing your own videos and you’re exhausted, or you’ve tried a cheap freelancer and the results were painful.

Either way, you need real numbers — not vague ranges from sites that don’t actually sell editing services.

We run a video editing agency that handles everything from YouTube long-form to Reels to full brand productions. We’ve also worked with creators who came from Fiverr, Upwork, and every subscription service in between. So we know what things actually cost across the entire market — and more importantly, what you actually get at each price point.

Here’s the honest breakdown.

Video editing cost spectrum infographic

The Quick Answer: Video Editing Costs at a Glance

Before we dive deep, here’s the summary. These are 2026 market rates based on U.S.-facing services:

Pricing Model Low End Mid Range High End
Per video (YouTube long-form) $100–$200 $250–$500 $500–$1,500+
Per video (Short-form/Reels) $25–$50 $75–$150 $150–$400
Hourly rate $15–$30 $40–$80 $80–$150+
Monthly subscription $300–$600 $800–$2,000 $2,500–$5,000+
Full-time dedicated team $2,000–$3,000 $3,500–$5,000 $5,000–$10,000+
Key Takeaway: The “right” price depends entirely on what you’re getting. A $150 video from Fiverr and a $500 video from a dedicated editor are fundamentally different products. We’ll break down exactly what changes at each tier below.

Per-Video Editing Costs: What You’re Actually Buying

Tier 1: Budget Editing ($100–$200 per video)

This is where most creators start. You’ll find these rates on Fiverr, Upwork, and offshore freelancer platforms. At this price point, you typically get:

  • Basic jump cuts and trimming
  • Simple text overlays (usually templated)
  • Background music from a free library
  • 1-2 rounds of revisions
  • 3-5 day turnaround

What’s missing: Color grading, sound design, custom motion graphics, pacing expertise, audience retention optimization. The editor is cutting footage, not crafting a viewing experience.

For hobby creators or channels that don’t monetize, this can work. For anyone treating video as a business asset, this tier creates a ceiling on quality that will show in your analytics.

Tier 2: Professional Editing ($250–$500 per video)

This is the sweet spot for serious YouTube creators producing 4-8 videos per month. At this price, you’re working with editors who understand platform-specific best practices:

  • Strategic pacing for audience retention
  • Professional color correction
  • Custom lower thirds and graphics
  • Proper audio mixing and noise reduction
  • B-roll integration and visual storytelling
  • 2-3 revision rounds
  • 1-3 day turnaround

According to data from VeedYou, their average per-video rate in 2025 was around $305 — right in this range. Tasty Edits quotes $320-$450 per video depending on format. These numbers are consistent across the professional tier of the market.

Tier 3: Premium/Agency Editing ($500–$1,500+ per video)

At this level, you’re paying for a team — not just an editor. Premium editing includes:

  • Dedicated editor who learns your brand voice
  • Motion graphics and custom animations
  • Advanced color grading (cinematic looks)
  • Sound design and foley
  • Thumbnail concepts
  • Strategy input on content structure
  • Project management and quality control layers
  • Same-day or next-day turnaround options

This is what agencies like Increditors and a handful of premium services provide. The price premium isn’t just for prettier videos — it’s for reliability, consistency, and the compound effect of working with editors who deeply understand your channel.

Three editing tiers comparison

Hourly Rates: What Editors Charge by Experience Level

If you’re hiring by the hour (common for one-off projects or in-house roles), here’s what the market looks like:

Experience Level Hourly Rate Typical Background Best For
Beginner (0-2 years) $15–$30/hr Self-taught, Fiverr/Upwork Simple cuts, basic content
Intermediate (2-5 years) $35–$65/hr Freelancer with portfolio YouTube, social media, podcasts
Senior (5-10 years) $65–$100/hr Agency or production house experience Brand videos, commercials, complex content
Expert/Specialist (10+ years) $100–$150+/hr Broadcast, film, or top-tier agency VFX, animation, cinematic production

According to Payscale’s 2025 data, the average U.S. video editor earns about $32/hour as a salary. But freelancers command higher rates — CutJamm reports most professional freelancers charge $40-$80/hour, while senior editors on Reddit regularly report billing $90-$100/hour for direct clients.

The hourly trap: Hourly billing sounds transparent, but it incentivizes slower work. A skilled editor might complete your video in 4 hours where a cheaper editor takes 12. At $75/hour × 4 hours = $300 vs. $25/hour × 12 hours = $300, you pay the same — but get a dramatically different result. This is why per-video or retainer pricing often makes more sense for ongoing work.

