Wedding Videographers in Boston, MA
The Boston wedding market spans a wide range of venue types — historic downtown venues, waterfront and Seaport District spaces, North Shore estates, Cape Cod and South Shore venues, and academic and museum spaces in Cambridge. Couples planning a wedding in this metro work with videographers whose offerings, scheduling, and pricing fit the broader plan they're building. Boston weather varies dramatically by season — humid summers, classic fall foliage, snowy winters — and the region's historic architecture supports indoor weddings beautifully across all four seasons, and that influences both ceremony timing and how a videographer integrates with the rest of the wedding day. October is the most-requested boston wedding month for fall foliage and crisp weather; september and june also fill quickly across the metro, which is why earlier engagement with vendors at the most popular categories tends to produce better availability and selection.
WeddingVenture's Boston videographers directory currently lists approximately 9 active videographer options for the area. Couples typically request itemized proposals from three to five comparable vendors before committing, comparing the offering, scheduling fit, and pricing across each. The right videographer for any wedding is the one whose work, working style, and pricing align with the couple's overall plan. The FAQ section below covers the most common questions couples in Boston ask when shopping for wedding videography.
26 Results
Orange Films
Orange Films is a boutique, award-winning event cinematography studio known for its creative film work, production values and unique cinematic style. Orange Films blends an artistic style and unobtrusive camera work with cinematographic, storytelling approach to create vibrant, dynamic and personal movie experience. The studio is capturing a limited number of events in order to...
Chris Fig Productions
Chris Fig Productions can customize any wedding video package to match your taste. We believe that the bride and groom are the stars of the day and we are there to record in a candid and respectful manner.
I Love Philly Weddings
ILovePhillyWeddings has been an established videography firm and has been shooting wedding videos in the Philadelphia market since 2009. Run entirely by a local videographer your videos are both shot and edited by local talent.
Mitl Studio Wedding Films
First and foremost we are blessed to do the best job in the world. We get to work with awesome people in the happiest day of their lives. We strongly believe that wedding video should be captured by someone who truly loves what they do. To be the ones to film such a special day in your life is something we don't take lightly.
15 Minutes Of Frame
All our players aim to shoot, edit, and produce films that truly reflect the events of your special day, with care, attention to detail, and a warm, yet unobtrusive presence.
All Occasion Video Productions
All Occasion Video Productions sets the quality and value standard for wedding videography in the Philadelphia area, with over 1,500 weddings lovingly and professionally captured for couples who want to remember and share their special day forever.
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Top-Rated Wedding Videographers
Updated for 2026
Frequently Asked Questions
- How much does a wedding videographer cost in Boston?
- Wedding videography pricing in Boston varies by the videographer's cinematic style, coverage hours, and deliverables (highlight reel, ceremony edit, full-feature film, raw footage). Single-shooter coverage is less expensive than multi-camera teams. The Boston market spans from couples who view video as essential to couples treating it as a budget-permitting add-on; pricing scales accordingly. Most videographers publish package tiers with itemized add-ons.
- How far in advance should we book a wedding videographer in Boston?
- Most Boston couples book a wedding videographer six to nine months ahead of the wedding date — slightly later than the photographer booking but well ahead of peak-season Saturdays filling. Cinematic-style videographers in particular have limited weekend capacity; the most-requested ones fill earliest. Booking the photographer and videographer in the same window helps ensure the two will coordinate cleanly on the wedding day.
- What's the difference between videography styles in the Boston market?
- Boston videographers generally fall into stylistic camps: documentary-observational (capturing the day as it happens, minimal direction), cinematic-narrative (treating the wedding as a story arc with structured editing), highlight-reel-driven (3-5 minute social-share-friendly cuts), or classic feature-length (a 30-60 minute film of the full day). Each style produces a meaningfully different deliverable. Review portfolios across formats before deciding which fit matches the couple's vision.
- What's included in a typical Boston wedding videography package?
- Standard Boston videography packages typically include a defined number of coverage hours, a highlight reel (3-5 minutes), a longer ceremony edit, and digital delivery within 8-16 weeks of the wedding. Some packages add raw footage, a full-feature film, social-media-ready short cuts, or drone coverage as upgrades. Audio capture (wireless mics on the officiant and groom for the ceremony, feed from the DJ's mixer) is universally important for usable wedding video.
- How does a Boston videographer coordinate with the photographer?
- The photographer and videographer compete for physical space at the same key moments (ceremony aisle, first-look, family portraits), and tight coordination is essential to non-disruptive coverage. Couples in the Boston market often look for videographers with documented experience working alongside their chosen photographer, or videographers whose past work demonstrates comfortable side-by-side execution. The two vendors typically connect a few weeks before the wedding to align on timeline and choreography.
- How do I choose between Boston wedding videographers?
- Compare Boston videographers on cinematic style alignment with your vision, coverage approach (single shooter vs. multi-camera, which day-parts they cover), audio setup quality, deliverables and edit turnaround, and total all-in cost. Watch full wedding films (not just highlight reels) to see how the videographer paces a real wedding day. Confirm contract terms on raw footage rights, re-edit policy, and what happens if the lead videographer needs a backup.