Video Production

How to Choose a Video Production Company in Dubai (2026): The Buyer's Guide

SKIMBOX Team

Dubai video prices swing from AED 1,500 to AED 500,000, and the worst surprise is finding out you do not own the footage you paid for. Here is how to choose the right company, read a quote, and avoid the traps.

How to Choose a Video Production Company in Dubai (2026): The Buyer's Guide

Video production in Dubai costs anywhere from AED 1,500 for a social clip to over AED 500,000 for a broadcast commercial, and the price is the easy thing to research [1][2]. The hard truths are the ones the pricing pages skip: that you probably do not own the footage you paid for, that your own corporate shoot legally needs a permit a freelancer cannot file, and that the Arabic version is not the free add-on it gets sold as. This is the buyer's guide to all of it.

We produce video for UAE brands out of our Dubai and Bengaluru teams, so we sit on both sides of these quotes. Here is how to choose the right company, read a quote properly, and avoid the traps that cost buyers money and footage.

How do you choose a video production company in Dubai?

Watch full finished projects rather than a sizzle reel, confirm who actually shoots and edits, demand an itemised quote, and get footage ownership in writing before you book [3][4]. Those four checks filter out most of the disappointments, and they take an afternoon.

Watch the full projects, not the showreel

A sizzle reel is three seconds of the best shot from twenty projects. It hides pacing, story, and audio problems [5]. Ask to watch complete finished videos, ideally for brands in your sector, and listen to the audio, because bad sound is the most common sign of a weak crew. Judge whether the style fits your audience, not your personal taste.

Find out who actually makes it

Many Dubai "agencies" subcontract the shoot and edit to freelancers [6]. That is not automatically bad, but you should know who holds the camera and who cuts your film. Ask for the named director, camera operator, and editor, and whether the crew is in-house. An in-house team gives you accountability and consistency. A loose chain of subcontractors gives you neither when something goes wrong.

Get an itemised quote

A real quote breaks down crew, equipment, location, permits, talent, and post-production [7]. A vague flat rate hides what you are buying and makes scope disputes easy. If a company will not itemise, that itself is the answer. For the same reason we recommend itemised quotes when choosing a web design company or an SEO company, the logic holds for video: transparency is the signal.

The trap nobody warns you about: who owns the footage

By default, the production company owns the copyright and the raw files, and you may only hold a licence to use the final edit [8]. This surprises almost every first-time buyer, and it is the single biggest conflict flashpoint in Dubai video.

To actually own your video and its raw footage, your contract needs a written assignment or a work-for-hire clause that transfers the rights to you [9]. Without it, the company can keep the raw files, restrict where you use the edit, or charge a fee to release the footage later, often a formula like the greater of a fixed sum or 10 percent of the contract value [10].

Straight talk: the UAE is a civil-law country, where courts weigh exactly what is written in the contract, not what you assumed [11]. Foreign contract templates often contain clauses that are unenforceable here, so use a locally drafted agreement. And settle ownership and usage rights, worldwide or domestic, perpetual or time-limited, before the shoot. After the shoot, you have nothing to bargain with and the footage is on their drive.

Why is video so expensive in Dubai?

Dubai stacks real costs on top of normal production: filming permits, location fees of AED 5,000 to 30,000 a day for hotels, Marina, or DIFC, licensed talent, and extra lighting for the city's reflective glass-and-marble surfaces [12]. These sit on top of a luxury market. The premium is real, not a markup, which is exactly why an itemised quote matters, so you can see where the money goes.

Here is the 2026 cost picture by video type:

Video typeTypical cost (AED)
Social media reel (15 to 60s)1,500 to 8,000
Corporate video (1 to 3 min)10,000 to 30,000
Product or explainer video5,000 to 30,000
Event coverage (per day)2,500 to 10,000
Brand film / cinematic25,000 to 100,000+
TVC / broadcast ad15,000 to 500,000+
2D animation (per finished minute)800 to 3,500

Quick math: post-production is 30 to 40 percent of most budgets, and batching several videos into one shoot day cuts the per-video cost by 40 to 50 percent, while a rush job adds a 50 to 100 percent premium [13]. So the cheapest way to get a lot of video is to plan a batch shoot in advance, and the most expensive way is to commission one rushed video at a time.