Monthly Retainer & Subscription Pricing

If you produce video content regularly (weekly or more), monthly pricing is almost always more cost-effective than per-video billing. Here’s how the market segments:

Service Type Monthly Cost What You Get Who It’s For
Budget subscription
(Vidchops, basic tiers)
$300–$600/mo 2-4 videos, 1 editor, limited revisions New YouTubers, hobby creators
Mid-tier subscription
(Tasty Edits, beCreatives)
$800–$2,000/mo 4-8 videos, dedicated editor, faster turnaround Growing creators, small businesses
Premium agency retainer
(Increditors, VEC)
$2,500–$5,000/mo 8-20+ videos, dedicated team, VFX/animation, shorts + long-form Established creators, brands, SaaS companies
Full-time dedicated team
(Increditors Teams)
$4,000–$8,000/mo Dedicated editor(s) working 40hr/week on your content, PM included High-volume creators, enterprises, agencies

The Increditors pricing model sits at the premium tier because you’re getting a full team — not a single editor juggling 15 clients. Our YouTube editing packages start at $5,000/month for weekly long-form content with a dedicated editor, project manager, and quality reviewer. Our Reels and shorts packages start at $2,500/month.

For SaaS companies specifically, our sister brand Video Editing Company provides dedicated teams that ship 10-40+ videos per month at similar price points, optimized for product demos, tutorials, and thought leadership content.

Not Sure Which Tier Fits Your Budget?

We’ll build a custom plan based on your content volume and goals. No commitment, no sales pitch — just honest pricing.

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What Does Editing Cost by Video Type?

Not all videos are created equal. A 10-minute talking head is a completely different project than a 10-minute travel vlog or a product demo with screen recordings. Here’s how costs break down by format:

Video Type Typical Length Per-Video Cost What’s Involved
Talking head / interview 10-20 min $150–$400 Multi-cam sync, lower thirds, basic graphics, audio cleanup
YouTube essay / educational 10-30 min $300–$800 Heavy B-roll, motion graphics, data visualization, pacing
Vlog / lifestyle 8-15 min $200–$500 Dynamic cuts, music sync, color grading, travel footage
Podcast (video) 30-90 min $200–$600 Multi-cam, speaker detection, chapters, clip extraction
Short-form (Reels/Shorts/TikTok) 15-90 sec $50–$200 Trending formats, captions, hooks, platform optimization
Brand/commercial video 1-3 min $500–$3,000+ Color grading, VFX, sound design, animation, multiple cuts
Product demo / explainer 2-10 min $400–$1,500 Screen recording polish, motion graphics, voiceover sync
Course / training content 5-60 min $150–$500/lesson Clean cuts, chapter markers, screen + camera sync, graphics

Video editing cost by type

Why Some YouTube Videos Cost 5x More Than Others

The biggest cost driver isn’t video length — it’s complexity. A 20-minute talking head with one camera angle might take 3-4 hours to edit. A 10-minute video essay with custom animations, data visualizations, 50 B-roll clips, and color grading could take 15-20 hours.

When we worked with Riley Coleman, a YouTuber who came to us producing solid content that wasn’t growing, the editing wasn’t just about making videos look better. We restructured pacing, added retention-optimized hooks, improved visual storytelling, and refined the entire post-production workflow. The result: his views doubled. That kind of strategic editing lives in the $400-$800 per video range — and the ROI made it a no-brainer.

9 Factors That Affect Video Editing Price

When you get wildly different quotes from editors, it’s usually because of these variables:

1. Video Length and Raw Footage Volume

A 10-minute final video from 30 minutes of raw footage is straightforward. A 10-minute video from 4 hours of multi-camera footage requires serious curation. Always discuss footage-to-final ratios upfront.

2. Editing Complexity

Jump cuts on a single camera vs. multi-cam with B-roll, graphics, animations, and VFX. These are different jobs with different price tags. Be specific about what you need.

3. Motion Graphics and Animation

Custom lower thirds, animated charts, logo animations, text effects — these are often billed separately or bundled into higher-tier packages. Even “simple” motion graphics add 2-4 hours to a project.

4. Color Grading

Basic color correction (making footage look normal) is included at most tiers. Cinematic color grading (creating a specific mood and look) is a specialized skill that adds $50-$200 per video.

5. Sound Design and Audio

Noise reduction, audio leveling, music selection, and basic mixing are standard. Custom sound effects, foley, and professional audio mastering are premium add-ons.

6. Turnaround Time

Need it tomorrow? Expect a 25-50% rush fee. Standard turnaround (3-5 business days) is cheapest. 24-48 hour turnaround is the norm for agencies with dedicated teams.

7. Revision Rounds

Most professionals include 2-3 revision rounds. Unlimited revisions (offered by some subscription services) sound great but can mask slower initial quality — if you need 6 rounds of revisions, the editor didn’t understand your brief.

