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Video Editor Retainer Pricing: What to Charge per Month (2026)

Last updated: July 2026 · A ReelRate guide · For freelance editors

A retainer is the closest thing freelance editing has to a salary: one fixed monthly fee for an agreed volume of work, invoiced whether the client had a busy month or a quiet one. Editors want retainers for the predictable income; clients sign them for guaranteed turnaround and a modest discount. The trouble is that most editors price their first retainer by feel — usually too low — and skip the contract lines that stop "four videos a month" from quietly becoming six. This guide covers what editing retainers cost in 2026, the four-step math for pricing your own, and the exact clauses to put in writing. Since a retainer is really just your rate multiplied by volume, start by checking the rate itself with our free video editor rate calculator.

The two ways to structure a retainer

Every retainer sells one of two things, and FreelancerToolkit's 2026 retainer guide draws the line cleanly:

Either way, one rule defines a real retainer: the fee is due whether or not the client uses the full scope. That's not fine print — it's the product. The client is buying reserved capacity and first place in your queue, not a punch card.

What video editing retainers cost in 2026

For editing-only retainers — no filming, the client supplies footage — these are the going monthly rates, consistent with the tiers in our YouTube pricing guide:

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

Editing-only retainer benchmarks for creators and small brands in 2026.

It helps to know what the market charges around you, too. Full production retainers — where an agency or videographer also plans and films the content — run higher: Vidico's 2026 retainer guide puts a solo videographer's basic package at $750–$2,000/month, standard business retainers at $2,000–$5,000, premium agency tiers at $5,000–$10,000+, and enterprise partnerships at $10,000–$20,000+. When a client is comparing you against an agency quote, an editing-only retainer at half the price — using footage they already shoot — is often the easiest pitch you'll ever make.

One creator-economy extra: some YouTube retainers add a 5–10% revenue share on the videos' AdSense earnings. Treat it as a bonus on top of a fee that already covers your time — never as a substitute for one.

How to price your own retainer, in four steps

Step 1 — total the deliverables at one-off prices. Take your normal per-video rates and multiply by the monthly volume. That sticker total is your anchor; a retainer is priced down from it, never up to it.

Step 2 — apply a 10–15% retainer discount, and hold the line. That's the standard trade for guaranteed volume, per FreelancerToolkit — predictability has value, but you're not selling hours in bulk. Across the market the realized savings land a little wider: clients producing 4+ videos a month save 15–25% per video versus per-project pricing, and very high-volume YouTube deals can run 20–40% below one-off rates. Deeper discounts should only ever be volume doing the work — not nerves.

Step 3 — budget the invisible hours. A retainer comes with messages, check-in calls, and planning that never show up in a one-off quote. FreelancerToolkit's guide recommends adding a 15–20% buffer to your estimated hours for exactly this — the same logic behind the 20% buffer our calculator builds into your recommended rate. Those hours are real; count them before you commit, not after.

Step 4 — sanity-check the effective hourly. Divide the monthly fee by the realistic hours from step 3. If the result is below the target hourly from your calculator run, don't sign it — trim the scope or shrink the discount until the number works.

Worked example. A creator wants 4 long-form videos ($400 each one-off) and 8 Shorts ($60 each) every month. Sticker total: $2,080. With a 10% retainer discount → $1,850/month (rounded). Realistic hours: 4 × 6h + 8 × 1h = 32h, plus 15% for comms ≈ 37 hours. Effective rate: $1,850 ÷ 37 ≈ $50/hour. If your calculator target is $45, sign it. If your target is $60, offer 3 videos instead — same fee logic, fewer hours.

The five clauses that make a retainer work

A retainer without a scope definition is an all-you-can-eat buffet with your name on it. Five clauses do the protecting:

Copy-paste contract wording.
Scope & rollover clause: "The monthly fee includes up to four videos delivered within the calendar month. Unused videos don't carry over. Additional videos are $[X] each, confirmed in writing before work begins."
Term clause: "Either of us may end this agreement with 30 days' written notice. Rates are reviewed once a year in [month]."

When — and how — to pitch one

Retainers are earned, not opened with. Pitch after two or three successful one-off projects, when you already know the client's footage, feedback style, and pace — and they already trust your delivery. The clients worth pitching are the ones who need at least 2–3 videos every month; below that volume, per-project pricing serves them better and they'll sense it.

Frame the offer around their convenience, not your income: one agreement instead of a quote for every video, guaranteed turnaround, and first priority in your schedule. Lower the commitment fear with a soft start — production retainers commonly open with a 3-month trial period, and many freelancers simply make the first month cancel-anytime. A client who was hesitating signs a trial; a client who signs a trial and gets great work stays for years.

A retainer multiplies your rate — get the rate right first

Discounting a rate that was already 30% too low locks in underpayment for months at a time. Run the calculator to get an hourly rate built from your real costs, taxes, and billable hours, then build your retainer math on top of it.

Open the rate calculator →

Frequently asked questions

How much does a video editing retainer cost per month?
Editing-only retainers in 2026 typically run $800–$2,500/month at the entry level (4–8 long-form videos), $1,500–$3,500 for established editors (4 long-form plus social cutdowns), and $5,000–$10,000 for senior, high-production work. Full production retainers that include filming run higher — roughly $750–$2,000 for a solo videographer up to $20,000+ for enterprise agency partnerships.
How big a discount should a retainer include?
Open at 10–15% off your one-off rates and hold the line — that's the standard trade for guaranteed monthly volume. Market-wide, clients producing 4+ videos a month realize savings of 15–25% per video, and only very high-volume deals justify the 20–40% range. Any deeper discount should be volume doing the work, not negotiation pressure.
Should unused videos or hours roll over to the next month?
The standard is no — unused scope expires with the month, because rollover turns quiet months into a stockpile that can wipe out your capacity later. If a client pushes back, offer a capped credit instead: one unused video carries a single month, then expires. Whatever you choose, write it into the agreement.
How long should a retainer contract run?
Standard practice is 30 days' written notice to end on either side, with a soft start — a 3-month opening term or a cancel-anytime first month — to lower the commitment fear. Commitment is worth money: month-to-month arrangements price about 10–20% higher per video than 6–12-month terms. Add an annual rate review so raises happen by default.

Read next: Hourly vs Per-Minute vs Flat Fee (2026) · How to Price a YouTube Video Edit (2026) · Rush Fees & Revision Pricing (2026) · How Many Hours Can a Video Editor Actually Bill? (2026) · Rate Calculator