
- Wedding videography in Belfast typically starts from around £1,100, with full-day cinematic packages ranging up to £2,000 or more depending on what's included.
- Five key factors drive the price of any package: hours of coverage, videographer experience, crew size, drone footage, and post-production depth.
- E Vision Productions offers four clearly structured Belfast packages: from ceremony-only coverage right through to a second camera operator and a 60+ minute feature film.
- Knowing the difference between a highlight film, a feature-length edit, and a social media reel will help avoid paying for deliverables that won't actually get watched.
- Peak Belfast wedding dates book up 6 to 18 months in advance: read on to find out when to act and what questions to ask before signing anything.
Couples who've been through a wedding will often say the same thing: they wish they'd booked a videographer. Photos capture how everything looked. Video captures how it sounded: the crack in someone's voice during the vows, the eruption of laughter after the best man's speech, the quiet moment when two people stop and just look at each other during the first dance. That's something no still image can recreate.
For couples planning a wedding in Belfast, the market is well-served, with experienced providers typically pricing between £1,100 and £2,000 depending on coverage and production level. The challenge is understanding what each package actually delivers, and whether it matches what you'll genuinely want to watch back years from now.
Belfast Wedding Videography: Understanding the Price Range
Wedding videography costs in Belfast and the wider Northern Ireland region vary based on what's being delivered. At the lower end, you're generally looking at ceremony-only or short-form coverage: a couple of hours on-site, one videographer, and a brief highlights edit. At the upper end, expect full-day attendance, multiple cameras, drone aerials, longer edited films, and post-production that involves colour grading, sound design, and proper music licensing.
For context, the UK national average across all regions sits at approximately £1,514 (Bridebook, 2026), with Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland tending to come in slightly below that: typically between £1,100 and £1,400 for experienced providers. Belfast couples can find strong quality across that range, but knowing which variables push the price up or down makes it far easier to compare quotes fairly. E Vision Productions' Belfast packages lay out four distinct tiers: from focused ceremony coverage through to a full documentary-style film, which makes for a useful real-world reference point when weighing up the market.
What Drives the Price Up or Down
No two videography quotes are identical. The variables that move the cost most significantly are consistent across the industry, and understanding them makes it much easier to evaluate whether a quote represents genuine value.
Hours of Coverage
This is the single biggest driver of price. Ceremony-only coverage typically runs two to three hours; full-day coverage from morning preparations through to the evening reception can stretch to ten hours or more. The difference isn't just time on-site: it's the volume of footage to review, sync, and edit in post-production. Before committing to a package, it's worth discussing what moments matter most and whether a half-day or full-day presence is actually needed to capture them.
Videographer Experience
A videographer with 200 weddings behind them charges more than someone in their first season, and for good reason. That experience buys editing instinct, the ability to anticipate moments before they unfold, and the composure to handle whatever the day throws at them: a delayed schedule, a dark church, an unexpected downpour. When reviewing portfolios, always watch a full wedding film rather than just a showreel. Showreels are designed to impress; a complete film reveals how someone handles the quiet, unscripted moments.
Number of Cameras and Crew
A second camera operator means simultaneous coverage: both perspectives during the ceremony, more candid reception moments, fewer gaps in the story. Industry figures suggest a second shooter adds roughly £450 to £650 to the overall cost. For larger weddings or ceremonies with complex layouts, that addition is often the difference between a complete film and one that feels like it's missing half the day.
Drone Footage
Aerial footage is popular for countryside venues, coastal locations, and architecturally striking buildings, all of which Northern Ireland has in abundance. Not every videographer is licensed to fly: they'll need a valid Flyer ID and Operator ID under UK CAA regulations. If drone coverage matters to you, confirm it's included in writing before signing. It's a perfectly reasonable question to ask, not an awkward one.
