Entertainment Industry Salary Guide 2026: Every Role, Every Union Rate

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entertainment industry salary guide 2026

The U.S. entertainment industry employs 4.58 million workers across 1.82 million enterprises β€” yet salary transparency remains remarkably low for a sector that spends billions on talent (IBISWorld, 2025). Producers set budgets, HR teams set bands, and financiers model P&A β€” all without a single authoritative reference that covers union floors, role-by-role benchmarks, post-strike increases, and the growing gap between executive and crew compensation. This guide consolidates all of it: current salary data for every key M&E role, union rate floors for SAG-AFTRA, DGA, WGA, and IATSE, geographic comparisons across the US, UK, and India, and what the 2023 strikes actually changed for 2026 pay structures.

Key Takeaways

  • US median for producers and directors is $83,480/year; executive producers average $152,000; top 18 Hollywood execs combined earned $746M in 2025
  • SAG-AFTRA day rates run $249–$1,246/day depending on total production budget; post-2023 strike increases added ~14.8% cumulatively through July 2026
  • IATSE union DP rate is $429.43/day; WGA high-budget original screenplay minimum is $170,655
  • M&E CEO pay surged 117% in 2025 vs. an 11% S&P 500 average β€” while sector shareholder return was negative 28.6%
  • India mid-level crew costs ~$4/hr vs. US median of $29/hr β€” a 7:1 labor arbitrage that is reshaping international co-production structures

Entertainment Industry Salary by Role: The Complete 2026 Breakdown

The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics places the median annual wage for producers and directors at $83,480 (May 2024) β€” but that number conceals a range from under $45,000 for entry-level associate producers to over $200,000 for senior executive producers at major studios (BLS, 2024). The table below maps current salary benchmarks across the key on-screen and below-the-line roles for US-based productions.

Role Entry-Level Mid-Level Senior / Top End Source
Producer / Director ~$45,000 $83,480 (median) $200,000+ BLS OOH, 2024
Executive Producer ~$114,000 $152,000 (median) $206,000+ FilmLocal, 2025
Film/Video Editor <$39,170 $70,980 (median) >$145,900 BLS OOH, 2024
Camera Operator / DP $39,222 $53,239–$68,810 $30,000+/week (blockbuster) BLS / FilmLocal, 2025
Casting Director ~$61,000 $92,000 (avg) $138,000+ FilmLocal, 2025
Screenwriter $50,000 $50K–$120K/script $250,000 (WGA one-step deal median) WGA / FilmLocal, 2025
Film/TV Crew (avg) $66,892 $83,002 $95,680 Hollylist, July 2026
Talent Agent ~$45,000 ~$58,000 $600,000+ (mid-career top) / $10M (board level) FilmLocal, 2025

The crew salary distribution from Hollylist’s analysis of 181 current postings (July 2026) shows a 43% premium from entry ($66,892) to senior ($95,680) β€” a narrower range than most industries, reflecting the union floor effect. Without union minimums, the distribution would likely be far wider. For HR teams setting non-union band structures, these benchmarks provide a useful anchor before applying market and location adjustments.

Diverse professionals sitting around a conference table with laptops in an entertainment industry executive meeting

Union Rate Floors: SAG-AFTRA, DGA, WGA & IATSE (2025–2026)

Union minimums are the production budget constraint that surprises most first-time producers β€” and the benchmark that experienced production executives use to validate their line items. The rates below reflect the most current effective agreements: SAG-AFTRA Basic Agreement rates effective July 1, 2025, DGA contract rates, WGA 2023 MBA minimums, and IATSE Hollywood Basic Agreement 2025-2026 rates (Wrapbook, 2025).

SAG-AFTRA Day Rates by Production Budget (July 2025–June 2026)

Budget Tier Total Budget Range Day Rate Weekly Rate
Ultra Low Budget <$300,000 $249/day N/A
Modified Low Budget $300,000–$700,000 $436/day β€”
Low Budget Agreement $700,000–$2,000,000 $810/day β€”
Basic Agreement >$2,000,000 $1,246/day $4,326/week

Health and pension contributions add 21% on top of all performer compensation under the Basic Agreement. A $1,246/day actor effectively costs the production $1,508/day when P&H is included. For a 20-day shoot with 5 principal actors, that adds $50,840 to the budget line before any above-the-line negotiated overage.