The permit nobody mentions until it delays the shoot

Commercial, advertising, and branded video in Dubai legally needs a filming permit from the Dubai Film and TV Commission, and you cannot file for it yourself [14]. Individuals and foreign entities must appoint a UAE-licensed production company as the applicant, which is one reason the local company you hire is contractually central.

The numbers: the application fee is AED 520, public-area permits run around AED 2,520 plus the application, and private locations charge anywhere from zero to AED 25,000 a day [15]. Weddings, private events, and personal footage do not need a permit. Drone footage needs a separate aerial permit and a licensed operator under DCAA rules, so do not assume drone shots are covered in a base quote.

Common mistake: assuming the permit is your problem to sort, or worse, shooting without one. Filming branded content without a permit can bring fines of AED 10,000 to 100,000 and equipment confiscation [16]. A reputable company handles the permit inside pre-production so it never delays you. If a company offers to skip it to save time, that is a serious warning sign, because the AED 520 was never the issue.

Arabic is real work, not a free toggle

A bilingual Arabic and English video is two deliverables, not one, and it should be priced that way [17]. Arabic voiceover, subtitles, and on-screen talent are all standard in Dubai, but the second-language version means re-timed graphics, re-spaced subtitles, and sometimes a re-edit to fit the Arabic pacing.

The mistake buyers make is accepting "yes, we can do Arabic" as if it were free, then being surprised by the cost or, worse, getting a rushed Arabic cut with subtitles that overrun the frame. Budget the Arabic version as close to a separate deliverable and confirm the cost upfront. For a UAE audience, the Arabic cut is often the one that matters most, so it deserves the same care as the English original, not a machine-subtitled afterthought.

The costs a quote usually leaves out

Even an itemised quote often stops at the shoot and edit, and the extras land later. Budget for them upfront so the final number is not a surprise. Music licensing runs AED 500 to 3,000 for a stock track and AED 8,000 to 25,000 for a custom score, and it needs a synchronisation licence cleared for the specific platforms you will use, or you risk takedowns and surprise fees [13]. Stock footage is AED 500 to 2,000 a clip, extra deliverable formats AED 500 to 2,000 each, and a sensible project carries a 10 to 15 percent contingency for weather, gear failure, or scope creep.

The one most brands forget is distribution. A great video that nobody sees earns nothing, so plan an extra 20 to 30 percent of the production cost for the ad spend to actually put it in front of people [13]. With 85 percent of UAE video views happening on mobile and short-form formats making up most of the consumption, the money you spend promoting the video often matters as much as the money you spend making it.

What a real production process looks like

A professional company runs a clear pre-production stage before anyone picks up a camera: a discovery brief, a treatment or pitch deck, a mood board that sets tone and lighting, a storyboard mapping the shots, and a call sheet for the shoot day [3]. If a company skips straight from "yes" to filming with none of this, that is a red flag, because the planning is what separates a video that hits the brief from an expensive guess. The shoot is usually one or two days. The pre-production and the post-production around it are where the quality is won or lost.

How this played out for three clients

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

A DIFC fintech. They paid AED 40,000 for a brand film, then asked for the raw footage a year later to recut it for a campaign. The original company owned the raw files and quoted AED 6,000 to release them. We now write a work-for-hire clause into every contract so the client owns everything from day one. Their marketing lead's advice: "Get ownership in writing. We learned it the expensive way."

A Dubai hospitality group. Their previous vendor quoted a flat AED 25,000 with no breakdown, then added location fees, a permit charge, and an Arabic version at the end, landing near AED 38,000. We rebuilt their next project on an itemised quote with the Arabic cut and permit priced in. "The flat rate was the problem," they say. "I could not see what was missing until the invoice."

