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May 14, 2026

How Much Does It Cost to Hire a Video Editor? (2026 Rates Breakdown)

Real 2026 rates for hiring a video editor — short-form, YouTube, brand, hourly, retainer. What drives price, what's a fair quote, and how to avoid overpaying.

Short answer: anywhere from $15 to $10,000 per video. Which isn't a useful answer.

The real answer depends on five things: what kind of video, how long, how complex, how experienced the editor is, and where they're based. This guide breaks all of those down with real 2026 numbers so you can quote a job, set a budget, or sense-check the proposals landing in your inbox.

The five things that actually drive price

Before any specific numbers, understand what you're paying for. These five factors explain almost every quote you'll ever get:

  • Format and length. A 30-second TikTok and a 30-minute documentary take wildly different time and skill.
  • Complexity of the edit. Are we talking simple cuts, or motion graphics, colour grading, sound design, b-roll sourcing, captions, multicam sync, voiceover, and licensed music?
  • Volume of raw footage. Cutting a 5-minute video from 10 minutes of footage takes maybe an hour. From 4 hours of footage, a day.
  • Editor's experience and location. A skilled editor in the Philippines may charge $30 per short-form video. A skilled editor in Los Angeles charges $300 for the same brief.
  • Turnaround time. Need it in 24 hours? Add 30–100% to the standard rate.

Short-form social video rates (TikTok, Reels, Shorts)

TierPer videoWhat you typically get
Entry / overseas$15–50Basic cuts, simple captions, light sound design. Limited revisions.
Mid-level$50–150Hook structure, captions, b-roll integration, sound design, 1–2 revisions.
Experienced$150–400Strategic hook crafting, motion graphics, custom captions, polished sound, multiple revisions.
Top-tier specialist$400–1,500+"Viral editor" rates. Often working with creators who've scaled to millions of views.

What drives the range: whether the editor writes the hook or just executes yours; whether captions are custom-animated or auto-generated; whether they source b-roll or just cut what you give them; number of revisions.

Volume discounts are common. An editor charging $200/video might drop to $150 at 4+ videos/week, or $120 at 8+. Always ask.

Long-form YouTube rates

TierPer videoWhat you typically get
Entry / overseas$50–250Basic cut, light captions, simple b-roll. Often weak on retention pacing.
Mid-level$250–800Solid story pacing, b-roll integration, music, captions, 2 revisions.
Experienced channel editor$800–2,500Full creative pass — story structure, b-roll sourcing, motion graphics, custom thumbnails, sound design.
Top-tier (MrBeast-class)$2,500–10,000+Senior editors who structurally improve videos. Usually retained on big channels.

The best long-form editors are creative partners, not button-pushers. They restructure the story, suggest cuts, push back on weak content. That's worth real money — it's why top channel editors are paid like producers, because they essentially are producers.

Brand and commercial video rates

TierPer projectWhat you typically get
Entry$150–500Basic edit with stock music. Limited motion graphics.
Mid-level$500–2,000Custom motion graphics, colour grade, sound design, licensed music.
Senior$2,000–5,000Full creative direction, polished colour, custom sound design, multiple cutdowns.
Agency / production company$5,000–25,000+Turnkey — project management, multiple revisions, multiple deliverables.

Hourly rates

  • Entry-level: $20–40/hour
  • Mid-level: $40–80/hour
  • Senior: $80–150/hour
  • Specialist (colour, motion graphics, sound design): $100–250/hour

If an editor quotes hourly, always ask for a cap. Otherwise you're betting on someone you don't know being fast.

Retainer and subscription rates

VolumeMonthly cost (mid-level editor)
4 short-form videos/week (16/month)$1,500–3,500
1 long-form YouTube + 5 short-form/week$2,500–6,000
2 long-form YouTube/week$3,000–8,000
Full-time freelance (40 hrs/week)$4,000–10,000

Retainers usually include a fixed number of revisions, a guaranteed turnaround, and priority over the editor's other work. They're great for both sides: predictable income for the editor, predictable output for you.

Overseas vs. local: is it worth saving the money?

The case for overseas editors (Philippines, India, Eastern Europe, Latin America):

  • Significantly lower rates — often 30–60% of equivalent Western pricing.
  • Many are highly skilled, especially in long-form YouTube editing where the genre has been globalised.
  • Time zones can work in your favour — you send footage, wake up to a cut.

The case against:

  • Communication overhead. If you can't articulate creative direction clearly in writing, it falls apart fast.
  • Cultural references and pacing instincts can lag — short-form social trends move faster than someone abroad can keep up with.
  • Vetting is harder. Stolen portfolios are more common.

For long-form YouTube where you have clear references and a defined style, overseas editors at $200–600/video can be excellent value. For short-form social where trend literacy and cultural fluency matter, paying more for someone closer to your market usually wins.

What's actually included — and what's extra

A $300 quote and a $1,200 quote for "the same video" often differ because of what's included. Always clarify:

  • Revisions. "2 rounds" is standard.
  • Captions. Auto-generated vs custom animated.
  • Music. Royalty-free included, or do you supply/license?
  • Stock footage and b-roll. Sourcing fees, licence fees.
  • Motion graphics. Simple text overlays vs custom animated.
  • Colour grade. Basic correction vs creative grade.
  • Source files. Many editors don't include project files by default.
  • Rush fees. 30–100% surcharge for sub-48-hour turnaround.

How to know if a quote is fair

  • Does it match the editor's experience level? A senior editor charging entry-level rates is either a great deal or a red flag.
  • Does it include what you actually need? A $200 quote that excludes b-roll sourcing, when you have no b-roll, is not a $200 quote.
  • Does it leave room for revisions? If the quote is at the absolute floor, they will optimise for speed and minimal effort.

Where Vidsteer fits in

Most freelance platforms like Fiverr take 10–20% commission on every job. That cost gets baked into editor pricing, so you're paying more than the editor is actually charging. Vidsteer works differently: it's a directory of editors who pay a small flat fee ($9/month) to be listed, with no commission on any work. You browse, contact editors directly via email, and negotiate rates one-on-one. The editor quotes you their real rate, not their marked-up rate.

Final thoughts on what to pay

The cheapest editor is rarely the best value. Time spent fixing bad work, re-briefing, or finding a replacement adds up to more than you saved.

The most expensive editor isn't automatically worth it either. A great $300/video editor will often outperform a mediocre $1,500/video one. Pay what the work is worth, not what the market floor is. The right editor at the right price will make you money. The wrong one will cost you twice.

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Related reading

How to Hire a Video Editor in 2026: The Complete Guide
Where to find them, what to pay, how to vet portfolios, and what to include in your brief — from a producer with 10+ years of experience.
Fiverr vs Upwork vs Vidsteer: Where to Hire a Video Editor in 2026
Compare Fiverr, Upwork, and Vidsteer for hiring a video editor. Pricing, commission fees, quality, and which platform delivers the best editor for your project.
How to Hire a Short-Form Video Editor for TikTok, Reels & Shorts
What to look for, what to pay, how to brief them, and how to avoid hiring someone who can cut but can't make content perform.