Talent shortages, equipment inflation, and studio rate increases are forcing Singapore businesses to rethink how — and how much — they invest in video content. Here is what the data actually shows, and what smart brands are doing about it.
Being as pivotal as it is, companies can’t ignore the importance of video production, even when the costs have increased by up to 30% in the past 2 years in Singapore. According to Wyzowl’s 2025 report, 91% of businesses globally now use video as a marketing tool. In Singapore specifically, total digital advertising spend grew 11% year-on-year to reach SGD 1.94 billion in 2024. But the cost of producing it is rising in ways that are putting real pressure on marketing budgets.
Inflationary environment, talent shortages, and high equipment costs are all contributing. A Talent Shortage Survey found that more than 4 in 5 Singapore employers report difficulty finding the skilled talent they need, double the rate from 2019 (ManpowerGroup, 2025). Even the estimated 15-30% cost surge is expected to grow higher in the next 5 years.
What Is Driving Costs Up: A Line-by-Line Breakdown
Talent shortage is the sharpest pressure point, while rising equipment cost and studio rents are adding more salt to the pain.
Talent: The Sharpest Pressure Point
Singapore’s creative workforce is genuinely constrained. The Singapore Film Commission reported, “Singapore’s extremely high living costs create a particularly acute challenge for film production.”
For corporate video production in Singapore specifically, the current Singapore-based guides indicate camera operator day rates now typically range from SGD 250 to SGD 600. On the other hand, director/producer day rates range from SGD 300 to SGD 800 for mid-tier engagements. With more senior and experienced freelancers, the cost can increase significantly. Hourly rates for camera operators are cited at SGD 110 to SGD 390 per hour. These represent a sharp increase in overall pay rates from 2-3 years ago.
Equipment Rental: Moderating but Still Elevated
Professional cinema camera and lighting rental in Singapore has risen in line with the broader cost environment. From our research through active Singapore rental houses, including Cinegear and Camera Rental Centre, we found the change in prices in video production equipment in recent years:
| Category | Equipment Name | Old Price (2022-23 Avg) | Current Price (2026) | % Change |
| Camera | Sony FX6 Full-Frame Camera | $175.00 | $219.00 | +25.1% |
| Drone | DJI Mavic 3 Classic (Fly More) | $150.00 | $400.00 | +166.7% |
| Light | Godox AD600Pro (2-Light Kit) | $95.00 | $108.00 | +13.7% |
| Light | ARRI M18 HMI 1800W | $175.00 | $158.00 | -9.7% |
| Gimbal | DJI Ronin 2 Professional Combo | $325.00 | $425.00 | +30.8% |
Inflationary pressures are real: rising insurance premiums, the high capital costs of rapidly evolving cinema tech (RED, ARRI, Sony), and Singapore’s import-heavy supply chain drive up expenses.
Studio Rates: Rising Overheads, Rising Rates
Singapore studio rates have risen steadily, fueled by the same industrial rental pressures. By early 2024-25, professional video studios averaged SGD 120 to SGD 250 per hour. However, as of 2026, the rent increase has gone up to 40% when compared to a few years ago.
| Studio | Old Full Day Rent | New Full Day Rent | % Increase |
| H2 Studio, MacPherson Studio | S$350 | S$450 | 28.6% |
| Vivid Snaps (Kallang) | S$500 | S$650 | 30.0% |
| The Kyt Studio (Woodlands) | S$600 | S$750 | 25.0% |
| Marina Bay | S$1,500 | S$2,100 | 40.0% |
Post-Production: Software Costs and Talent Demand
Post-production pricing has also climbed. Adobe Creative Cloud, DaVinci Resolve, and motion graphics tools have all seen SGD price hikes, largely due to shifts in the USD exchange rate.
| Cost Component | Indicative 2022 Range (SGD) | Indicative 2025 Range (SGD) | Driver |
|---|---|---|---|
| Camera Operator (day) | 200-450 | 250-600 | Wage growth, talent scarcity |
| Director/Producer (day) | 250-600 | 300-800 | Wage growth, regional competition |
| Cinema Camera Package (day) | 150-280 | 239-400+ | Equipment costs, insurance, and industrial rent |
| Studio Hire (per hour) | 100-180 | 120-250 | Industrial rent increases (+19% since 2020) |
| Basic Editing (per project) | 250-600 | 300-800 | Software costs, talent demand |
| Drone Equipment (day) | 300-450 | 400-550+ | Equipment, insurance, and regulatory complexity |
Note: Ranges are indicative, drawn from published Singapore vendor rate cards and pricing guides as of 2025. Actual rates vary significantly by vendor, experience level, and project scope. These figures are not Moving Image’s own internal data and do not represent a single audited source.