8. Editor’s Location and Experience

U.S.-based editors: $40-$100+/hour. LATAM editors: $20-$40/hour. Southeast Asian editors: $10-$25/hour. You generally get what you pay for, but strong agencies build teams in lower-cost regions while maintaining U.S.-level quality through training and QC processes.

9. Volume Commitment

One video is always the most expensive per unit. Committing to 4, 8, or 20+ videos per month unlocks significant discounts — typically 20-40% less per video than one-off pricing.

9 pricing factors

Freelancer vs Agency: The Real Cost Comparison

This is the decision most growing creators and businesses face. Let’s put actual numbers side by side.

Scenario: You produce 8 YouTube videos + 16 short-form clips per month

Factor Freelancer (Mid-Tier) Budget Subscription Premium Agency
Monthly cost $3,200–$4,800 $1,500–$2,500 $4,000–$5,500
Avg turnaround 3-5 days 2-4 days 1-2 days
Backup if editor is sick ❌ You’re stuck ⚠️ Maybe ✅ Team covers
Project management ❌ You manage ⚠️ Basic dashboard ✅ Dedicated PM
Quality control ❌ Self-review ⚠️ Internal QC ✅ Multi-layer QC
Motion graphics ⚠️ Extra cost ❌ Limited ✅ Included
Shorts from long-form $50-100 each extra ⚠️ Separate plan ✅ Bundled
Your time managing 5-10 hrs/month 3-5 hrs/month 1-2 hrs/month
True monthly cost
(including your time at $100/hr)
$4,200–$5,800 $1,800–$3,000 $4,100–$5,700

Notice something? When you factor in your own time managing freelancers — reviewing rough cuts, writing detailed feedback, re-explaining your brand style for the third time, dealing with missed deadlines — the premium agency option costs roughly the same as a mid-tier freelancer. But you get faster turnaround, a safety net, and hours of your life back every week.

When we onboarded TuMeke, an AI/SaaS company, they had been cycling through freelancers for months. Each new editor meant re-teaching their brand guidelines, re-explaining their product, and hoping the editor actually understood B2B content. Their switch to a dedicated Increditors team eliminated that entire cycle. Same editors, every month, who actually understood AI product positioning.

The real question isn’t “what’s cheapest?” — it’s “what’s cheapest per unit of quality?” A $200 video that doesn’t move your business metrics is more expensive than a $500 video that doubles your retention rate.

Hidden Costs Nobody Talks About

The sticker price is never the full cost. Here’s what catches people off guard:

The Ramp-Up Tax

Every new editor needs 2-4 weeks to learn your style, brand, and preferences. During that time, you’ll do more revisions, spend more time on feedback, and get lower-quality output. If you switch editors every few months (common with freelancers), you pay this tax repeatedly. With a stable agency team, you pay it once.

Stock Footage and Music Licensing

Budget editors often use free, low-quality stock and music. Professional editing may require licensed assets — Artgrid, Epidemic Sound, Adobe Stock — costing $20-$100+ per video. Some agencies (including Increditors) include licensed asset access in their retainers.

Software and Storage

If your editor needs access to your brand assets, project files, or raw footage, you’ll need file transfer solutions (Frame.io, Google Drive, Dropbox Pro). Budget $20-$100/month depending on volume.

The Opportunity Cost of Bad Editing

This is the big one nobody quantifies. A poorly edited video doesn’t just “not perform” — it actively damages your channel. YouTube’s algorithm learns from viewer behavior. If viewers click away in the first 30 seconds because of bad pacing, the algorithm serves your content to fewer people. That impact compounds across every future video.

We see this regularly with creators who come to us from budget services. VYVE Wellness, a health and wellness brand, had been producing videos consistently but getting minimal traction. The content was good — the editing was the bottleneck. After switching to our team and overhauling their post-production approach, their engagement metrics shifted meaningfully within the first month.

The ROI Question: Is Professional Video Editing Worth It?

Let’s do actual math instead of vague claims.

Scenario: A YouTube creator earning $15 CPM with 100K monthly views

Metric DIY Editing Professional Editing
Monthly views 100,000 150,000–200,000
Average retention 35% 45-55%
Monthly ad revenue $1,500 $2,250–$3,000
Sponsorship rate $500/video $800–$1,200/video
Time spent editing 20-30 hrs/month 2-3 hrs/month (review only)
Editing cost $0 (but 25+ hours) $2,000–$4,000/month
Net gain from outsourcing +$750–$1,500/mo in revenue + 20 hours freed

For creators at the 100K+ monthly view level, professional editing almost always pays for itself through higher retention → more views → more revenue. The freed-up time for content creation or audience building is a bonus.