Post-Production Depth
There's a meaningful difference between a lightly assembled highlights reel and a properly crafted wedding film with a narrative arc, clean audio, licensed music, and colour grading. Both are legitimate products, but they're not priced the same way, and they don't deliver the same experience. A camera operator alone costs approximately £450-£650 per day to hire; professional post-production editing adds roughly £350 per day on top of that. The final price reflects all of that unseen work, not just the hours spent at the venue.
Belfast Packages: What's Typically Included
Before comparing quotes, it helps to know what most packages in this market actually contain as standard, and where the common upsells tend to appear.
Standard Inclusions Across Most Packages
Regardless of budget tier, most Belfast wedding videography packages will include the following as a baseline:
- Day-of coverage (hours vary by package tier)
- An edited highlight film, typically running 4 to 10 minutes
- Full recording of the ceremony and key speeches
- Private online gallery or digital delivery
- Personal use rights for sharing with family and friends
Higher-tier packages typically extend the film length, add a social media recap cut, include drone footage, and incorporate morning preparation coverage. The key question to ask any supplier is not just what's included but what the final deliverables actually are: film length, format, and how they'll be delivered.
Common Paid Extras
These features appear frequently as optional add-ons rather than package standards:
- Second camera operator: adds coverage angles and redundancy
- Drone footage: where not already included in the package
- Same-day edit: a short cut shown at the reception evening
- Raw or unedited footage: not all suppliers offer this
- Guest video messages
- Expedited delivery: if a faster turnaround than standard is needed
Always confirm which of these are included and which are billable extras before signing a contract. It's an easy detail to miss when comparing multiple quotes side by side.
E Vision Productions' Four Belfast Packages
E Vision Productions structures their Belfast offering across four tiers, each built around a distinct set of priorities. Rather than a one-size-fits-all approach, the packages reflect how differently couples experience their wedding day: from a focused ceremony celebration to a full documentary of everything from morning prep onwards.
Essentials: Ceremony to First Dance
The Essentials package is built for couples whose priority is capturing the core of the day: the ceremony, the key moments, and the first dance, without extending coverage into the morning preparations. It includes multiple cameras, professionally graded and colour-mixed footage, and a 15 to 20 minute film delivered digitally in 4K/HD. For intimate celebrations or couples who want a polished record of the highlights without a longer production, this tier delivers exactly that without unnecessary extras built into the price.
Extended: Adds a Social Media Recap Film
The Extended package builds on Essentials with one meaningful addition: a dedicated recap film made specifically for sharing. The same ceremony-to-first-dance coverage applies, with the same multiple camera setup and 4K/HD delivery, but the film runs slightly longer at 20 to 30 minutes, and the social media recap cut gives couples something ready to share almost immediately. For anyone who knows they'll want to post something to Instagram or send a short clip to family who couldn't attend, this addition is genuinely practical rather than a token extra.
Wedding Day Documentary: Drone Footage and Morning Prep
This is where the story of the day gets told in full. Coverage begins at the bride's house, extending through the entire day to the first dance. Drone videography is included, particularly valuable given the scenic venues available across Northern Ireland, alongside extended highlights, the social media recap film, and a 30 to 40 minute final film. For couples who want the texture of the morning, the travel, and the build-up woven into their film, not just the ceremony and reception, the Wedding Day Documentary is the natural fit.
Signature: Second Camera Operator and 60+ Minute Film
The Signature package is E Vision Productions' most complete offering. It includes everything in the Documentary tier: drone footage, morning prep coverage, social media recap, multiple cameras, with the addition of a dedicated second camera operator and a final film of 60 minutes or more. The second operator means simultaneous coverage from multiple perspectives throughout the day, reducing any risk of missed moments and giving the edit significantly more to work with. For larger weddings, complex venues, or couples who want the most thorough record of their day, this is the package built for that.
Highlight Film, Full Edit, or Social Reel?
These terms get used interchangeably by suppliers and couples alike, but they describe meaningfully different products. Knowing what each one actually is makes it much easier to compare quotes and ask the right questions.
