Find a local
videography & editing

Post a gig in 60 seconds, get bids from videography & editings across Australia. You pick the one that fits.

Free to postStripe-secured payments300+local freelancersABN required
300+ local Aussie freelancers
One platform, brief to final payment
Two-factor secured
ABN verified
Paid securely through Stripe
No PAYG, pay per gig

Best videography & editings in Australia

Ranked by verified rating, review volume, proximity and profile completeness. Every freelancer joins with an ABN and an Australian mobile.

Showing 5 of 21 freelancers.
YA

Yianni A.

Just joined
Sydney, NSW 25+ yrs
Product & Service PhotographyPortrait & Brand PhotographyVideography & Editing +1 more
MC

Maria Florencia C.

Just joined
Sydney, NSW 15+ yrs
Logo & Brand IdentityGraphic Design (Signage, Posters, Digital & Print)Presentation & Pitch Deck Design +11 more
LD

Lachlan D.

Just joined
Geelong, VIC 10+ yrs
Advertising & Marketing CreativeMeta Ads (Facebook & Instagram)Google Ads (Search, Display, YouTube) +6 more
JG

Jenny G.

Brisbane, QLD 9+ yrs
Meta Ads (Facebook & Instagram)Google Ads (Search, Display, YouTube)TikTok & Emerging Social Ads +14 more
TS

Taha S.

Sydney, NSW 5+ yrs
Logo & Brand IdentityGraphic Design (Signage, Posters, Digital & Print)Website & UI/UX Design +13 more

What's the cost of a videography & editing in Australia?

$136/hr
Est. hourly rate $76$222/hr
videography & editing Ave. hourly rate · Updated today
Post a gig

Not sure who's best for the job? Post a gig and let local videography & editings send you a quote.

What is Unjumble?

Post a gig. Pick a local freelancer. Pay in stages. All in one web app. Finding great help shouldn't be hard work.

Post a gig.

01

Tell us what you need, time-based or outcome-based. Takes 60 seconds and it's free to post.

Sketch of a gig card with a budget range and a Post a gig button

Pick a person.

02

Compare bids from local freelancers, view portfolios and past work.

Sketch of three freelancer bids with the chosen one highlighted

Wrap it up.

03

When the work lands and you're happy, sign it off and release the payment securely through Stripe. Done and dusted.

Sketch of a gig payment schedule with 2 of 3 stages released
Post a gig

Not sure who's best for the job? Post a gig and let local freelancers send you a quote.

Videography & editing in Australia, questions

It depends whether you need the shoot, the edit, or both. A full gig covers planning (a brief and a rough shot list), the shoot itself (camera, lighting, audio and direction on the day), and the edit (the cut, colour grade, sound, captions and exports in the formats you need). An edit-only gig skips the shoot and works from footage you supply. Be clear up front which one you're after, it changes the bid.

Videography includes capturing the footage, so the freelancer plans and shoots it. Video editing is post-production only: you hand over the raw clips and they cut, grade, add sound and titles, then export it. If you've already got footage from your phone or an event, you want an editor. If nothing's been shot yet, you want a videographer who can do both.

The usual run: brand and promo videos, product clips, social content (reels, TikTok and shorts), testimonials, event coverage, explainers and real estate walkthroughs. Most freelancers lean one way, polished brand films or fast social content, so match the freelancer to the job. Their showreel tells you quickly which lane they're in.

A social edit from footage you supply can turn around in a few days. A produced brand video with a shoot usually runs 2 to 4 weeks once you factor in planning, a shoot day and a couple of revision rounds. On a tight deadline? Say so in the gig, plenty of freelancers can move fast when the brief is clear.

Shoot it vertical (9:16), hook people in the first second, and build it to work with the sound off. The numbers are brutal: average watch time on Meta is 1 to 2 seconds, and about 95% of people don't make it past 1.5 seconds. So lead with the payoff, burn in captions, and keep it short. A good editor builds for that, not for a TV ad.

For raw, in-the-moment social clips, absolutely, phones shoot great footage now. Where a freelancer earns their keep is the bits that separate it from your nephew's iPhone: lighting, clean audio, direction on the day, and an edit that holds attention. Even if you shoot it yourself, handing the footage to an editor is often the highest-value half of the job.

Final exports in every format and aspect ratio you need: 16:9 for YouTube, 9:16 for reels and stories, 1:1 for the feed. Ask for a captioned version too, since most social plays on mute. If you want the raw footage or the editable project file, write that into the gig up front, it's not always included by default.

Two rounds is a fair default: one to react to the first cut, one to fine-tune. The trick is to lock the structure early, sign off the rough cut before anyone polishes the colour and sound, because reordering scenes after the fine edit is where time and budget blow out. Agree the number of rounds in the gig so there are no surprises.

In Australia, a social edit from supplied footage often starts around $300 to $800. A half-day shoot with a produced edit typically runs $1,200 to $3,000, and a full brand video across multiple locations can go well beyond that. Price tracks shoot days, crew, locations and how many final cuts you need.

Start with the showreel: look for work in your style and ideally your industry, and judge the edit quality, not just the camera. Read their verified reviews on Unjumble, ask what gear and turnaround they offer, and confirm the deliverables and revision rounds. A quick chat about the idea tells you whether they get the brief.

Post a videography gig in under five minutes. Describe the work, set your budget and timeframe, and choose whether it's time-based or outcome-based. Local freelancers send a bid with a quote, you compare their profiles, showreels and verified reviews, then pick the one that fits. Posting is free, so you only pay for the work.

Every gig is split into stages you both agree on up front, often the shoot and the final edit. You fund each stage before the work starts and it's held securely through Stripe, then released once you sign off. No chasing invoices, and no paying for work that's not done.