IATSE Key Crew Rates (Hollywood Basic Agreement 2025–2026)

  • Director of Photography (Local 600): $429.43/day / $5,163.01/week
  • Gaffer (Local 728): $63.01/hr / $4,353.30/week
  • Key Grip (Local 80): $63.01/hr / $3,793.59/week
  • Production Sound Mixer: $105.38/hr
  • Makeup Department Head: $69.91/hr
  • Pension contributions: $10.60–$15.52/hr additional on all IATSE positions

WGA Script Minimums (2023 MBA, Current Through 2026)

  • High-budget feature original screenplay + treatment: $170,655
  • Low-budget feature screenplay (<$5M total budget): $77,495
  • TV staff writer (week-to-week): $5,935/week minimum
  • Minimum writers per room (13+ episode series): 6 writers guaranteed β€” a staffing floor with direct budget implications

Stack of US dollar bills spread on a flat surface representing entertainment industry compensation benchmarks

Post-Strike Pay Increases: What the 2023 Strikes Actually Changed

The 2023 dual WGA and SAG-AFTRA strikes resulted in the largest union contract increases in Hollywood in a generation. The SAG-AFTRA 2023–2026 MBA β€” valued at “more than $1 billion” β€” front-loaded a 7% increase upon ratification (November 2023), followed by a further 4% increase in July 2024 (compounding to 11.28%), and a 3.5% increase in July 2025, bringing the cumulative increase to approximately 14.8% over three years (Romano Law, 2024; GreenSlate, 2025).

Date SAG-AFTRA WGA DGA
Nov 2023 (ratification) +7.0% +5.0% +5.0%
July 2024 +4.0% (11.28% cumulative) +4.0% +4.0%
July 2025 +3.5% (~14.8% total) +3.5% +3.5%

Beyond rate increases, the 2023 SAG-AFTRA deal introduced structural changes that materially affect production budgets. A $120 million streaming participation bonus pool ($40M/year) distributes to performers when a streaming title is watched by 20%+ of domestic subscribers within 90 days of release. AI protections were codified for the first time, with studios required to get consent and pay for digital likeness use. For production finance teams modeling multi-year slates, the 14.8% increase in SAG-AFTRA minimums through July 2026 is a direct input into any above-the-line and ensemble cast budget revision.

Streaming vs. Traditional Broadcast: How Compensation Differs

Streaming platforms restructured entertainment compensation in ways that are still not fully understood outside studio finance teams. The traditional broadcast model paid modest upfront fees but generated substantial residuals through syndication β€” a structure that sustained many writers and actors for years after initial production. Streaming replaced this with higher upfront fees but dramatically reduced residuals for most content, creating a different income profile that front-loads cash but eliminates the long-tail income stream.

SAG-AFTRA New Media rates (for streaming-exclusive productions) are structured in four budget tiers that differ significantly from the theatrical Basic Agreement. A production with a $700K–$1M budget pays $809.90/day per performer under New Media Category C β€” close to the theatrical Low Budget rate but with different residual obligations. At the ultra-low end (Category A, $50K–$300K), the rate is $249.20/day. Productions above $1M but below the theatrical Basic Agreement threshold ($2M) fall under Category D at rates between $436 and $810/day.

