Event Filming Market in Australia
Industry Overview
Drone event filming is rapidly growing:
- Annual market: varies — consult relevant providers for current pricing+ in Australia
- Growth rate: 45% year-over-year
- Key events: Weddings, corporate events, concerts, sports, festivals
Drone Shot Demand
Clients increasingly expect:
- Cinematic aerial sweeps
- Sunrise/sunset reveals
- Crowd atmosphere capture
- Venue establishment shots
- Bride/groom couple reveals (careful positioning required)
- Cannot fly directly above audience
- Must position drone 30+ meters away from all attendees
- Creative camera angles are essential
- Professional framing techniques required
- Requires: ReOC + event permit
- Timeline: Immediate approval
- Cost: Minimal (permit fees vary by venue)
- Restrictions: Cannot fly directly over crowds
- Requires: ReOC + CASA special approval + advanced safety case
- Timeline: 120–180 days
- Cost: varies — check with relevant providers (maximum under the Civil Aviation Act 1988)
- Restrictions: None (but heavily monitored)
- Remote Operator Certificate (ReOC) from CASA
- Event venue approval (written permission from venue owner)
- Event organizer notification (safety briefing to attendees optional but recommended)
- Insurance — varies by coverage level and operations type public liability + event endorsement
- Safety plan — documented procedures
- Venue owner/manager
- Event organizer (if different from venue)
- Security coordinator (if applicable)
- Drone operation hours
- Flight boundaries (no-fly zones within venue)
- Landing zones
- Restricted airspace coordination (if required)
- Emergency procedures
- Insurance verification
- Pre-event coordination
- Venue walkthrough
- Obstacle identification
- Flight path planning
- Crowd management coordination
- Event day procedures
- Backup plan for weather
- Emergency landing procedures
- Spectator briefing (recommended)
- Real-time monitoring
- No-fly zones
- Specific areas over crowds where drone prohibited
- Buffer distances from stages, VIP areas
- Power line avoidance zones
- Controlled flight corridor
- Walk full venue perimeter
- Identify all obstacles (trees, poles, wires, buildings)
- Mark power lines on map (largest drone hazard)
- Identify safe takeoff/landing zones
- Note wind patterns (trees indicate prevailing wind)
- Scout camera angle opportunities
- Measure distances from key spots to crowds
- Test GPS signal strength at venue
- Photograph venue layout for planning
- Confirm airspace status (controlled vs. uncontrolled)
- 45-Degree Diagonal Shot
- Drone positioned 40m away
- Camera angle 45° down
- Captures subject + context
- Result: Stunning, legal cinematography
- Ascending Reveal
- Start at ground level 50m away
- Ascend to 200 feet while moving sideways
- Reveals venue/landscape above/behind subject
- Visually striking, completely legal
- Perimeter Sweep
- Circle event at 30m+ distance
- Multiple angles of venue
- Captures atmosphere without flying over people
- Professional result
- Crowd Parallel Shots
- Fly parallel to crowd direction
- Maintain 30m+ horizontal distance
- Captures energy without over-people flying
- Great for festivals/marches
- VIP state events (governor appearance, etc.)
- Major sporting events (requires government coordination)
- High-profile television productions
- Search & rescue during event (emergency)
- Comprehensive hazard analysis
- Redundant system documentation
- Equipment specifications
- Personnel training records
- Weather protocols
- Emergency procedures (beyond standard)
- Ground risk analysis (crowd density, infrastructure)
- Airspace risk analysis (other aircraft in area)
- Mitigation verification
- System redundancy assessment
- varies by coverage level and operations type+ public liability
- Event coverage endorsement
- Equipment coverage
- Professional indemnity (varies by coverage level and operations type+)
- Full safety case package
- Equipment specifications
- Insurance certificates
- Personnel qualifications
- Risk mitigation strategies
- CASA issues conditions (usually)
- May require safety observer onsite
- Real-time communication with CASA
- Post-event reporting required
- Large crowds (100+ people) = +20% surcharge
- Night filming = +40% surcharge
- Near water (outdoor events) = +15% surcharge
- Over-people flying = +100%+ surcharge
- High-profile event = +50% surcharge
- Cost (equipment amortized, fuel, insurance): varies depending on specifications and supplier
- Labor (12 hours): varies depending on specifications (at varies depending on specifications/hour billable)
- Net profit: varies depending on specifications (58% margin)
- Site visit and mapping
- Identify optimal flight times (golden hour timing)
- Scout camera angles (45° shots, perimeter)
- Confirm venue approval and insurance
- Brief with event organizer/photographer
- Test drone and equipment
- Setup: 30 minutes (arrive 45 min before first shot)
- Ceremony coverage: 45 min (positioned away from crowd)
- Reception arrival: 30 min (aerial establishing shot, guest arrivals)
- Couple dancing: 20 min (perimeter filming, 30m+ distance)
- Sunset shot: 30 min (golden hour, ascending reveal)
- Pack-down: 15 min
- Footage review and organization
- Highlight reel editing (3–5 minutes)
- Color grading and color correction
- Music selection and synchronization
- Titles/graphics insertion
- Client review and revisions
- Final delivery (online link or USB)
- Flying without ReOC (illegal, up to A$16,500 per offence under CASR Part 101)
- Flying over crowds without approval (criminal violation)
- No event venue approval (trespass liability)
