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How to Price a YouTube Video Edit (2026)

Last updated: July 2026 · A ReelRate guide

YouTube editing is rarely billed by the hour. Creators think in videos and months, not hours, so the editors who earn the most price their work per video, per finished minute, or on a monthly retainer. This guide covers what YouTube editors charge in 2026, what pushes the price up or down, and how to set a rate that pays you fairly for a format that rewards speed. For a number built from your own costs and income goal, use our free video editor rate calculator.

The four ways to price a YouTube edit

Before the numbers, get the model right — it matters more than the exact figure.

YouTube editing rates in 2026 (per video)

Per-video pricing depends far more on complexity than on video length alone. A 20-minute talking-head edit can be quicker than a 6-minute video packed with motion graphics.

Edit typeTypical priceWhat's involved
Simple talking-head / vlog$30–$150Basic cuts, sync, light cleanup
Standard long-form (retention edit)$200–$600B-roll, captions, sound design, pacing
High-production ("MrBeast-style")$800–$2,500+Heavy motion graphics, VFX, fast cuts
Shorts / vertical cutdowns$20–$100 eachCheaper in bundles with a long-form deal

Indicative 2026 freelance ranges. Roughly by experience: beginners $150–$400, intermediate $400–$1,200, and senior editors $1,000–$5,000 per video for premium work.

Monthly retainers: the YouTube editor's best friend

Once you've proven yourself on a few one-off videos, a retainer is usually the upgrade that stabilizes your income. You commit to a set number of videos each month; the creator commits to a set fee.

TierMonthly (2026)Typical scope
Entry / budget$800–$2,5004–8 long-form videos
Intermediate$1,500–$3,5004 long-form + social cutdowns
Senior / high-production$5,000–$10,000Multiple premium videos per week

Retainers usually run 20–40% cheaper per video than one-offs — that discount is what you trade for guaranteed volume and income. Some editors also negotiate a small revenue share on top: one well-known freelance YouTube editor charges roughly $2,500–$3,000/month for four long-form edits plus about 20 shorts, plus a 10% share of the videos' AdSense earnings. Revenue share can be lucrative on a fast-growing channel, but only take it in addition to a fee that already covers your time.

What actually drives the price

Pricing per finished minute (and calculating your own rate)

Per-minute pricing connects the client's world (minutes of video) to yours (hours of work). The link is your edit-time ratio — how many hours a polished minute of YouTube takes. For retention-style long-form, roughly 1.5 hours per finished minute is a realistic planning figure.

Worked example. Say your target rate is $50/hour. A 10-minute YouTube video at 1.5 hours per finished minute is about 15 hours of work → $750 for the video, or $75 per finished minute. Quote the client the $750 flat fee, but price it from the hours so you never lose money on a video that runs long.

That's exactly what our calculator does: it turns your income goal, costs, and real billable hours into an hourly rate, then a per-finished-minute price using the YouTube edit-time ratio. Start there instead of copying a number off a forum.

Get your YouTube per-minute and day rate in seconds

Pick "YouTube long-form" in the calculator and it returns your recommended hourly rate, day rate, and price per finished minute — built from your own numbers.

Open the rate calculator →

How to charge more for YouTube editing

Frequently asked questions

How much should I charge for a 10-minute YouTube video?
For a standard retention-style edit, roughly $200–$600 in 2026, depending on complexity and your experience. Price it from the hours: at a 1.5-hour-per-minute ratio a 10-minute video is about 15 hours, so multiply that by your hourly rate and quote it as one flat fee.
Should I charge per video or a monthly retainer?
Start per video to prove yourself, then move steady clients to a retainer. Retainers give you predictable income and save both sides from re-quoting; you offer a modest per-video discount in exchange for guaranteed volume.
How many revisions should I include?
Two rounds is the industry standard. Spell it out in your quote, and charge roughly 15–25% of the project fee for each additional round. This single clause protects most of your per-video profit.
Should I take a revenue share instead of a flat fee?
Only in addition to a fee that already covers your time. A revenue share (say 5–10% of AdSense) can pay off handsomely on a fast-growing channel, but on its own it leaves you exposed if the videos underperform.

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