How Much Does Drone Photography Cost in Minnesota?

Most drone photography in Minnesota costs between $150 and $450 per shoot, with the U.S. median residential real estate package landing around $225. In the St. Cloud area, local pilots typically charge $100–$200 per hour, while Twin Cities operators run $250–$500 — and our own launch pricing starts at $129 for an aerial photo package.

That's the short answer. The longer answer depends on what you're shooting, where the property is, and whether you need photos, video, or both. This guide breaks down real 2026 numbers so you can budget accurately — whether you're a realtor pricing out a listing, a builder documenting a project, or a homeowner selling by owner.

Typical Drone Photography Rates in Minnesota (2026)

Here's what pricing actually looks like across the state right now:

  • U.S. median residential package: around $225 for aerial photos of a typical home listing
  • Standalone drone shoots: most fall in the $250–$450 range depending on scope and deliverables
  • St. Cloud–area pilots: roughly $100–$200 per hour for general aerial work
  • Twin Cities metro pilots: typically $250–$500, before any travel fees to Central MN
  • Central MN Drone launch pricing: $129 for an aerial photo package, $279 for photos + 4K video

Why the wide range? A drone shoot isn't just flight time. You're paying for a licensed FAA Part 107 pilot, professional equipment, airspace authorization where required, liability insurance, and — the part most people forget — editing. A pilot who color-grades stills and cuts video in-house delivers a very different product than someone handing you raw files off a memory card.

What Drives the Price Up or Down

1. Photos vs. video vs. both

Still photos are the fastest to capture and edit, which is why photo-only packages sit at the bottom of the range. Adding edited 4K video — with smooth reveal shots, orbits, and color grading — usually adds $100–$200 to a residential package because post-production takes real hours. Our photo + video package at $279 reflects exactly that gap over the $129 photo package.

2. Property size and type

A quarter-acre lot in Sartell takes one battery and a tight flight plan. A 160-acre farm near Long Prairie, a lakeshore property with dock and shoreline coverage, or a multi-building commercial site each take more flight time, more batteries, and more editing. Acreage, hobby farms, and land listings usually price 25–75% above a standard residential shoot.

3. Location and airspace

Much of Central Minnesota is uncontrolled airspace where a certified pilot can fly without prior authorization. Near St. Cloud Regional Airport and a few other fields, flights need LAANC airspace authorization — a compliant local pilot handles that as part of the job, but it's one more reason experienced operators charge professional rates. If you're in the metro, controlled airspace is far more common, which is part of why St. Cloud–area drone photography tends to cost less than Minneapolis shoots.

4. Travel

Hiring a Twin Cities pilot to drive to Alexandria or Brainerd usually means a travel fee on top of the shoot — sometimes $50–$150. A local Central Minnesota pilot skips that entirely, which is often the single biggest saving for rural and lake-country properties.

5. Turnaround and licensing

Rush delivery for a listing going live tomorrow, extended commercial-use licensing, and extras like twilight shoots or vertical social-media cuts all add cost. Standard delivery on edited photos is typically 24–48 hours; video runs a few business days.

What a Fair Real Estate Package Looks Like

For a typical Central Minnesota home listing, a fair aerial package should include 10–20 edited high-resolution stills shot from multiple altitudes and angles, front/rear elevations, and wide context shots showing the lot and neighborhood. For photo + video packages, expect a 60–90 second edited highlight video on top of the stills. Everything should come with a commercial-use license so you can run the content in MLS, ads, and social without restrictions.

If a quote is dramatically below market, ask two questions: is the pilot FAA Part 107 certified, and are the images actually edited? Uncertified flights put realtors and brokers at legal risk, and unedited aerials rarely look better than a good ground photo. Our FAA rules guide explains what compliance involves and why it matters for anyone paying for aerial content.

Where Our Pricing Fits

Central MN Drone is running launch pricing right now: $129 for an aerial photo package (normally $179) and $279 for photos + 4K video (normally $349). That's below the U.S. median for a residential package, with no travel fees anywhere in our Central Minnesota service area — St. Cloud, Sartell, Sauk Rapids, Alexandria, Brainerd, Monticello, and everywhere in between. Construction progress plans, roof inspections, land, and commercial work are quoted by scope, and every project gets a free quote within one business day.

If you're comparing options for a listing, our real estate drone photography page covers exactly what's included, and the full pricing page lays out every package. Have an odd-shaped project — a 500-acre parcel, a weekly construction flyover, an event? Send us the details and we'll price it straight.

Cost Questions, Answered

How much does drone photography cost for a real estate listing in Minnesota?
Across the U.S., the median residential drone package runs around $225, and most standalone drone shoots land between $250 and $450. In the St. Cloud area, rates are typically lower than the Twin Cities — Central MN Drone's launch pricing starts at $129 for an aerial photo package and $279 for photos plus 4K video.
Do drone photographers charge by the hour or by the project?
Both models exist. Hourly rates in the St. Cloud area typically run $100–$200 per hour, while Twin Cities pilots often charge $250–$500. For real estate and small commercial work, flat per-project packages are more common because clients know the total cost up front.
Why is drone photography cheaper in Central Minnesota than the Twin Cities?
Lower overhead, shorter travel distances for local pilots, and simpler airspace in many Central Minnesota towns all reduce costs. Hiring a metro pilot to drive out to Stearns, Benton, or Todd County usually adds travel fees a local pilot doesn't charge.

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