How to Launch Your Wedding Videography Business
Starting a wedding videography business requires less upfront capital than many realize, but demands deliberate planning around equipment, client acquisition, and operational systems. You’ll need reliable gear, a portfolio strategy, and a process for booking and delivering projects before your first wedding.
Most successful videographers launch while working part-time, building a client base over 3-6 months before going full-time. This guide walks you through the exact steps to get operational and profitable.
Your Step-by-Step Launch Plan
- Assess your equipment: If you already own a decent mirrorless or cinema camera, you’re ahead. If not, budget $2,000-$4,500 for a used body, stabilizer, microphone, and backup battery. You’ll add to this over time, but start with what captures sharp video and clear audio. Skip the unnecessary gear.
- Build a basic portfolio: If you have no wedding footage, offer to film 2-3 weddings at steep discounts ($400-$800 per wedding) or free for friends and family. You need 3-4 full-length highlight reels (3-5 minutes each) to show prospects. This takes priority over everything else in week one.
- Create a simple website: Use Squarespace, Wix, or WordPress. Include your name, location, a portfolio gallery with your best video work, pricing tiers (typical: $2,500-$6,000 for full-day coverage), and a contact form. No lengthy copy needed—showcase your work, not your mission statement.
- Set up business essentials: Register your business as an LLC (costs $50-$250 depending on state), open a separate business bank account, and claim your business name on social media. Don’t overthink the legal structure yet; see legal basics for specifics on licensing and insurance.
- Establish your pricing and packages: Research local competitors’ rates. In most U.S. markets, full-day wedding coverage (8-10 hours) ranges from $2,500-$5,000. Offer a base package with edited highlight reel and raw footage delivery. You can expand into same-day edits or cinema-style edits as you grow.
- Create a booking process: Use Calendly or Acuity Scheduling to let couples book consultation calls. Write a simple inquiry form that asks date, guest count, venue, and their vision. Respond to inquiries within 24 hours with a personal message and your rate sheet.
- Set up contracts and payments: Use a template from LawDepot or Rocket Lawyer. Your contract should specify deliverables (number of final videos, turnaround time, cancellation policy) and require a 50% deposit to book. Use Stripe or PayPal for invoicing and payments.
- Plan your backup systems: Buy a second backup drive and duplicate your SD cards on location. Losing a wedding’s footage is a reputation killer and potential lawsuit. Test your backup process before your first paid gig.
Your First Week
- Film 1-2 test weddings or events to generate portfolio footage. Prioritize quantity of content over perfect final edits.
- Create a basic portfolio website with video galleries. Spend 4-6 hours max; it doesn’t need to be fancy.
- Register your LLC and open a business bank account.
- Write and customize a wedding videography contract. Have someone review it.
- Set up Calendly or similar for scheduling consultations.
- Post your first portfolio videos on Instagram and TikTok. Tag local wedding hashtags and wedding vendors.
- Reach out to 10-15 wedding planners, photographers, and venues in your area with a personal email introducing your services.
- Buy liability and equipment insurance (quotes start at $40-$80/month).
Your First Month
Your main focus is generating your first 3-5 paid bookings. Spend 50% of your time on client acquisition: responding to inquiries quickly, calling couples back within 4 hours, following up with referral sources, and posting 2-3 times per week on social media. Spend 40% of your time editing your portfolio pieces to make them look professional, and 10% on operational tasks.
Expect your booking rate to be low initially. For every 10 inquiries, you might close 1-2. That’s normal. Focus on converting couples who are seriously considering you, not every lead. A couple who is ready to book and wants your style is worth more than someone shopping on price alone.
Your First 3 Months
By month three, aim to have 3-4 paid weddings booked and 1-2 completed and delivered. This proves your process works and gives you real client feedback to improve. Your income should be $5,000-$15,000 if you’ve closed 2-3 bookings at your base rate.
Spend time refining your editing workflow—this directly affects your profitability. A videographer who edits 8 hours of footage into a 5-minute highlight reel in 20 hours makes $125-$250/hour. One who takes 40 hours makes $62-$125/hour. System matters as much as skill.
Legal Basics
Start as an LLC if you want to separate personal and business liability. It costs $50-$250 to file and provides legal protection if someone gets injured at a wedding or you’re sued over your work. A sole proprietorship is simpler and costs nothing, but your personal assets are at risk. For details on structure, taxes, and state requirements, see our legal guide.
Most states don’t require a videography license, but check your local film permit requirements. Some cities require a permit to film at public venues or large events; fees are typically $100-$500. You’ll need general liability insurance ($40-$80/month) and equipment insurance ($30-$60/month). This protects you if a couple sues over unsatisfactory work or your gear is damaged.
Keep clean records of all income and expenses. You’ll owe income tax quarterly (estimated tax payments) and likely self-employment tax. Hire a CPA or accountant if you’re unsure; their fees ($500-$1,500/year) pay for themselves in tax savings.
Common Launch Mistakes
- Launching without a portfolio: Couples need to see your finished work, not just your camera specs. Shooting 2-3 discounted weddings first is not wasted time—it’s essential.
- Underpricing from the start: Charging $1,000-$1,500 per wedding to “build a portfolio” trains couples to expect that rate. Price at $2,500+ from day one, even if you’re new. Your work is worth it.
- Overcomplicating your packages: Offer one or two simple packages. Add complexity later. Couples get confused by too many options.
- Not backing up footage: Losing a wedding’s video is a business-ending disaster. Redundant backup is non-negotiable from your first gig.
- Ignoring inquiries: Slow response times cost you bookings. Reply to every inquiry within 4 hours, even if it’s just to say you’ll follow up with details.
- Editing too much: Perfectionism kills momentum. Your first edits won’t be perfect, and that’s fine. Ship them, learn, improve the next one.
- Not tracking metrics: Don’t know your closing rate, average project cost, or edit time per hour? You can’t improve what you don’t measure.
- Skipping contracts: A handshake agreement leads to disputes. Every paid project needs a written contract specifying deliverables and payment terms.
Your wedding videography business is launchable in 1-2 weeks with clear goals and realistic expectations. The real work happens in your first 90 days: generating bookings, delivering strong work, and building systems that don’t depend entirely on you. For a complete roadmap, review our business plan template, and for help structuring your launch timeline, see launching your business online.