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Video Editor Rates in the Philippines (2026)

Last updated: July 2026 · A ReelRate guide · For Filipino editors and the clients who hire them

The Philippines is the world's video editing outsourcing capital — strong English, deep creative talent, and a workforce that has powered YouTube channels and brand accounts everywhere for a decade. It's also the market where published rates confuse people most, because two very different price lists exist side by side: monthly salaries for full-time remote editors, and hourly rates for independent freelancers. This guide covers both, in dollars and pesos, for 2026 — whether you're a Filipino editor deciding what to charge or a client deciding what's fair to pay. For a rate built from your own numbers, use our free video editor rate calculator — it works in ₱ as well as $.

The two markets: monthly salary vs freelance hourly

Most confusion about Philippine editing rates disappears once you see the two lanes. Lane one is full-time remote employment: a US or European client hires one editor for a monthly salary, usually through job boards like OnlineJobs.ph or an agency. Per HireTalent's 2026 hiring guide, these roles pay:

LevelMonthly (full-time)Effective hourly*
Entry (0–2 years)~$800~$5
Mid-level (2–5 years)$1,056–$1,232$6–$7
Senior / specialist$1,760–$2,640+$10–$15+

*At a standard 176-hour month (8 hours × 22 days). Source: HireTalent.ph, 2026 guide.

Lane two is independent freelancing — quoting per project or per hour, no single boss. Established Filipino freelancers on the open market charge $10–$30/hour, the range in our rates-by-country guide, with per-project pricing around $20–$100 for short-form clips and $50–$150+ for long-form videos. The freelance lane pays more per hour; the salary lane pays every month whether work is busy or slow. Neither is wrong — they're different products, exactly like the staff-vs-freelance split in our US deep dive.

The local baseline — and the 2–6× gap

Here's the number that explains the whole market. The average video editor salary inside the Philippines is ₱27,072 a month (Indeed, June 2026, 636 salaries) — about $440 at mid-2026 exchange rates of roughly ₱61.5 to the dollar. Even in the best-paying city, Manila, the average is ₱33,060 (≈$540).

Set that against the international remote lane above and the gap is roughly 2× at entry level and up to 6× for seniors. That gap drives everything: it's why talented editors compete hard for international clients, why a client paying $1,000 a month is offering a genuinely strong local income — more than double the domestic average — and why "cheap by US standards" and "well-paid by Manila standards" can both be true of the same salary. Lower rates reflect cost of living, not lower skill; some of the world's busiest YouTube editors cut from Manila and Cebu.

If you're hiring: what fair pay buys you

For clients, the practical question isn't "how low can I go?" — it's "what keeps a great editor for years?" Three things worth knowing before you post a role (our client-side cost guide covers the general budgeting):

If you're a Filipino editor: pricing up, and the 8% tax

The ladder out of local-average pricing is the same one we describe for every market: a sharp niche reel, verified reviews, and clients anchored to their economy, not yours. A Manila editor cutting for a Texas YouTuber is selling into a market where mid-level editing bills $45–$85 an hour — you don't need US rates to win the work, just a rate that respects the value gap. Moving from ₱27k local employment to an $800 international role nearly doubles your income; moving from $800 salaried to $15–$25/hour freelancing can double it again.

One genuine advantage over your US and UK peers: tax simplicity. Registered self-employed professionals with gross receipts of ₱3 million or less can elect the BIR's 8% flat income tax — 8% on gross receipts above ₱250,000, replacing both the graduated income tax and percentage tax, with almost no expense bookkeeping. Compare that with the 15.3% self-employment tax in the US or IR35 headaches in the UK.

Worked example. A mid-level editor lands a full-time international role at $1,100/month — about ₱812,000 a year at ₱61.5/$. That's ₱67,700 a month, 2.5× the local staff average. On the 8% option, tax is 8% × (₱812,000 − ₱250,000) ≈ ₱45,000 for the year — an effective rate of about 5.5%. Run the same income goal through the calculator in pesos to see the hourly floor it implies before you quote any freelance project.

Price your work in pesos, dollars, or both

The calculator is currency-agnostic: enter your income goal, gear and software costs, tax set-aside, and realistic billable hours, and it returns the hourly, day, and per-minute rate that actually sustains you — whichever market you sell into.

Open the rate calculator →

Frequently asked questions

How much does a full-time Filipino video editor cost per month?
In 2026, full-time remote Filipino video editors typically cost around $800/month at entry level, $1,056–$1,232 for mid-level, and $1,760–$2,640+ for senior or specialist editors, based on a standard 176-hour month. For context, the average local staff salary is ₱27,072 (about $440), so international rates at 2–3× the local average attract and keep strong talent.
What hourly rate do freelance video editors in the Philippines charge?
Independent Filipino freelancers on the open market typically charge $10–$30/hour in 2026, with short-form clips quoted at $20–$100 per video and long-form edits at $50–$150+. Full-time salaried remote roles work out lower per hour (roughly $5–$15) in exchange for guaranteed monthly income.
Do freelance video editors in the Philippines get 13th month pay?
Legally, no — the mandatory 13th-month pay under PD 851 covers rank-and-file employees, not independent contractors. In practice, many international employers pay a 13th month to long-term full-time contractors anyway, because it's the local norm and a powerful retention gesture. If you're hiring, budget for it; if you're an editor, it's reasonable to negotiate for.
Why are video editing rates in the Philippines so much lower?
Because rates anchor to local cost of living and the ₱27,072 average local salary — not to skill. The Philippines has one of the world's deepest pools of experienced editors, and a $1,000/month international role that looks inexpensive to a US client is more than double the domestic average. As Filipino editors build portfolios and reviews, many price toward international freelance rates of $15–$30/hour and beyond.

Read next: Video Editor Rates by Country (2026) · Video Editor Rates in the US (2026) · Video Editor Rates in the UK (2026) · How Much Does Video Editing Cost? (2026 Client Guide) · Rate Calculator