Media Production

Motion Graphics Pricing in Dubai: 2D, 3D & Animated Ad Costs Per Minute (2026)

SKIMBOX Team

Motion graphics in Dubai costs from around AED 1,000 to 50,000+ per finished minute, depending on 2D vs 3D and how much is custom. Here is the real price by type, what drives it, and whether you own the source files.

Motion Graphics Pricing in Dubai: 2D, 3D & Animated Ad Costs Per Minute (2026)

Last updated: July 2026

Motion graphics in Dubai costs from around AED 1,000 to over AED 50,000 per finished minute, depending on the style and how much of it is custom-built. Simple 2D motion graphics with text and shapes sit at the low end, while detailed 3D animation sits at the top. The single most important thing to understand is that the style, not the length, sets the price. This guide to motion graphics pricing in Dubai gives you the real per-minute and per-project costs by type, explains why two quotes for the "same" video can differ so much, and covers the questions most buyers forget to ask, like who owns the source files.

We produce motion graphics and animation for UAE brands out of our Dubai and Bengaluru studios, so the numbers below come from real project work, not a generic price list. Here is the honest picture in plain language.

What is motion graphics?

Motion graphics is animated graphic design: moving text, logos, icons, shapes, and data, usually without characters or a story. It is a branch of animation, but a narrower one. Full character animation adds character design, rigging, and lip-sync, which is why it costs more. Most business explainers, app demos, and social ads in Dubai are motion graphics, not character animation. In practice the work is built in Adobe After Effects for 2D and Cinema 4D or Blender for 3D. The distinction matters for your budget: the moment a brief adds characters, the price moves up a tier.

How much does motion graphics cost in Dubai?

Motion graphics pricing in Dubai runs from about AED 1,000 per finished minute for simple 2D work to AED 50,000 or more for detailed 3D, because a minute of animated text and a minute of detailed 3D need completely different amounts of work. Here are the Dubai-market rates we see, as estimates to plan against.

TypePer finished minute (AED)
Simple 2D motion graphics / kinetic typography1,000 โ€“ 4,000
Standard 2D explainer / animated ad3,000 โ€“ 9,000
Whiteboard animation3,000 โ€“ 12,000
Character-driven 2D animation8,000 โ€“ 22,000
3D motion graphics / animation10,000 โ€“ 50,000+
Logo animation / sting (flat, 2 to 10 seconds)1,500 โ€“ 8,000

For a typical 30 to 60 second animated ad as a full project, budget roughly AED 3,000 to 12,000 for a simple 2D style, AED 5,000 to 20,000 for a standard 2D explainer, AED 20,000 to 80,000 or more for 3D, and AED 100,000 and up for broadcast-grade work.

These are our own Dubai estimates. Studios in the US and UK generally charge more per minute for the same work, because their labour and overhead cost more. Mordor Intelligence puts the global animation and VFX market at around US$176 billion in 2024, heading toward US$311 billion by 2029, which tells you demand and production capacity are both rising [1]. Local demand is climbing too: Statista forecasts the UAE digital advertising market to reach about US$2.64 billion in 2026, growing at roughly 17.7 percent a year to around US$4.30 billion by 2029, and a rising share of that spend needs animated creative [4]. Dubai rates sit within that global structure, adjusted for the local market.

Why do two quotes for the same video differ so much?

Two quotes for the "same" 60-second video can differ by three to five times because they usually cover different amounts of work. This is the question that frustrates buyers most, and the answer is almost never the length of the video.

Here is what actually moves the price:

  • Custom illustration versus templates. Bespoke, hand-drawn art and characters cost far more than stock or templated assets. This is the single biggest lever.
  • The number of revision rounds included.
  • Voiceover language and talent. English plus Arabic doubles the voice cost.
  • Sound design and music licensing.
  • How many platform formats you need, such as square, vertical, and widescreen.

Labour rates explain a lot of the spread. On Upwork, the median animator charges about US$25 per hour, while senior motion specialists charge US$100 or more [5]. A quote built on senior artists' time will cost several times more than one built on junior time, even for the same 60 seconds.