Key Structural Differences: Streaming vs. Broadcast

  • Residuals: Traditional broadcast syndication residuals can generate income for 10–20+ years; streaming residuals are significantly compressed, typically paid on a fixed domestic/international schedule without long-tail repeats
  • Upfront vs. backend: Streaming shows typically pay above-scale “favored nation” upfront deals to attract talent; backend participation is rare unless negotiated by major stars
  • Transparency: Viewership data β€” the basis for participation bonuses β€” is not publicly disclosed by streaming platforms, making it nearly impossible for talent to audit their bonus eligibility without the 2023 contract’s new viewership disclosure requirements
  • Writer’s room model: Streaming mini-rooms (3–4 writers writing all episodes before production begins) vs. traditional rooms that staff throughout the season. WGA’s 2023 contract established minimum staffing floors of 6 writers for 13+ episode series specifically to address streaming compression

Geography: US vs UK vs India Entertainment Salary Comparison

Geography creates the largest salary spread in entertainment. An IATSE DP in Los Angeles earns $429.43/day ($5,163.01/week) under union contract. The same role in India at mid-level costs approximately $25–$40/day in crew fee β€” a 10:1+ differential that drives both offshore post-production and international co-production structuring decisions. UK rates sit between the two: the average UK film/TV producer earns Β£44,467/year (~$57K USD) with entry-level at Β£35,319 and editors averaging Β£30,520 (PayScale UK, 2025).

Role United States United Kingdom India
Producer (mid) $83,480/yr Β£44,467/yr (~$57K) β‚Ή8–25 lakh/yr (~$10K–$30K)
Film Editor (mid) $70,980/yr Β£30,520/yr (~$39K) β‚Ή5–15 lakh/yr (~$6K–$18K)
DP / Cinematographer $429/day (IATSE union) Β£200–£400/day β‚Ή5,000–₹15,000/day (~$60–$180)
VFX Artist (mid) $29/hr ($60,414/yr) Β£17/hr (Β£35,949/yr) ~$2.75–$4/hr
Top Actor (annual) $88M+ (Dwayne Johnson, 2024) Varies widely by project β‚Ή150–₹300 crore/film (SRK / Allu Arjun)

For UK-based productions, the 2024 enhanced Visual Effects Tax Relief (up to 34%) partially offsets the UK’s rate premium vs. India and Eastern Europe. For US productions seeking co-production structures, the UK offers a combination of high technical talent quality, English-language workflow, and significant tax offset β€” making it the most cost-effective high-quality Western market. Canada’s combined federal and provincial tax credits (up to 40–50%) make it competitive with the UK for VFX-heavy productions shooting on location.

Film crew members holding a clapboard on location during production, representing global entertainment industry jobs

Executive Compensation: The CEO-to-Crew Pay Gap in 2025

The top 18 Hollywood executives combined earned $746 million in 2025 β€” a 51% surge from $615M in 2024 β€” according to a May 2026 Wrap analysis of public proxy filings (The Wrap, May 2026). M&E CEO pay surged 117% in 2025 vs. an S&P 500 median increase of 11%, while the sector’s median total shareholder return was negative 28.6% in the same period, per ISS-Corporate analysis (Deadline, April 2026). This disconnect has become a governance flashpoint, with activist shareholders and union leaders citing the gap as evidence of misaligned incentives at major studios.

Executive Company 2025 Total Comp CEO-to-Median Worker Ratio
David Zaslav Warner Bros. Discovery $165M 1,378:1
Bob Iger Disney ~$45.6M 805:1
Ted Sarandos Netflix $53.9M β€”
Greg Peters Netflix $53.2M β€”

Disney’s median employee earns $56,932 annually β€” a ratio of 805:1 to Bob Iger’s 2025 total compensation. Zaslav’s 1,378:1 ratio is among the highest in the S&P 500. For context, the S&P 500 average CEO-to-worker ratio is approximately 280:1. More than 17,000 jobs were eliminated across film, TV, and streaming in 2025 as studios cut costs β€” a period during which the top 18 executives collectively saw compensation surge 51%. The governance implications of this gap are now a standing agenda item at most M&E board compensation committee meetings.

How Vitrina Helps M&E Companies Benchmark Talent and Find Partners

Salary intelligence is only one dimension of talent and production planning. Understanding who is active β€” which production companies are hiring, which studios have open development slates, which international co-production partners are structured for the budget tier you’re working in β€” requires a level of industry intelligence that goes well beyond salary tables. Vitrina tracks 400,000+ M&E companies worldwide with verified data on company structure, recent project credits, geographic presence, and active deal activity.