Highlight Film (4-10 Minutes)
A highlight film is the most common deliverable across all package tiers. It's a curated edit of the best moments from across the day, set to music, designed to capture the feel and emotion rather than document everything in sequence. Most couples watch this the most: it's the version they share with family, re-watch on anniversaries, and show friends. A well-crafted highlight film covers the preparation, ceremony, speeches, and reception through carefully selected clips with a clear emotional arc. When reviewing a videographer's work, always watch a full highlight film from a real wedding, not just a promotional showreel, to understand how they handle pacing and quieter moments.
Feature-Length Film (15-60+ Minutes)
A feature-length or full edit is a longer, more thorough film that covers the entire day in greater depth. Depending on the package, this can range from 15 minutes right up to 60 minutes or more. It typically includes the ceremony in full: vows, readings, and ring exchange uncut, alongside complete speeches and extended reception coverage. This format suits couples who want a thorough record, but it's worth being realistic about viewing habits: a 60-minute film will be watched far less frequently than a tight 6-to-10-minute highlights cut. The ideal approach is having both: the feature film as the archive, the highlight film as the everyday keepsake.
Social Media Reel
A social media reel, sometimes called a recap film, is a short, vertically or horizontally formatted cut built specifically for sharing on Instagram, Facebook, or WhatsApp. Typically under two minutes, it's optimised for mobile viewing and immediate sharing. It's not a replacement for the highlight film or full edit; it's a companion piece designed for a different purpose. One detail worth clarifying before booking: music licensing. If the reel uses commercially licensed tracks, it may be muted automatically on certain platforms. Ask specifically whether the social media cut uses sync-licensed music that allows unrestricted online sharing.
Questions to Ask Before You Book
Once a shortlist of videographers has been identified, a few targeted questions will surface the details that don't always appear clearly on a package page. The most relevant ones relate to legal compliance and what actually happens to the final films after delivery.
Check Drone Licensing and Insurance
Drone footage has become a standard expectation at many Northern Ireland weddings, given the region's scenic venues and coastline. Not every videographer who offers it is properly licensed to fly commercially. Under UK Civil Aviation Authority rules, any videographer operating a drone for commercial purposes must hold a valid Flyer ID and Operator ID. Ask to see these before confirming the booking. Additionally, check whether the videographer carries public liability insurance: some Belfast venues require proof of this before permitting filming on site. Neither question is awkward; both are basic due diligence.
Clarify Music Licensing for Social Sharing
Music licensing is one of the most overlooked details in wedding videography, and one of the most frustrating to discover after the fact. When a wedding film uses commercially licensed music without proper sync licensing, social media platforms like Instagram and Facebook will automatically mute or block it. Before signing, ask specifically: What music licensing does this package use, and will the final films be shareable on social media without restrictions? Some videographers use royalty-free libraries that permit social sharing; others use commercial tracks with limitations. Getting clarity on this before the wedding removes the disappointment of a muted reel later.
Book Early: Peak Belfast Dates Fill 6-18 Months Ahead
The average couple books their wedding videographer 12 to 15 months in advance. For peak summer Saturdays in Belfast and across Northern Ireland, popular videographers, across all budget tiers, can be booked up to 18 months or more ahead. Many professional videographers also deliberately limit the number of weddings they take on each year to ensure each film receives proper time and attention in post-production. That's a good sign of quality, but it also means availability disappears faster than it might appear.
The practical advice is straightforward: if a videographer's work feels right after watching a full film, not just a highlights reel, reach out before the date is gone. Enquiries cost nothing. Losing a preferred date to someone who moved faster costs considerably more.
Final Thoughts
For anyone still narrowing down options, E Vision Productions offers Belfast wedding videography packages built for the full range of wedding day shapes: from focused ceremony coverage to complete documentary-style films with drone footage and a second camera operator.
Planning a Belfast wedding film? Get in touch to talk through your date and package options.