Straight talk: the cheapest quote is rarely the same scope as the most expensive one. Before you compare two prices, ask each studio the same questions: what is included, how many revisions, do I get the source files, and how many format cuts. Once you line those up, the price gap usually explains itself.

Is 3D animation more expensive than 2D animation?

Usually. 3D animation costs about two to five times more per minute than 2D in Dubai, but not always, because price tracks complexity, not the label. A simple 3D scene that reuses ready-made models can cost less than a highly detailed, frame-by-frame 2D piece with custom characters. The gap exists because the 3D pipeline adds modelling, texturing, rigging, lighting, and rendering on top of the animation itself.

But the medium is not the whole story. A plain 2D motion-graphics piece with text and icons is cheap. A hand-drawn 2D character animation with lip-sync can cost as much as some 3D work. So when someone tells you "3D is always more expensive," the honest answer is that complexity and how much is custom-built decide the price, and 2D versus 3D is only one part of that.

What drives the price of a motion graphics video?

The biggest cost drivers are the style and how much is custom, not the runtime. Understanding these helps you shape a brief that fits your budget. Here are the main ones:

  • Style complexity. Simple motion graphics is cheapest, then whiteboard, then standard 2D explainer, then character animation, then 3D.
  • Custom versus stock assets. Bespoke illustration is the biggest single premium.
  • Voiceover. English plus Arabic is two tracks, not one, and character work needs a second lip-sync pass.
  • Sound and music. Budget roughly 10 to 15 percent of the project for audio, more if you want a custom track [2].
  • Revisions. Most quotes include one or two rounds; extra rounds cost more.
  • Rush deadlines. A compressed timeline usually adds a surcharge.

Notice that length is not near the top of that list. A 30-second video is not half the price of a 60-second one, because the fixed costs of script, design, and sound setup do not shrink with the runtime.

Do you own the source files? The question most people forget

Most studios deliver only the final rendered video, not the editable project files, unless you agree otherwise in writing. This is one of the most common points of confusion after a project ends, and it matters more than people expect.

The source files are the editable project scenes, such as the After Effects or Cinema 4D files, plus the layered assets. They let you, or another studio, re-edit the work later without starting over. Because those files hold so much value, many studios keep them or charge an extra fee to hand them over.

Common mistake: assuming the source files come with the final video. They usually do not. If you think you will want to change the video later, or reuse its elements, write source-file ownership into the contract before the project starts. Ask about it upfront, because it is far cheaper to agree at the start than to negotiate a buyout after delivery.

Motion graphics pricing models: per minute, per second, or per project

The standard way to price motion graphics is per finished minute, and this is how most Dubai studios quote. It lets you budget against a known runtime. But two other models come up, and knowing when each applies saves confusion.

  • Per finished minute is the headline number for explainers and ads. It is the industry standard.
  • Per project, or flat pricing, is used for very short pieces like a logo sting or a single social cutdown, because a 5-second clip does not map neatly onto a per-minute rate.
  • Per second is only a rough cross-check. It usually looks like poor value for very short pieces, because the fixed setup costs make a short clip cost more per second than a long one.

A quick worked example: a 45-second standard 2D explainer at AED 8,000 per finished minute is quoted as AED 6,000 for the animation, and then voiceover, music licensing, and a vertical cut are added on top. That is why the itemised breakdown matters more than the headline rate.

Whichever model you are quoted, always ask for an itemised breakdown covering script and storyboard, animation, voiceover, sound, and revisions. A bare per-minute number hides the parts that actually vary.

How motion graphics is made, step by step

A standard 60 to 90 second 2D explainer takes about 6 to 8 weeks from kickoff to final delivery, and every project follows the same pipeline: brief, script, storyboard, style frames, animation, sound design, revisions, delivery.

Simpler motion-graphics-only pieces can be done in 3 to 4 weeks, and 3D takes 6 to 10 weeks. About a quarter to a third of that time is pre-production: writing the script, drawing the storyboard, and locking the visual style in a few key frames before full animation begins.

