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Podrobný sprievodca čoskoro
Pracujeme na komplexnom vzdelávacom sprievodcovi pre Drone Photography Pricing. Čoskoro sa vráťte pre podrobné vysvetlenia, vzorce, príklady z praxe a odborné tipy.
The Drone Photography Pricing Calculator builds project quotes for aerial photography and videography work using a standard cost-plus structure: flight time × hourly rate + editing hours × editing rate + travel costs + profit margin. Typical commercial drone work prices: $150–300/hour for flight time (FAA Part 107 certified pilots command higher rates), $50–80/hour for editing/post-production, 25–35% profit margin on top of direct costs. Small project (residential real estate) $300–600 total; mid-size (commercial real estate, events) $800–2,500; large (inspection, mapping, multi-day shoots) $3,000–15,000. FAA Part 107 certification is required for commercial drone work in the US. Test costs $175, study time 15–30 hours, renewal every 24 months with free recurrent training. Without Part 107 you can fly recreationally but cannot charge money or barter for drone services. Insurance (general liability + hull) runs $50–150/month or $5–20 per individual flight via SkyWatch or Verifly apps. Most commercial clients require $1M+ liability coverage proof before hiring. Project types and typical pricing: Residential real estate aerial photos $250–500 per home (1 hour flight + 2 hours edit, includes 20–30 photos and overhead shots). Commercial real estate $500–1,500 (multiple buildings, more elaborate shots). Wedding aerial $500–1,500 ceremony coverage. Roof/building inspection $300–800 per structure. Construction progress monitoring $500–2,000 per visit, often retainer-based. Real estate video tour $1,500–4,000. High-end commercial (movie, advertising, branded content) $5,000–25,000+ with talent and additional crew. What the calculator captures: direct labor (flight time + edit time at your rates), travel costs (mileage at IRS rate $0.67/mile + day rate for distant jobs), and profit margin. NOT captured: equipment depreciation (~$3,000–8,000/year for working drone + batteries + accessories), Part 107 maintenance, insurance, software (Adobe Creative Cloud $55/month, drone mapping software like DroneDeploy $99–399/month for surveying work). Build these into your hourly rates rather than itemizing. Photography work pricing follows photography norms; volume discounting and package deals are common for repeat clients.
- 1Step 1 — Enter flight hours estimated for the job (consider weather buffer)
- 2Step 2 — Enter your flight hourly rate ($150–300 typical for Part 107 commercial work)
- 3Step 3 — Enter editing hours (rule of thumb: 1 hour edit per 30 minutes flight for photos; 4–6× flight time for video)
- 4Step 4 — Enter editing rate ($50–80 typical)
- 5Step 5 — Enter travel cost (mileage at $0.67/mile + lodging for overnight jobs)
- 6Step 6 — Enter profit margin (25–35% typical above direct costs)
- 7Step 7 — Calculator outputs flight fee, editing fee, travel, subtotal, and final client price
Standard residential job — 20–30 aerial photos delivered, basic edit/color.
Multiple buildings, more shots, higher pilot rate justified by complexity
Wedding video editing is expensive — typical 4–6 hour edit per hour shot.
Inspection work commands higher margin — specialized expertise plus reporting deliverables.
Project quote generation for clients
Pricing strategy comparison across markets
Annual revenue projection for drone businesses
Justifying rate increases to existing clients
Comparing freelance vs employee compensation
Insurance and tax planning for drone businesses
Do I need FAA Part 107 certification?
Yes if you're charging money or trading services. The test is 60 multiple-choice questions covering airspace, weather, regulations. Cost $175 at FAA-approved testing center. Pass rate ~92% for prepared test-takers. Renewal every 24 months via free online recurrent training. Without Part 107, you can fly recreationally but not commercially — fines for unauthorized commercial flight start at $20,000+.
What insurance do I need?
General liability $1M+ is industry standard. Most commercial clients require Certificate of Insurance (COI) before hiring. SkyWatch ($65/month annual or $5–10/hour on-demand) and Verifly ($10/flight on-demand) are popular for variable schedules. Add hull coverage ($50–100/month) if your drone is expensive — typical commercial-grade drones (Mavic 3, Phantom 4 Pro, Inspire 2) run $1,500–8,000.
How do I price beginners vs experienced rates?
New Part 107 pilots: $100–150/hour to build portfolio. Established (1–2 years, 50+ paid jobs): $150–250. Specialist (5+ years, niche expertise like inspection, mapping, cinematic): $250–500+. Don't underprice — bidding $50/hour signals amateur quality and devalues market. Better to charge market rate and accept fewer jobs while building portfolio.
Should I include drone gear cost in hourly rate or itemize?
Include in hourly rate — clients don't want to see equipment line items. Calculate equipment cost: ($3,000 drone + $500 spare batteries + $200 controller + $400 software) / 5-year life = $820/year. At 100 paying flight hours/year, that's $8.20/hour in equipment cost. Bake into hourly rate rather than itemizing.
How do recurring/retainer clients change pricing?
Retainer clients (monthly construction monitoring, real estate volume agents) get 10–25% discount vs project rate in exchange for predictable revenue. Typical structure: monthly retainer ($1,000–5,000) covers a defined scope (e.g., 4 hours flight + edits). Overages billed at retainer hourly rate. Retainers stabilize income and improve client relationship.
Pro Tip
Charge for flight time + edit time, not 'per photo' or 'per deliverable.' Photo/video count varies wildly by project; hourly billing aligns price to actual effort. Quote a flat package only when scope is precisely defined; otherwise itemize hours.