A retail brand. They were commissioning social videos one at a time at AED 5,000 each. We moved them to a quarterly batch shoot: twelve videos in two days for the price of about six separate ones. "Batching changed our whole content budget," the founder says. "Same crew, same setup, half the cost per video."

How SKIMBOX produces video

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

References

[1] People Perfect Media - Video production cost in Dubai by type. peopleperfectmedia.com/video-production-cost-in-dubai [2] Tanit Studio - Video production cost Dubai, transparent breakdown. tanit-studio.com/en/blog/video-production-cost-dubai-transparent-breakdown [3] Hala Media - Choosing the right video production company in Dubai. halamedia.ae/media/choosing-the-right-video-production-company-in-dubai-a-complete-guide [4] VMG Studios - Questions to ask a video production company. blog.vmgstudios.com/questions-to-ask-a-video-production-company [5] Kartoffel Films - Hiring a video production company, judging the reel. kartoffelfilms.com/blog/hiring-video-production-company [6] Dubai Cinematic - Freelance videographer vs agency in Dubai. dubaicinematic.ae [7] Udjat - Corporate video production Dubai, itemised pricing. udjat.ae/corporate-video-production-dubai [8] Jon Conti Visuals - Copyright and usage of raw footage. joncontivisuals.com/blog/copyright-usage-raw-footage [9] Terms.law - The essential guide to contracts for video production. terms.law/2023/11/09/the-essential-guide-to-contracts-for-video-production [10] Nimia - Retaining rights to video footage you create. nimia.com/retain-rights-to-video-footage-you-create [11] R&H Dhale - Legal agreement drafting for video creators in Dubai (UAE civil law). rhandhale.com/blog/legal-agreement-drafting-for-youtubers-in-dubai [12] JJ Agency - Corporate video production cost in Dubai 2026, honest pricing. jjagency.co/video-production/corporate-video-production-cost-in-dubai-2026-honest-pricing-guide [13] JJ Agency - Batching, rush premiums, and hidden costs. jjagency.co/video-production [14] Film Dubai (DFTC) - How to film in Dubai, who applies for the permit. filmdubai.gov.ae [15] Film Dubai (DFTC) - Permit fees. filmdubai.gov.ae/s/site/how-to-film-in-dubai/permit-fees [16] UAE Film Permit - Filming without a permit, fines and confiscation. uaefilmpermit.com/blog/how-to-get-a-filming-permit-in-dubai-uae-everything-you-need-to-know [17] Studio52 - Arabic voiceover and bilingual video localisation. studio52.tv/audio/voice-over-artist [18] SKIMBOX - Internal project experience producing corporate, brand, and social video for UAE brands across fintech, hospitality, and retail, 2026. skimbox.co

Frequently asked questions

  • How much does video production cost in Dubai?

    Most video projects in Dubai run AED 3,000 to 30,000. A 1 to 3 minute corporate video averages AED 10,000 to 30,000, social media reels AED 1,500 to 8,000, and cinematic brand films or commercials AED 25,000 to 100,000 or more. The wide range reflects crew size, locations, talent, and post-production, which is 30 to 40 percent of most budgets.

  • How much does a corporate video cost in Dubai?

    A corporate video in Dubai typically costs AED 10,000 to 30,000 for a 1 to 3 minute piece, rising to AED 50,000 or more for multi-location shoots with actors. A realistic professional floor for a one-day, single-location corporate shoot is around AED 10,000 to 15,000. Below that you are usually getting a solo operator and a template edit.

  • Why is video production so expensive in Dubai?

    Dubai adds real costs on top of normal production: DFTC filming permits, location fees of AED 5,000 to 30,000 a day for hotels, Marina, or DIFC, licensed talent, and extra lighting for the city's reflective glass-and-marble surfaces. These stack on top of a luxury market. The premium is real, which is why an itemised quote matters so you can see what you are paying for.