The stage that most affects your timeline is your own feedback. The most common cause of delay is slow client responses or changing the script after animation has started. Giving clear, complete feedback early, at the script and storyboard stage, keeps a project on time and on budget.

The Dubai advantage: no filming permit needed

One real cost and time advantage of motion graphics over live-action video is that it needs no filming permit. Because animation is made entirely in software, with no location shoot, cast, or crew on a public street, the Dubai Film and TV Commission filming permit simply does not apply.

Live-action video is different. A live shoot in Dubai needs a DFTC permit, which costs AED 2,520 plus a AED 520 application fee, must be filed by a licensed production company, and takes several days to process [3]. For a project where either approach could work, choosing animation skips that whole permit process, fee, and wait. Our Dubai filming permit guide covers the live-action side in full.

One more Dubai factor to plan for is language. Many UAE brands need the same animation in both English and Arabic, in Modern Standard Arabic or Gulf dialect. A professional Arabic voiceover track typically costs around AED 550 to 2,200 for a short video, and character work needs a second lip-sync pass on top. That is a real, separate cost line, not a rounding error, so decide early whether you need a bilingual version.

Common hidden costs to watch for

A few costs are easy to miss when you first budget for motion graphics. Knowing them upfront avoids surprises:

  • Music and sound licensing. Stock tracks are cheap, but a custom track or a broadly licensed one costs more. Budget 10 to 15 percent for audio.
  • Extra revision rounds beyond the one or two included.
  • Extra formats. Each aspect ratio, such as square and vertical, is usually a separate export, not a free resize.
  • Rush fees for a compressed deadline.
  • Source files, which usually cost extra if you want them.

Real client stories

These are real situations from motion graphics projects we have worked on. Names and a few details have been changed for privacy.

Layla's SaaS startup (Emirati founder). Layla got quotes for a 60-second explainer ranging from AED 6,000 to AED 28,000 and could not understand why. The cheap one used stock templates and one revision; the expensive one was fully custom with two languages. "The quotes were not for the same thing at all," she says. "Ask what is included before you judge the price."

Karan's real estate firm (Indian founder). Karan paid for a polished brand animation, then a year later wanted to update it and found he did not have the project files. The studio charged a buyout fee. "I assumed I owned everything I paid for," he says. "Get the source files written into the contract from day one."

Sophie's retail brand (British expat). Sophie needed a set of social ads and ordered them one at a time, paying full price each time. We showed her batch pricing, where the brand style and characters are reused. "Ordering a series together was far cheaper per video," she says. "Plan the whole campaign, not one clip at a time."

How SKIMBOX prices motion graphics

We quote per finished minute with an itemised breakdown, so you can see exactly what the script, animation, voiceover, sound, and revisions each cost. We are clear about source-file ownership and format cuts upfront, never as a surprise later, and we plan bilingual English and Arabic versions from the start where you need them. See our animation and motion graphics services and media production services, or contact us for a clear estimate.

For related reading, see our video production cost guide and our guide to choosing a video production company in Dubai. If the animation is part of a product launch, our UI/UX design cost guide covers the app side of the budget.

References

[1] Mordor Intelligence - Global animation and VFX market size and growth forecast. mordorintelligence.com [2] Filmustage - Film and video budgeting guide, including recommended audio and music share of budget. filmustage.com [3] Dubai Film and TV Commission (DFTC) - Filming permit fees for live-action production in Dubai. filmdubai.gov.ae [4] Statista - UAE digital advertising market size and growth outlook. statista.com [5] Upwork - Aggregate animator hourly rate data used to anchor labour costs. upwork.com [6] SKIMBOX - Internal experience producing 2D and 3D motion graphics for UAE brands, including per-minute pricing, bilingual delivery, and project scoping, 2026. skimbox.co

Frequently asked questions

  • How much does motion graphics cost in Dubai?

