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Film Product Placement

Product placement is when real brands appear in your film on screen. It can bring funding, locations, or products into your production, from local businesses to larger brands depending on your budget.

Product placement works when the film already needs real-world products, spaces, or services and those elements can be supplied by actual businesses instead of sourced entirely by the production. That can reduce costs, support the budget, and make the world on screen feel more grounded.

On independent films, this usually means practical support from local businesses rather than major cash deals. A real café, salon, clothing label, vehicle provider, or bar may be a more realistic fit than a global brand, especially when those things already belong in the script.

The key is not to force brands into the film. The strongest placements come from things the scene already needs.


What you need to know

  • Product placement works best when the product or location already belongs naturally in the scene.
  • On smaller films, support often comes as locations, products, or services rather than large cash payments.
  • Local businesses are often the most practical starting point.
  • The stronger the natural fit, the easier the offer becomes.
  • Product placement can support the budget directly or reduce production costs in useful ways.

How does it work?

You begin by looking at the script and identifying what is already visible in the film: products characters use, places they go, vehicles they drive, and brands that could realistically appear in the world of the story.

Those moments can then be matched with real businesses that may want the visibility, the association, or the connection to the project. In some cases they provide cash. In others they provide the product, location, or service itself.


Where does it apply best?

  • Films shot in real locations such as cafés, streets, shops, or homes
  • Scenes involving everyday products like drinks, clothing, vehicles, or technology
  • Projects where the environment is grounded in real life

What needs to be in place?

  • A script with clear on-screen use of products or locations
  • A breakdown of scenes where placement could happen
  • A simple proposal showing visibility and usage
  • A clear explanation of what the business receives
  • Basic materials to present the project

Examples of product placement

  • Local restaurant used as a filming location with branding visible on screen
  • Hairdresser or barber shop featured in a scene
  • Local clothing brand providing wardrobe
  • Café or bar supplying drinks and space for filming
  • Local business vehicles used in scenes
  • Gym, studio, or workspace used as a real location

At higher budget levels, this can extend to national or global brands. On most independent films, it starts with businesses that can provide what the production already needs.


Product placement works best when it grows directly out of the script and the production plan. The more naturally a business fits the world of the film, the easier it becomes to turn that fit into useful support.

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