Skyrex Productions
My brother and I have been making industrial videos since 2020. We have filmed in auto shops, food processing plants, warehouses, and construction sites across the country. And the first question we hear from almost every manufacturing client is the same.
How much is this going to cost?
It is a fair question. You have a budget to protect. You have a plant manager who needs to approve the expense. You have a leadership team that wants to see ROI. You cannot just throw money at a video and hope it works.
So let me give you a straight answer. No fluff. No “it depends” and then walking away. Real numbers, real breakdowns, and real advice on how to get the most out of your budget.
The short answer
A professionally produced manufacturing or industrial video typically costs between $3,000 and $25,000 for a standard 2 to 3 minute project. But that range is wide. Some projects come in under $3,000. Others push past $50,000.
The average agency video project in 2026 costs around $42,281**. That covers everything from 30-second social clips to 10-minute brand films. For corporate video specifically, you are looking at roughly **$1,000 to $10,000 per finished minute.
But those are just averages. Your actual cost depends on a handful of factors that I am going to walk you through right now.
What actually drives the cost
Six variables determine what you will pay for an industrial video. Understanding them is the difference between an accurate budget and a painful surprise three weeks into production.
1. Video type and purpose
A safety training video and a brand film require completely different approaches. Training content might use a single presenter and a simple background. A brand film might need multiple locations, actors, and custom music.
Safety orientation videos for manufacturing plants typically start around $2,750**. A factory tour video runs higher. A full brand film with multiple setups and professional crew pushes into the **$10,000 to $50,000 range.
2. Crew size
This is a big one. A freelance videographer costs $1,000 to $4,800 per day. A full crew with a director, DP, gaffer, sound engineer, and production assistant runs $3,000 to $8,000 per day before you have paid for a single actor.
We keep our crews small for industrial shoots. Usually two to four people. Small enough to stay out of your way. Skilled enough to handle anything. That keeps costs down without sacrificing quality.
3. Equipment
High-quality cameras start at $3,000 to $8,000 per unit. Professional lighting kits cost $2,000 to $5,000. Audio equipment adds another $2,000 to $4,000. Initial equipment investment for a production company typically ranges from $15,000 to $35,000.
You are not paying for the gear itself. You are paying for the expertise to use it properly. An industrial facility is one of the hardest environments to film. Harsh lighting, reflective surfaces, loud noise, tight spaces. You need someone who knows how to handle all of that.
4. Location and logistics
Filming in your own facility is usually free. But there are other costs. Studio rentals, location fees, and permits add up. If your facility is outside the city, travel and accommodation costs come into play.
The bigger factor is disruption. Can we film during production hours or do we need to work around your schedule? We film around your production schedule. We wear your gear. We follow your rules. We never get in the way.
5. Post-production
Editing, color grading, sound design, motion graphics, and visual effects can equal or exceed production costs. Complex animations and visual effects are particularly time-intensive.
A simple edit with cuts and titles costs less. A polished video with color grading, sound design, and motion graphics costs more. Post-production typically accounts for 25 to 35 percent of the total budget.
6. Revision rounds
Every round of revisions takes time. Time is money. Most production companies include two to three rounds of revisions in their base price. Additional rounds cost extra.
We include revisions in our pricing. We do not stop until you are happy. But we are also upfront about what is reasonable. Endless revisions drive costs up for everyone.
A realistic breakdown by video type
Here is what you can expect to pay for different types of industrial and manufacturing videos. These are real ranges based on actual projects.
| Video Type | Typical Price Range |
|---|---|
| Safety orientation video | from $2,750 |
| Basic interview or testimonial | $3,000 – $5,000 |
| Product demo or walkthrough | $3,000 – $8,000 |
| Corporate overview or brand story | $6,000 – $15,000+ |
| Professional corporate video | $10,000 – $50,000 |
| Factory tour with drone footage | $8,000 – $20,000 |
| Full documentary-style film | $15,000 – $50,000+ |
| Broadcast-quality commercial | $75,000 – $500,000+ |
Most manufacturing companies land somewhere in the $8,000 to $25,000 range for a solid, professional video that actually does something for their business.
Hidden costs to watch out for
Here is where things get tricky. The initial quote is rarely the final number if you are not careful.
Localization and translations. If you need the same video in multiple languages, costs multiply. Multilingual projects add significant expense.
Content updates. You filmed a process video. Then you upgraded your equipment. Now the video is outdated. Updating content can cost almost as much as the original production.
Usage rights. Music licensing, stock footage, and talent usage rights all add costs. If you want to use the video for multiple years or across multiple channels, make sure those rights are included.
Rush fees. Need it in two weeks instead of six? That will cost extra. Rush fees can add 20 to 50 percent to the total.
Ask about all of these upfront. A good production company will tell you about them before you sign anything.
How to get an accurate quote
Here is what we tell every manufacturing client who asks about cost.
Be specific about what you want. The more vague you are, the wider the price range. Tell us what kind of video, how long, where it will be used, and what you want it to achieve.
Know your budget range. We have worked with clients from $5,000 to nearly six figures. Both can work. But we need to know what we are working with so we can design a project that fits.
Ask for a breakdown. A legitimate production company will give you a clear proposal with costs, timelines, and deliverables. They will tell you what is included and what is not. No surprise charges.
Get multiple quotes. Ask three production companies what a two-minute training video costs and you will get three different answers. One quotes $2,000**. Another quotes **$20,000. Both are technically correct. The difference is scope, quality, and what is included.
Is it worth the investment?
This is the question that matters most.
82 percent of marketers report a positive ROI from video. 93 percent of marketers now report strong ROI from video—the highest level ever recorded. 91 percent of stakeholders state that video quality directly impacts their trust in a brand’s technical capability.
For manufacturing specifically, the numbers are even more compelling. 52 percent reduction in sales cycle length using explainer videos. Landing pages with videos see an 80 percent increase in conversions. 70 percent of B2B buyers watch videos during their purchasing journey.
A professionally produced manufacturing video is not an expense. It is an investment in your sales process, your brand credibility, and your competitive position.
A few final thoughts
We have filmed in factories, warehouses, and construction sites across the country. We have seen what works and what does not.
The companies that get the most value from their video budget are the ones who come in with a clear goal, a realistic budget, and a willingness to trust the process. They do not try to cut corners. They do not expect Hollywood quality for a shoestring budget. They understand that good work costs money and that bad work costs more in the long run.
If you are ready to invest in a video that actually does something for your business, we would love to talk.
Ready to get a real quote?
Send us a note. Tell us about your facility and what you want to achieve. We will reply fast and set up a call. No pressure. Just a conversation.
We create high-impact commercials, brand films, and documentaries for organizations on the frontlines of service, performance, and change. Content that captures attention, builds credibility, and drives real results.
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