  • How do I choose a video production company in Dubai?

    Watch full finished projects, not just a sizzle reel, check they have range across brands in your sector, demand an itemised quote covering crew, equipment, permits, and post, confirm who actually shoots and edits, and get footage ownership in writing. Then ask for results, not just nice visuals: how a past video performed for the client.

  • Do I own the video and raw footage after I pay for it in Dubai?

    Not automatically. By default the production company owns the copyright and the raw files, and you may only hold a licence to use the final edit. To own it, your contract needs a written assignment or work-for-hire clause. The UAE is a civil-law country where courts weigh exactly what is written, so get ownership in writing before the shoot, not after.

  • Can I get the raw footage from a Dubai video production company?

    Sometimes, and usually for an extra fee, because raw files are negotiated separately from the final edit. Ask before you book, not after, because a retroactive request costs more and the company is under no obligation to release them unless your contract says so. If you want the raw footage, make it a line item in the agreement upfront.

  • Should I hire a freelance videographer or a production company in Dubai?

    Hire a freelancer, at AED 1,500 to 5,000 a day, for reels, interviews, and events where you can supply the creative direction. Hire a production company, from around AED 10,000, when you need a full crew, strategy, backup if something fails, and accountability. Note that many agencies subcontract freelancers anyway, so always ask who actually shoots and edits your project.

  • What is the day rate for a videographer in Dubai?

    A solo videographer with a DSLR is AED 1,500 to 5,000 a day, a two-person team AED 5,000 to 8,000 a day, and a full crew with director, camera, sound, and lighting AED 10,000 to 50,000 a day. The right level depends on the production, not the budget. A reel needs a solo shooter, a brand film needs a crew.

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

    Short social clips and reels run AED 1,500 to 8,000, with a polished 30 to 60 second piece typically AED 3,000 to 8,000. Cost drops sharply when you batch several videos into one shoot day, which can save 40 to 50 percent versus shooting them separately. For ongoing social content, batching is the single biggest cost saver.

  • How much does event videography cost in Dubai?

    Event coverage is AED 2,500 to 10,000 per day, with larger multi-camera corporate events at AED 15,000 to 45,000. Events do not need a DFTC filming permit, which keeps the cost down compared with a branded commercial shoot. The price depends on the number of cameras, the length of coverage, and how fast you need the edit delivered.

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

    A real estate walkthrough typically costs AED 2,500 to 5,500 per property, more if you add drone shots or a 360 tour. For higher-value and off-plan stock, video and 360 content is now expected and converts noticeably better. Batching several properties in one day brings the per-property cost down significantly.

  • What is the cheapest video production in Dubai?

    Entry listings advertise from AED 500 to 1,500, but that buys a solo operator, one camera angle, and a template edit. It is fine for a quick social clip, risky for anything that represents your brand. Treat very low quotes for a cinematic corporate video as a red flag, because real crew, gear, and post cannot be covered at that price.

  • What are the red flags when hiring a video production company in Dubai?

    Watch for a vague flat-rate quote with no breakdown, a suspiciously low price for cinematic work, an undefined revision process, no real portfolio of finished projects, no knowledge of Dubai filming permits, weak audio in past work, and a promise of unlimited revisions, which usually hides scope problems. Any one of these is a reason to ask more questions.

  • What questions should I ask before hiring a video production company?

    Ask what is included and what could increase the budget, how many revision rounds you get, who owns the footage and raw files, the delivery timeline, who handles the filming permit, who the named director and editor are, and to see finished work that matches your style and scale. The answers, not the showreel, tell you who you are dealing with.

  • How do I evaluate a video production showreel or portfolio?

    Do not trust the highlight montage. Ask to watch complete finished projects so you can judge story, pacing, and audio, which a sizzle reel hides. Confirm the work is their own concept, not just executing a client's script, and look for range across brands in your sector. Bad audio is the most common sign of a weak crew.