How Singapore Brands Are Responding
Rising costs have forced brands to adapt their video commissioning through four primary strategies:
1. Consolidation: Quality over Quantity
Brands are shifting budgets from high-volume, forgettable clips toward fewer, high-impact productions with longer lifespans. Wyzowl’s 2025 data shows 95% of marketers still view video as crucial, companies are reducing the quantity by almost 40% while adding 10-15% budget to ensure premium production value and longer content shelf-life.
2. Scope Reduction: Simplified Production
To maintain content frequency, some are reducing crew sizes, locations, and camera setups. That means cutting costs by 20-25%, but mostly for internal communications or interviews. Cutting corners on customer-facing content invites mediocre content, risking damage to brand perception.
3. Format Shifting: UGC and AI Integration
Brands are increasingly supplementing professional work with User-Generated Content (UGC) and AI-assisted tools. While 91% of consumers say video quality impacts brand trust, the economic logic holds for low-stakes content. In Singapore, IMDA data shows 85% of AI-using workers report productivity gains, signaling a growing role for AI in creative workflows.
4. Strategic Planning: Early Booking and Bundling
The most effective strategy is proactive planning. Booking facilities 6-12 months in advance or batching multiple projects into a single shoot day secures better rates and crew availability. Many brands now use annual retainers, typically yielding 15-25% savings compared to standard spot rates.
| “The clients who are managing costs most effectively are not the ones cutting the most — they are the ones planning earliest. We are seeing a significant increase in brands booking six months or more ahead. That lead time changes the conversation entirely: it allows proper creative development, reduces rush surcharges, enables crew batching, and usually produces a better end product. The brands that react to campaign deadlines rather than plan for them consistently pay more for less.“ |
| – Moving Image, Singapore. |
Quality Investment Areas That Deliver ROI Despite Costs
Video production still requires smart and high budgeting. Not all video production should face budget compression; certain categories require premium investment to ensure strong returns.
High-Value Investments: Budget Cut Means Heavy Risks
- Hero Brand Films: These anchor a brand’s visual identity and offer a 3-5 year shelf life, making them critical long-term assets.
- Product Launch Campaigns: Content that directly affects revenue, these videos provide an estimated 25-40% boost in launch awareness.
- Training Content: High-quality training assets can eliminate recurring in-person training costs, saving upward of S$50,000 for large organizations.
- Compliance Communications: The financial risk of regulatory fines far outweighs the savings from cutting production corners here.
Strategic Cuts vs. Dangerous Cuts
Effective budget discipline focuses on efficiency without degrading quality:
- Strategic Cuts: Reduce filming days through meticulous pre-production, leverage virtual locations over travel, and simplify animation complexity. Additionally, batch content saves time without any compromise. Corporate communications, social media cuts, and internal updates can often be captured in a single production day with smart shot planning.
- Dangerous Cuts: Never skip pre-production (which invites expensive reshoots), compromise audio (audiences forgive poor video, not poor sound), or bypass compliance reviews.
How a Video Production Company in Singapore is responding to the Cost Environment
The cost pressures that affect brands also affect the production companies themselves. Studios and production houses operating in Singapore are responding through a combination of operational changes and technology investment.