VIQI, Vitrina’s AI intelligence platform, lets production executives and HR teams query that dataset directly: “Which mid-sized production companies in the UK have active credits in scripted drama and are structured for US co-production?” or “Find development executives at streaming platforms who’ve greenlit projects in the $3M–$8M budget range in the last 18 months.” The salary data in this guide tells you what to budget; VIQI tells you who to work with.

For companies building international production or distribution partnerships β€” particularly in lower-cost markets like India, Eastern Europe, and Southeast Asia β€” Vitrina Concierge delivers verified introductions to partner companies with mandate confirmation, recent credit verification, and rate benchmarking against current market. This compresses the time from partner identification to signed co-production agreement from months to weeks.

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Conclusion

Entertainment industry salaries are not a single number β€” they’re a layered structure of union floors, market rates, geographic differentials, and post-strike adjustments that require active monitoring to budget accurately. The 14.8% cumulative increase in SAG-AFTRA minimums through July 2026 is a direct input to every studio and independent production budget. The 117% surge in M&E CEO pay against a negative 28.6% shareholder return in 2025 is a governance signal that boards and institutional investors are now actively tracking. And the 7:1+ labor cost differential between US and India crew rates is reshaping how international co-productions are structured.

For production finance teams, the practical implication is that 2026 budgets cannot be benchmarked against 2022 data. Union minimums are materially higher, AI and offshore options are restructuring below-the-line costs, and streaming compensation models continue to diverge from traditional broadcast structures. The executives who budget most accurately are those who work from current, verified rate data β€” not industry folklore.

This guide provides the public-domain floor. The company-specific intelligence β€” who’s hiring, at what rates, under what deal structures β€” is where VIQI adds the layer that no salary guide can provide.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the average salary in the entertainment industry?

The U.S. median for producers and directors is $83,480/year (BLS, May 2024). Film/TV crew averages $83,002 at mid-level and $95,680 at senior level (Hollylist, July 2026). Entry-level crew starts at $66,892. These figures reflect union-floor effects; non-union rates can be significantly lower, particularly outside major markets like LA and New York.

How much do SAG-AFTRA actors earn per day?

SAG-AFTRA day rates (July 2025–June 2026) range from $249/day for ultra-low budget productions (under $300K total) to $1,246/day under the Basic Agreement for productions over $2M. Weekly rates under the Basic Agreement are $4,326. Health and pension contributions add 21% to all performer compensation, raising the effective daily cost to approximately $1,508/day at Basic Agreement tier.

How much did the 2023 strikes increase entertainment salaries?

The 2023 SAG-AFTRA strike resulted in cumulative minimum rate increases of approximately 14.8% through July 2026: 7% upon ratification, 4% in July 2024, and 3.5% in July 2025. WGA rates increased 5%+4%+3.5% over the same period. A $120M streaming participation bonus pool ($40M/year) was also created, distributing to performers on qualifying high-viewership titles.

Is entertainment a high-paying industry?

The distribution is extremely bimodal. The top of the industry pays extraordinary sums β€” the top 18 Hollywood executives earned $746M combined in 2025, and A-list talent can earn $88M+ annually. However, the median film/TV crew rate of $83,002/year is modest relative to tech or finance. Union minimum floors compress the lower end but don’t eliminate it; non-union and emerging market rates can be well below median.

How do entertainment salaries compare between the US, UK, and India?

The US has the highest salary floor due to union structures. UK rates are roughly 30–40% below US equivalents (UK average film/TV producer: Β£44,467 vs. US $83,480). India has a far lower base crew rate (VFX artists ~$2.75–$4/hr vs. US median $29/hr) but a small tier of top directors and actors who earn among the highest per-project fees globally β€” Bollywood A-list actors command β‚Ή150–₹300 crore per film.

About the Author

Vitrina Research Team

The Vitrina Research Team produces intelligence-led analysis on media and entertainment industry structure, deal activity, and market trends. Our research draws on VIQI’s proprietary dataset of 400,000+ M&E companies worldwide.