  • Do I need a filming permit to shoot a video in Dubai?

    Yes for commercial, advertising, and branded content, filmed through the Dubai Film and TV Commission. You do not need one for weddings, private events, educational, or personal-use footage. The application fee is AED 520, with public-area permits around AED 2,520 plus the application, and private-location fees from zero to AED 25,000 a day depending on the venue.

  • Who applies for the Dubai filming permit, me or the production company?

    The production company. You must appoint a UAE-licensed production company to obtain a DFTC filming permit, because individuals and foreign entities cannot file directly. This is one reason the local company you hire is contractually central, and a good one handles the permit inside pre-production so it never delays your shoot.

  • What happens if I film without a permit in Dubai?

    Filming commercial content without a permit can bring fines of AED 10,000 to 100,000 and confiscation of your equipment. Given a permit application is only AED 520, the risk is never worth it. A reputable production company will not shoot branded content without the correct permit, so if a company offers to skip it, treat that as a serious warning sign.

  • How much does drone footage cost in Dubai?

    Drone footage runs AED 1,000 to 6,000 on top of the shoot, and that usually excludes the aerial filming permit, which is separate. Dubai drone rules are strict and require a licensed operator and DCAA clearance, so confirm your production company holds the right permits. Do not assume drone shots are included in a base quote, because they rarely are.

  • How long does video production take in Dubai?

    A standard corporate video takes 3 to 5 weeks from concept to delivery, and a brand film 4 to 8 weeks or more. Budget tiers map to timelines: AED 10,000 to 20,000 is 2 to 3 weeks, AED 25,000 to 50,000 is 4 to 6 weeks. A promise of a full corporate video in 48 hours usually means templates or cut corners.

  • How many revisions are included in a Dubai video package?

    Most packages include 2 to 3 revision rounds, with extra rounds typically AED 500 to 1,500 each. Be wary of unlimited revisions, which sound generous but usually mean an undefined scope that can stretch a project by months. Agree the revision process and what counts as a revision versus a new request before you start.

  • Can I get a Dubai video produced in Arabic or bilingual?

    Yes, with Arabic voiceover, subtitles, and on-screen Arabic talent all standard. But the second-language version is real extra work, not a free add-on, because graphics are re-timed, subtitles re-spaced, and sometimes the edit is redone for the Arabic cut. Budget the bilingual version as close to a separate deliverable, and confirm the cost upfront so it is not a surprise.

  • What is included in a corporate video production package in Dubai?

    A standard package covers pre-production with script and planning, production with crew and professional gear, post-production with editing, colour, and sound, licensed music, and multiple format exports for web and social. Confirm what is excluded too: permits, location fees, actors, drone, raw footage, and extra language versions are often quoted separately.

  • What hidden costs should I budget for in a Dubai video shoot?

    Beyond the headline quote, budget for music licensing at AED 500 to 3,000 for stock or AED 8,000 to 25,000 for custom, stock footage at AED 500 to 2,000 a clip, location and permit fees, extra deliverable formats at AED 500 to 2,000 each, and a 10 to 15 percent contingency for weather, gear, or scope changes. Distribution and ad spend is separate again, often 20 to 30 percent on top.

  • Does batching videos in one shoot save money?

    Yes, significantly. Shooting several videos in one production day can cut the per-video cost by 40 to 50 percent, because you pay for crew, gear, and setup once. If you need a steady stream of social or product videos, planning a batch shoot quarterly is far cheaper than commissioning them one at a time. It is the single most effective way to lower your video cost.

  • Why does a rush video job cost more in Dubai?

    A rushed timeline adds a 50 to 100 percent premium, because the company pays crew overtime or bumps other projects to fit yours. Real production needs time: pre-production, the shoot, and a post-production stage that is 30 to 40 percent of the work. A genuine rush is possible for simple edits, but for anything cinematic, a rushed timeline usually means cut corners.

SKIMBOX Team

Tech Consultancy

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