Private investment gives a film access to cash before other income arrives. It is often used when part of the budget is already in place, but the production still needs real money to move into prep or shoot.
An investor puts money into the film now and is repaid later from revenues. This is not a donation or sponsorship. It is a financial investment, and investors are usually placed first in the recoupment structure, meaning they are among the first to be paid back, often with an agreed premium or percentage on top.
What you need to know
- Private investment means cash invested in exchange for a share of future returns.
- It is often used to close a finance gap or cashflow production.
- Investors are usually among the first to be repaid in the recoupment structure.
- That repayment often includes an agreed premium or percentage on top of the original investment.
- A clear finance plan is what makes the opportunity investable.
Who is it for?
- Films with part of the budget already in place
- Projects waiting on incoming or deferred financing
- Productions that need upfront cash to move into prep or shoot
- Films with a package strong enough to support an investment case
Why does it matter?
Private investment is often the money that allows a film to move forward at the point production actually needs cash. It can sit alongside incentives, pre-sales, or other funds that may arrive later.
When is it worth pursuing?
- When a defined amount is needed to close the budget
- When other financing is in place but not yet available in cash
- When the film has enough structure and planning to justify investment
- When there is a realistic path to revenue or recoupment
Final takeaway
Private investment works best when a film already has structure, a defined gap, and a serious plan for how investor money is protected, repaid, and placed within the wider finance picture.