Operational Efficiency
- Investing in gear ownership over rental to reduce long-term per-project costs
- Cross-training staff to cover multiple roles per shoot day
- Template-based workflows for high-frequency project types (corporate interviews, event video production Singapore)
- Remote collaboration tools are reducing in-person review sessions and associated time costs
Client Education
- Earlier brief discussions to catch scope creep before it reaches production
- Production planning workshops to align on scope, format, and deliverables upfront
- Budget transparency tools that show clients where costs sit before commitments are made
- Proactively suggesting alternative production approaches when a brief’s original scope exceeds the budget
Technology Adoption
- Virtual production (LED walls) is replacing costly location shoots for applicable content
- Cloud collaboration platforms are cutting revision turnaround from days to hours
- AI tools integrated for defined tasks: scriptwriting assistance, rough-cut assembly, subtitle generation
- Workflow automation software is reducing administrative overhead across project management and delivery
Price Positioning
- Some studios are raising prices 15-25% to reflect the full cost environment
- Others are holding headline rates but reducing the scope of included services
- Strategic split emerging between premium positioning (fewer, higher-value projects) and volume plays (competitive rates, standardised output)
Consolidation Pressures and What They Mean for Buyers
Singapore’s video production industry is not immune to the consolidation dynamic playing out across professional services. The small operators are the ones feeling the most acute pressure due to the cost environment.
Sectors Under Pressure Boutique
Shops and studios with 1-5 members face the sharpest margin squeeze. Rising fixed costs (rent, insurance, and equipment) coupled with competition from low-overhead freelancers, have limited their pricing power. As the Singapore Film Commission notes, rising costs and a limited domestic market act as fundamental constraints for these smaller producers.
Implications for Buyers
For brands, consolidation presents a double-edged sword:
- Costs vs. Coordination: While fewer vendors may reduce pricing competition and lead to higher rates, larger integrated studios can lower coordination costs by offering full-service capabilities in one place.
- Creative Risks: A consolidated market risks “aesthetic drift,” where a few large studios produce similar-looking content, creating a shift in the diverse aesthetics of the video production. Brands should preserve relationships with independent talent even as they consolidate their primary vendor list.
A Practical Guide to Cost Management Without Compromising Quality
From our industry knowledge, the following practices reflect the most effective approaches observed among brands to maintain high video quality despite the rising production costs.
Planning and Preparation
- Advance Booking: Secure specialist crews and facilities 6-12 months ahead to avoid premium “last-minute” rates and limited options.
- The “Perfect” Brief: Invest time in a comprehensive briefing to minimize post-production revisions and scope creep.
- Avoid Rush Fees: Plan early and realistically to maintain the expected timeline; aggressive deadlines almost always incur avoidable surcharges.
Production Optimization
- Batch Filming: Combine multiple projects (e.g., brand films, social cuts, and internal updates) into a single shoot day to drastically reduce per-project costs.
- Strategic Locations: Use studios unless a location adds specific, irreplaceable creative value. Studio environments often eliminate the logistical premiums of on-site shoots.
- Multi-Output Design: Plan shoots from the start to yield long-form content, social clips, and still assets simultaneously.
Vendor Relationships
- Annual Retainers: Volume commitments typically secure 15-25% discounts and guarantee access to preferred crews.
- Consistency over Re-tendering: Long-term partnerships eliminate the “onboarding friction” and repetitive costs of briefing new teams on brand standards.
- Budget Transparency: Sharing financial parameters early allows production houses to maximize value within their constraints, avoiding the need for painful mid-project compromises.
Outlook: What to Expect Through 2026
Singapore’s broader cost environment is expected to remain elevated. Even when CPI inflation remains within the 2.5% range in 2026, the structural and industrial costs are not expected to reduce anytime soon. Further cost increase of 5-15% is estimated, primarily due to continued talent wage growth and stable-to-rising industrial rent.
For brands, the practical implication is that the cost efficiency gains are available through better planning and smarter commissioning. Batching, early booking, retainer arrangements, and multi-purpose content design are likely to grow in value as the gap between planned and reactive production costs widens.
For production companies, the medium-term winners will likely be those that invest in operational efficiency and AI-enhanced production while maintaining the creative quality that justifies professional production over lower-cost alternatives.
About Moving Image
Moving Image is a Singapore-based video production company specialising in corporate, brand, and communications video content. With 12 years in the industry, 600 client projects across financial services, technology, healthcare, FMCG, and government sectors, the company has proved itself to be a strong voice in the video production space. This analysis reflects the company’s market observations and is intended to contribute to informed decision-making by marketing and communications professionals operating in Singapore.






