Film Price TrendsFilm Price Trends

    Today’s average film prices.

    Find out individual store prices, reviews, and additional info when you click one of the 0 film names below. You can also sort this list by name and price:

    Stores surveyed: This data was last updated on January 1, 1970. Film prices can vary by region.

    Film price trends since 2018.

    Graph settings
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    • AVERAGE (Global)
    • AVERAGE (Black & White)
    • AVERAGE (Colour)

    What is this?

    Film Price Trends is a research tool for anyone interested in understanding trends in the costs and availability of popular film stocks. This app graphs six-plus years of data about film prices.

    Use it to find films that cost less this year than they did previously. Compare average seller offers to get the best deal on your stock. Discover reliable emulsions impervious to inflation.

    Film Price Trends provides the most complete overview of the analogue photographic market, with data going back to 2018. It’s the best way to observe more than half a billion rolls of film (~$8 billion)¹ changing hands annually.

    ¹ — As of February 2025.

    How to use this app.

    The graph shows the AVERAGE film price for all the film stocks and stores that sell it in your currency across several years.

    You can drag your mouse or your finger over various points on the graph to see the exact average film price at a particular date. The tooltip that appears will also show you the cheapest and most expensive film at that time.

    Film Price Trends graphs comparing prices for four popular colour film stocks between 2019 and 2025.

    Switch to Black & White or Colour film AVERAGE graph to see how each of the film categories behaves. For example, August 2024 shows a notable decrease in the AVERAGE Colour film prices and a slight increase in AVERAGE Black & White film prices.

    You can hide the AVERAGE graph by toggling the active AVERAGE switch.

    You can graph up to 10 films at once. Drag your mouse or your finger over various points on the individual film graphs to compare store prices for that date. You can also observe grouped averages, such as one for colour film vs black-and-white film.

    Note: If you switch your currency, the graphs will change slightly. This is because the true exchange rates vary by date. For example, if your currency is stronger in a particular year, your relative film price will be lower.

    Subscribe to the FREE Film Price Reports newsletter.

    Film Price Reports is a twice-yearly email newsletter where I share the latest data on film prices and a few insights based on it (i.e., which films got cheaper, which are more expensive, and a general feel for the market).

    GOLD subscribers get additional insights, but the newsletter is free. Subscribe here.

    About the data.

    The individual prices were collected in various currencies, which were all converted to Canadian dollars using the exchange rate at the time they were surveyed. All values are then converted to your local currency using a recent exchange rate.

    All film prices are for single rolls of 35mm film with 36 exposures. Bulk discounts are ignored, but sale prices are used instead of regular prices. Prices for films that are listed but out of stock are also recorded. Kodak Portra films are sold almost exclusively in packs of five (this started happening around 2022); I use that price divided by five.

    Film brands were primarily chosen based on popularity and availability.

    Stores surveyed were chosen based on inventory, general decency when it comes to pricing, and geographic location (in an attempt to pick a representative sample).

    The list of stores and film brands has changed slightly over the years.

    How many people shoot film, how many rolls per year, and how much do we collectively spend on it?

    Neither Kodak nor Fujifilm reports granular data about the number of rolls of film sold each year. Even if they did, we still wouldn’t know about other producers like ORWO, expired film sales, and other formats.

    But it’s still helpful to get a general idea, even if it’s not precise. So I dug through old news articles to get estimates shared by execs and used that data to build a conservative estimate. Note: these calculations do not include film made and sold for movies/video production.

    Here’s what I found:

    Feedback.

    If you have any questions, comments, feature requests, or bug reports, please leave a comment here.