    Motion graphics in Dubai costs from around AED 1,000 to over AED 50,000 per finished minute, depending on the style. Simple 2D motion graphics with text and shapes sit at the low end, around AED 1,000 to 4,000 a minute. Standard 2D explainers run about AED 3,000 to 9,000 a minute, and 3D animation runs from AED 10,000 a minute upward. The style and how much is custom-built matter far more than the length.

  • How much do motion graphics cost per minute?

    Per finished minute in Dubai, simple 2D motion graphics run about AED 1,000 to 4,000, standard 2D explainers about AED 3,000 to 9,000, character-driven 2D animation about AED 8,000 to 22,000, and 3D animation from AED 10,000 to 50,000 or more. These are Dubai-market estimates. Studios in the US and UK usually charge more per minute for the same work, because their labour and overhead cost more.

  • How much does motion graphics cost per second?

    Studios almost always price by the finished minute, not the second, so per-second figures are only a rough guide. At AED 3,000 to 9,000 a minute for a standard 2D piece, that works out to roughly AED 50 to 150 a second. But short pieces do not scale down neatly, because the fixed costs of script, design, and sound setup stay the same no matter how short the video is. A 10-second clip is rarely a sixth of a 60-second one.

  • How much does an animated ad cost in Dubai?

    A 15 to 30 second animated social or TV ad in Dubai typically costs AED 3,000 to 12,000 for a simple 2D style, and AED 20,000 to 80,000 or more for a 3D-animated ad. The price depends on the style, whether you need English and Arabic voiceover, and how many platform cuts you need, such as square for feeds and vertical for Reels and TikTok. Each format cut usually adds cost.

  • How much does an explainer video cost in Dubai?

    A standard 60-second 2D explainer video in Dubai costs roughly AED 5,000 to 20,000, including scripting, storyboard, animation, voiceover, and sound. The exact price depends on how custom the illustrations are, how many revision rounds you need, and whether you want both English and Arabic versions. Whiteboard and kinetic-typography styles sit at the lower end, while character-driven animation costs more because of the extra illustration work.

  • How much does logo animation cost in Dubai?

    A custom logo animation or brand sting, usually 2 to 10 seconds long, costs around AED 1,500 to 8,000 as a flat project in Dubai. It is priced as a flat fee, not per minute, because it is so short. Template-based logo reveals can be much cheaper, but they look generic. A 3D or effects-heavy logo sting sits at the top of that range or beyond. Do not apply a per-minute rate to a 5-second logo reveal, because it does not work that way.

  • Is 3D animation more expensive than 2D animation?

    Usually, but not always. Price tracks complexity, render time, and how much is custom-built, not just the 2D or 3D label. A simple 3D scene that reuses ready-made models can cost less than a highly detailed, frame-by-frame 2D piece with custom characters. As a rule, 3D costs about two to five times more per minute than 2D, because the 3D pipeline adds modelling, lighting, and rendering. But complexity, not the medium alone, is what really sets the price.

  • Why do two motion graphics quotes for the same video differ so much?

    Because the quotes usually cover different amounts of work, even for the same length. Price is driven by script complexity, the number of custom characters and illustrations, how many revision rounds are included, the voiceover language and talent, sound design, and how many platform formats you need. That is why two quotes for a 60-second explainer can differ by three to five times. Always ask exactly what each quote includes before you compare the numbers.

  • What drives the price of a motion graphics video?

    The biggest drivers are the style and how much is custom-built, not the length. Custom, hand-drawn illustration and characters cost far more than stock or templated assets. 3D costs more than 2D. Adding both English and Arabic voiceover doubles the voice cost. Sound design and music licensing add 10 to 15 percent. Extra revision rounds and rush deadlines add more. Length matters least, because the setup costs stay fixed however short the piece is.

  • Do I own the source project files after paying for a motion graphics video?

    Not automatically. Most studios deliver only the final rendered video, not the editable project files like the After Effects or Cinema 4D scenes. Those source files let you or another studio re-edit the work later, so many studios charge an extra fee to hand them over. If you want the source files, write it into the contract before the project starts. Do not assume they are included, because usually they are not.

  • How many revisions are included in a motion graphics project?