For businesses using video for lead generation, the math is even clearer. If one video-sourced lead is worth $5,000+ (common for SaaS, consulting, real estate), the entire annual editing budget pays for itself with a handful of conversions.

ROI comparison chart

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See our portfolio of client work and judge the quality yourself. Then let’s talk numbers.

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How to Find the Right Option for Your Budget

Here’s a decision framework based on where you are right now:

If you’re spending $0-$500/month on video

You’re either editing yourself or using a very basic service. If video is a hobby, that’s fine. If it’s a business channel, you’re leaving money on the table. Start with a mid-tier subscription ($800-$1,500/month) and measure the impact on retention and views over 90 days.

If you’re spending $500-$2,000/month

You’re probably using a freelancer or budget subscription. The question to ask: are you hitting quality ceilings? If your content quality has plateaued despite better cameras, better lighting, and better topics — the editing is the bottleneck. Consider stepping up to a dedicated editing team.

If you’re spending $2,000-$5,000/month

You’re in the professional tier. At this budget, evaluate whether your current setup gives you reliability and strategic value — not just deliverables. The best agencies at this level aren’t just editors; they’re production partners who understand your audience.

If you’re a business spending $5,000+/month

You need an enterprise-grade solution — dedicated teams, SLAs, brand guidelines documentation, and the ability to scale up or down without re-onboarding. This is exactly what our full-time dedicated team model provides.

The “Test Drive” Approach

Don’t commit to annual contracts upfront. Any decent agency will let you start with a single month or even a trial project. At Increditors, we start every engagement with a discovery call to make sure we’re the right fit — because a mismatched editor-client relationship wastes everyone’s time and money.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does it cost to edit a YouTube video?

A single YouTube video edit costs between $100 for basic jump cuts to $500+ for fully produced videos with motion graphics, color grading, and sound design. Monthly retainers with agencies typically range from $1,500 to $5,000+ depending on volume and complexity. For a detailed breakdown, see our pricing page.

Is it worth paying for professional video editing?

Yes, if video is a revenue channel for your business or personal brand. Professional editing typically increases viewer retention by 30-60%, improves click-through rates, and frees up 15-30+ hours per month. For creators earning from ads, sponsorships, or lead generation, the investment usually pays for itself within 2-3 months.

What is cheaper: a freelance editor or a video editing agency?

Freelancers appear cheaper at $25-100/hour, but agencies often deliver better value at scale. A freelancer editing 8 videos/month at $300 each costs $2,400 — but you manage everything. An agency retainer at $2,500-5,000/month includes a dedicated team, project management, QC, and backup editors. When you factor in your management time, the costs are surprisingly similar.

How much does a video editing retainer cost per month?

Monthly retainers range from $500/month (basic subscriptions with 2-4 videos) to $5,000+/month (premium agencies with dedicated teams handling 10-40+ videos). The Increditors model starts at $2,500/month for short-form content and $5,000/month for YouTube long-form packages.

What factors affect video editing pricing?

The main factors are: video length, raw footage volume, editing complexity, motion graphics requirements, color grading, sound design, turnaround time, revision rounds, editor experience, and volume commitment. A simple talking head edit and a cinematic video essay can differ by 5x in cost.

Can I get professional video editing for under $500/month?

Yes, but with significant trade-offs. Budget subscriptions like Vidchops offer plans in the $300-$600 range for 2-4 basic videos per month. You’ll get clean cuts and basic graphics, but don’t expect motion graphics, color grading, or strategic editing. For serious creators producing 8+ videos monthly, budget services create quality ceilings.

How do I know if I’m overpaying for video editing?

Compare your per-video effective rate against the benchmarks in this guide. Then evaluate the output: are your retention rates improving? Is your content quality noticeably better than when you edited yourself? If you’re paying premium prices but seeing no impact on metrics, you might have the wrong editor — not the wrong price point.

Should I hire a full-time editor or use an agency?

A full-time in-house editor costs $40,000-$80,000/year in salary alone, plus benefits, equipment, software, and management overhead. That makes sense if you produce daily content in-house. For most creators and businesses producing 4-20 videos/month, an agency is more cost-effective and gives you access to multiple specialists (editor + colorist + motion designer + PM) instead of one generalist.

Get Pricing for Your Exact Needs

Every project is different. Tell us what you’re producing and we’ll give you a straight answer on what it costs — no hidden fees, no upsells.

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Pricing data in this article reflects 2026 market rates gathered from public sources including Payscale, CutJamm, VeedYou, ContentBeta, and direct industry research. Rates vary by region and project specifics. For current Increditors pricing, visit our pricing page or schedule a call.