- Crossing into controlled airspace without ATC coordination
- No insurance or inadequate coverage
- Flying during extreme wind (loss of control, injury risk)
- No GPS lock (inertial navigation only, collision risk)
- Not maintaining VLOS (loss of situational awareness)
- Flying near power lines (electrocution, interference)
- Poor battery management (forced emergency landing)
- Inadequate camera angles (looks like hovering over crowd)
- Poor video quality (shaky, poor light, low resolution)
- Slow editing turnaround (clients expect quick delivery)
- No backup plan (equipment fails, no contingency)
- Not capturing audio (silent footage lacks impact)
CASA Regulatory Framework for Events
Key Rule: No Flying Over People
CASR Part 101 prohibits flying over crowds. This is the biggest constraint. What this means for event filming:Two Approval Pathways
Path 1: Standard Event Filming (No Over-People Flying)Path 1: Standard Event Filming (Recommended for Most Events)
Requirements
Event Venue Approval
You must get written permission from:Event Safety Plan
Your operations manual must specify:
Standard Event Filming: Best Practices
Pre-Event Site Visit (Critical)
Visit venue 7–14 days before event:Flight Planning for Events
Determine camera angles that avoid flying over people:| Event Type | Safe Camera Angles |
|---|---|
| Wedding ceremony | 45° angle from side (not overhead) |
| Concert | Elevated shot from side/back (not over audience) |
| Sports event | Behind goal line or sideline shots |
| Festival | Perimeter shots, ascending reveals |
| Corporate event | Wide establishing shots, participant reveals (avoid groups) |
Professional Event Filming Techniques
When you cannot fly directly over subjects:Path 2: Advanced Approval (Over-People Flying)
When Over-People Approval is Justified
Only in rare circumstances:
Over-People Approval Process
Estimated timeline: 120–180 days Step 1: Enhanced Safety Case (ConOps)Insurance for Event Filming
Essential Coverage
| Coverage | Amount | Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Public liability | varies by coverage level and operations typeM | varies by coverage level and operations type |
| Event coverage endorsement | varies by coverage level and operations typeM | +varies by coverage level and operations type |
| Professional indemnity | varies depending on specificationsM | varies depending on specifications |
| Equipment coverage | Full replacement | varies depending on specifications |
| Total Annual | — | varies depending on specifications |
Event-Specific Considerations
Higher premiums if:Event Filming Pricing & Business Model
Typical Event Filming Rates (Australia 2026)
| Event Type | Size | Price Range |
|---|---|---|
| Wedding | 100–200 guests | varies — check with relevant providers |
| Corporate event | 50–500 guests | varies — check with relevant providers |
| Festival | 1,000–10,000 attendees | A$5,000–A$20,000 |
| Concert | 5,000+ attendees | A$10,000–A$50,000 |
| Sporting event | Professional level | A$20,000–A$55,000 (maximum under the Civil Aviation Act 1988)+ |
Revenue Breakdown (Wedding Example)
4-hour wedding event:| Service | Cost |
|---|---|
| Drone filming (4 hours) | varies depending on specifications |
| Video editing (8 hours) | varies depending on specifications |
| Color grading | A$500 |
| Music licensing | varies — check with relevant providers |
| Total event price | varies depending on specifications |
Workflow: Wedding Event Filming
Pre-Event (2 Weeks)
Event Day (4 Hours)
Timeline:Post-Event (8–10 Hours)
Common Event Filming Mistakes
Regulatory Mistakes
Safety Mistakes
Professional Mistakes
FAQ
Q: Can I film a wedding without ReOC if I'm just a friend?
A: If charging fees = commercial operation = need ReOC. If free = still commercial if client has paid photographer. To be safe, get ReOC.Q: Do I need approval from every guest at a wedding?
A: No. Venue owner approval sufficient. However, brief guests on drone operations (common courtesy).Q: Can I film a public festival without venue approval?
A: No. You must notify event organizer and local council. Council may require permit application.Q: What if the venue says "drones are prohibited"?
A: Respect their decision. No fly. Over-people approval won't override venue restrictions.Q: How do I handle weather cancellations?
A: Contracts should specify weather terms (e.g., "if wind > 15 knots, event rescheduled, no cancellation fee"). Be flexible.Q: Can I use my aerial footage for promotional purposes?
A: No, unless client grants permission. Footage is client property. Get written release for portfolio use.Q: What if someone in the crowd gets injured by my drone?
A: Insurance covers bodily injury claims (up to limit). Your liability protection is why insurance is critical.Q: Do I need a contract with the client?
A: Absolutely. Specify deliverables, timeline, revision limits, payment terms, usage rights, cancellation policy.Q: How do I protect my drone during setup at events?
A: Always have eyes on it. Use geofencing in DJI apps to prevent accidental takeoff. Never leave unattended.Q: Does MmowW help with event filming compliance?
Key Takeaways
Event filming requires ReOC from CASA Cannot fly directly over crowds (unless rare approval granted) 45-degree angled shots are professional alternative to overhead footage Insurance varies by coverage level and operations type+ mandatory, with event coverage endorsement Pre-event site visit essential for safety and planning Pricing: varies by coverage level and operations type+ depending on event type Wedding filming: 58% profit margins typical for operators