    Most Dubai studios include one to two revision rounds, and full-service agencies sometimes include three to four. Extra rounds beyond that typically cost AED 500 to 1,500 each at a studio and AED 3,000 to 5,000 at a larger agency. Revisions cost more the later they come, because changing a scene after animation has started is far more work than catching it at the storyboard stage. A clear brief upfront is the best way to avoid revision costs.

  • How much does Arabic voiceover cost for a video in Dubai?

    A professional Arabic voiceover track, in Gulf dialect or Modern Standard Arabic, typically costs around AED 550 to 2,200 for a short video through a studio. Freelancers quote less for very short scripts, but quality varies. If you want both an English and an Arabic version of the same animation, budget for two separate voiceover tracks, and for character animation, a second lip-sync pass. Bilingual delivery is common in the UAE, so plan for it from the start.

  • What is the cheapest way to get motion graphics made?

    The lowest-cost options are ready-made templates you edit yourself, or freelancers on platforms like Fiverr and Upwork. Templates can cost as little as AED 40 to 80, and basic freelance logo work starts very low. The trade-off is your own time managing quality and revisions, and the result often looks generic. For anything that represents your brand publicly, a studio or experienced freelancer is worth the extra cost. Cheap, templated work usually looks cheap.

  • Should I hire a freelancer, an agency, or use a template for motion graphics?

    Templates are cheapest and fastest but generic. A freelancer is a good middle ground if you can direct the work and manage revisions yourself. An agency or studio costs more but bundles the script, illustration, animation, sound, and quality control, so you are not managing several specialists at once. For a one-off simple clip, a freelancer or template is fine. For brand-critical or complex work, a studio usually gives a better result with less hassle.

  • What is the difference between motion graphics, animation, and video?

    Video is the general format. Animation is the broad craft of moving imagery, including full character storytelling. Motion graphics is a type of animation focused on moving graphic design elements like text, logos, icons, and data, usually without characters or a story. Because motion graphics does not need character illustration and rigging, it is usually cheaper and faster to make than full character animation. Most business explainers and ads are motion graphics, not character animation.

  • How long does it take to make a 1-minute animated video?

    A professional studio usually needs about 6 to 8 weeks for a 60 to 90 second 2D explainer, from kickoff to final delivery. Simpler motion-graphics-only pieces can be done in 3 to 4 weeks, while 3D animation takes 6 to 10 weeks. The biggest cause of delay is slow client feedback and changes to the script after work has started. About a quarter to a third of the time is pre-production: script, storyboard, and style frames.

  • How much does 3D animation cost per minute in Dubai?

    3D animation in Dubai typically costs from AED 10,000 to 50,000 or more per finished minute, depending on model detail, characters, and render complexity. Premium, cinematic 3D costs even more. The reason 3D is expensive is the extra pipeline: modelling, texturing, rigging, lighting, and rendering all happen on top of the animation itself. Reusing 3D models and environments across several videos in a campaign is the main way to bring the per-video cost down.

  • How much does 2D animation cost per minute in Dubai?

    2D animation in Dubai costs about AED 1,000 to 4,000 per finished minute for simple motion graphics, AED 3,000 to 9,000 for a standard explainer, and AED 8,000 to 22,000 for character-driven 2D animation. The spread comes from how much is custom: templated text and shapes sit at the bottom, custom illustration in the middle, and full character design with lip-sync at the top. Style sets the price far more than length, because script, design, and sound setup costs stay fixed.

  • How much does whiteboard animation cost?

    Whiteboard animation is one of the cheaper styles, at roughly AED 3,000 to 12,000 per finished minute in Dubai, with many projects landing lower for a short piece. It costs less than character animation because there is no complex rigging or lip-sync. The biggest cost lever is whether the drawings are custom and branded or drawn from a stock library. A typical whiteboard video takes about 2 to 4 weeks to produce.

  • How much does kinetic typography cost?

    Kinetic typography, which is animated text, is one of the most budget-friendly styles at roughly AED 1,000 to 4,000 per finished minute in Dubai, and often less for a short social clip. It is cheaper than character animation because there is no illustration, character design, or rigging involved. It works well for quotes, statistics, social ads, and music-led promos. Most kinetic typography projects take about 2 to 4 weeks from script to delivery.

