Animation has moved from a nice-to-have to a standard part of how UK businesses communicate. Explainer videos on landing pages, animated training modules for onboarding new staff, product demos that simplify technical offerings — companies in London, Manchester, Belfast, Birmingham, and Edinburgh are all commissioning animated content that would have seemed extravagant a decade ago.
The problem is that pricing in the animation industry remains opaque. Unlike web design or print advertising, where businesses can find ballpark figures with a quick search, animation costs vary so widely that many companies either overpay or avoid it entirely because they cannot get a straight answer on price.
Educational Voice, a 2D animation studio based in Belfast, Northern Ireland, has published a detailed animation pricing guide for UK businesses that breaks down what companies can expect to pay based on project type, length, and complexity. The figures provide a useful benchmark for any business considering animated content for the first time.
Why Animation Pricing Varies So Much
A 60-second animated explainer video can cost anywhere from £1,500 to £15,000 or more in the UK. That range is wide enough to be almost useless without context, which is why so many businesses feel lost when they start requesting quotes.
The price depends on several factors that are not immediately obvious to buyers. Animation style is one — a simple motion graphics piece with text and icons costs significantly less than a fully illustrated character animation with custom backgrounds, lip-synced dialogue, and detailed movement. Script development, professional voiceover, sound design, and the number of revision rounds all add to the final figure.
Length matters, but not linearly. A two-minute animation does not cost exactly twice what a one-minute video costs. The per-second cost tends to decrease as the project gets longer, because much of the expense sits in the upfront work: concept development, storyboarding, character design, and style frames. Once those are established, additional seconds of animation are produced more efficiently.
Production timelines also affect price. A four-week turnaround is standard for most UK studios. Rush jobs — two weeks or less — typically carry a premium of 20–50%, depending on how much the studio needs to reorganise its schedule.
What UK Businesses Are Spending by Sector
Across the UK, animation budgets tend to cluster by industry and purpose. SMEs in cities like Leeds, Bristol, and Glasgow commissioning their first explainer video typically spend between £2,000 and £5,000 for a 60–90 second piece. This usually covers scriptwriting, storyboard, animation, voiceover, and one or two revision rounds.
Corporate training content tends to sit higher. Businesses in London and the South East commissioning animated training modules for compliance, health and safety, or employee onboarding usually budget between £3,000 and £8,000 per module, depending on complexity and interactivity requirements.
Healthcare and financial services animation commands the highest rates. The content requires additional accuracy checks, regulatory compliance review, and sometimes approval from legal or medical teams. Productions for NHS trusts, private healthcare providers, and financial institutions across the UK often start at £5,000 and can reach £15,000 for detailed, multi-scene productions.
Educational content sits in its own category. Schools, universities, and digital learning platforms commission animation series rather than one-off videos. The per-unit cost drops significantly with volume — a platform commissioning 50 or 100 animations will negotiate a very different rate than a company ordering a single explainer.
Michelle Connolly, Founder and Director of Educational Voice, a Belfast-based 2D animation company that produces content for businesses and educators across the UK, sees pricing confusion as one of the biggest barriers to entry. “Most businesses have never bought animation before, so they have no frame of reference for what it should cost. They compare it to stock video or a freelancer on Fiverr, and then they are shocked by professional studio quotes — or they go the cheap route and end up with something that does not represent their brand properly.”
The Hidden Costs Most Businesses Miss
The sticker price on an animation quote is rarely the full picture. Understanding the true cost of animation means accounting for several expenses that sit outside the production itself.
Script development is sometimes included in a studio quote and sometimes charged separately. A professional scriptwriter who understands both the subject matter and the constraints of animation (pacing, visual storytelling, timing) typically charges £300–£800 for a 60-second script. Some businesses write their own scripts to save money, but poorly written animation scripts often result in more revision rounds during production — which can cost more than the scriptwriter would have.
Voiceover is another variable. A professional British voice artist typically charges £200–£500 for a 60-second recording, depending on usage rights and experience. Studios in Belfast, Cardiff, and Manchester often have established relationships with voice artists that can reduce this cost. Some businesses opt for AI-generated voiceover to cut expenses, though the quality gap remains noticeable for customer-facing content.
Music and sound design are frequently overlooked. Royalty-free music libraries cost £30–£150 per track with a commercial licence. Custom sound design — foley, effects, and bespoke music — can add £500–£2,000 depending on complexity. For brand-level content that needs to feel distinctive, custom audio is often worth the extra spend.
Hosting, embedding, and distribution costs are rarely discussed upfront. Platforms like Vimeo Pro (around £150 per year) offer better quality and privacy controls than free YouTube hosting. Businesses using animation for paid advertising also need to factor in platform-specific format requirements — different aspect ratios for Instagram, LinkedIn, and YouTube — which may require additional edits at £100–£300 per adaptation.
Regional Pricing Differences Across the UK
Like most creative services, animation pricing varies by region. London studios tend to charge 20–40% more than studios elsewhere in the UK, reflecting higher operating costs rather than necessarily higher quality.
Studios in Manchester, Bristol, and Edinburgh typically sit in the mid-range. Northern Ireland has emerged as a particularly cost-effective location for animation production, combining lower studio overheads with a strong creative talent pool built partly on the back of the region’s growing screen industries. Belfast-based studios serve clients across the UK and Ireland, often offering London-quality production at significantly lower rates.
For businesses outside the South East — SMEs in the Midlands, the North of England, Scotland, and Wales — working with a regional studio often makes more commercial sense. Remote collaboration tools mean that geography is rarely a barrier to working with any UK studio, so the decision comes down to portfolio quality, communication style, and price.
When Animation Is Worth the Investment — and When It Is Not
Not every business needs animation. A local tradesperson in Sheffield probably does not need a £5,000 explainer video. A SaaS company in Cambridge trying to explain a complex product to enterprise buyers almost certainly does.
The strongest ROI from animation tends to come in specific situations: products or services that are difficult to explain with text or photography alone; training content that needs to be delivered consistently across multiple locations; sales materials targeting decision-makers who lack time to read long documents; and educational content aimed at audiences who respond better to visual formats.
Where animation performs less well is in time-sensitive, disposable content. Social media trends, seasonal promotions, and reactive marketing are generally better served by quicker, cheaper formats. Professional animation is an investment in content that will work for months or years, not days.
For businesses weighing up the decision, the maths is usually straightforward. Calculate the cost per view over the expected lifespan of the animation. A £3,000 explainer video that sits on a product page receiving 500 visits per month for two years costs roughly 25p per view. Compared with most forms of paid advertising, that represents strong value.
Getting Accurate Quotes
The best way to get realistic animation pricing is to approach studios with a clear brief. At minimum, businesses should be prepared to outline the purpose of the animation, the target audience, the approximate length, the desired style (if known), the deadline, and the budget range.
Providing a budget range is not about giving studios permission to charge the maximum. It helps them propose a solution that fits. A studio that knows you have £3,000 will suggest a different approach than one that thinks you have £10,000 — and both can deliver effective results at those price points.
Requesting showreels and examples of similar work is standard. Asking for a line-item breakdown of the quote helps businesses understand where their money goes and where they might save. And speaking to two or three studios before committing gives enough perspective to evaluate whether a quote is fair.
For companies across the UK — whether in Newcastle, Nottingham, Belfast, or Brighton — animation has become an accessible and measurable marketing tool. The key is understanding what drives the cost, planning the investment properly, and working with a studio that is transparent about pricing from the first conversation.










































