  • How much does a monthly retainer for animated social content cost in Dubai?

    A monthly retainer for ongoing animated and social content in Dubai commonly ranges from around AED 3,000 for a light freelancer package to AED 18,000 or more for a studio package covering several videos a month plus strategy. High-volume, full-service retainers cost more. Retainers usually give a lower per-video cost than one-off projects, because the brand style, characters, and voice are already set up, so each new video reuses that foundation.

  • How much does a 30-second animated video cost?

    A 30-second animated video costs roughly AED 3,000 to 8,000 in Dubai for a simple 2D style, more for 3D. It is not simply half the price of a 60-second video, because the fixed costs of scripting, design, and sound setup do not shrink with the length. Short does not mean cheap in proportion. The style, custom illustration, and voiceover matter more to the final price than the runtime does.

  • Why is motion graphics cheaper than character animation?

    Because motion graphics animates graphic elements like text, shapes, and logos, while character animation needs custom character design, rigging, and lip-sync, which take far more artist hours. A motion-graphics piece can reuse design elements and templates for movement, whereas each character and its movement is built more or less from scratch. That extra illustration and rigging work is why character animation sits well above motion graphics on any price list.

  • Do I need a script before I can get a motion graphics quote?

    You do not need a final script, but you need a rough idea of the word count and number of scenes. Studios usually give a price range until the script is locked, because the length and complexity of the script directly set how much animation work is needed. The clearer your brief and rough script, the tighter and more accurate the quote. A vague brief leads to a wide range and, later, to revision costs.

  • How much do extra revisions cost beyond the included rounds?

    Once you pass the included rounds, extra revisions typically cost AED 500 to 1,500 each at a studio and AED 3,000 to 5,000 at a full-service agency. Revisions cost more the later they happen, because re-opening a finished animation is far more work than fixing something at the storyboard stage. The best way to keep this cost down is to give thorough feedback at the script and storyboard stages, before animation begins.

  • Can I get a discount for ordering multiple motion graphics videos at once?

    Yes. Most studios give a lower per-video price when you order several videos in the same batch, often a discount of around 30 percent on each additional piece. This works because the brand style, characters, voice talent, and sound setup are already locked in from the first video, so each new one reuses that foundation. If you know you need a series, ask for batch pricing upfront rather than ordering one at a time.

  • Does a motion graphics video need a filming permit in Dubai?

    No. Motion graphics and animation are made entirely in software, with no location shoot, cast, or crew on a street, so the Dubai Film and TV Commission filming permit does not apply. Live-action video does need that permit, which costs AED 2,520 plus a AED 520 application fee and takes several days to process. Skipping this permit process is a real cost and time advantage of choosing animation over live-action for some projects.

  • What questions should I ask before hiring a motion graphics studio in Dubai?

    Ask five things: what is included in the price, whether you get the source files, how many revision rounds are free, the typical turnaround per finished minute, and whether pricing is per minute or per project. These questions surface most of the hidden costs before you sign. A good studio answers all five clearly and puts the answers in writing. Vague answers on scope, revisions, or file ownership are a warning sign.

  • Is motion graphics worth it for a small business?

    It can be, when it is tied to a clear goal like leads, sign-ups, or ad performance, and you track the result. A short animated explainer or ad can make a complex product easy to understand and lift conversion. It is not worth it as a vague brand video with no measurable goal. Decide before you produce what number you want it to move, and a well-made motion graphics piece can pay back quickly.

  • What formats and aspect ratios do I need for an animated ad?

    For most campaigns you need at least three: 16:9 for YouTube and websites, 9:16 vertical for Reels, TikTok, and Stories, and 1:1 square for feeds. Each format is usually billed as an extra export, because it needs a re-composition, not just a resize. If you know which platforms you will use, ask for all the formats upfront so they can be planned into one project rather than added later at extra cost.

SKIMBOX Team

Tech Consultancy

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