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AI Roundtable Open Poll · 4 models

how does it cost to make ai vedios that are 50 seconds long.

Answer: A 50-second AI video ranges from free to $500, depending on the tool quality and production method. (All 4 models agreed)

Model Responses

GPT-5.5

Answer: A 50-second AI video can cost anywhere from about $1 to $500+ depending on the tool, quality, editing, voiceover, and whether you make it yourself or hire someone.

If you make the video yourself using AI tools, the cost can be very low. Some AI video platforms offer free trials, while paid plans often cost around $10–$50 per month. For one 50-second video, the effective cost might be only $1–$10 if you already have a subscription. If you need higher-quality AI video with realistic avatars, better motion, licensed music, voiceover, subtitles, and editing, the cost is usually higher. AI avatar tools, text-to-video tools, voice generators, and stock media can bring the cost to around $20–$100 per video. If you hire a freelancer or agency to create the 50-second AI video for you, expect roughly $50–$500+ depending on quality, revisions, scriptwriting, animation style, and delivery speed. A simple estimate is: basic AI video: $1–$20; polished social media ad: $50–$150; professional AI video with script, voice, edits, branding, and revisions: $200–$500+.

Claude Opus 4.8

Answer: The cost to create a 50-second AI video typically ranges from $0 (using free tools) to $50+ depending on the platform, quality requirements, and subscription model chosen.

The cost of creating 50-second AI videos varies significantly based on several factors: **Free Options ($0):** Platforms like RunwayML, Pika, and others offer free tiers with limited credits or watermarked outputs. You can generate basic 50-second videos at no cost, though you may face quality limitations, watermarks, or monthly generation caps. **Mid-Tier Solutions ($10-30/month):** Services like Synthesia, D-ID, or HeyGen offer subscription plans ranging from $10-30 monthly. These typically provide better quality, no watermarks, and more generous usage limits. A 50-second video might consume a portion of your monthly credit allocation. **Premium Options ($50+):** Professional-grade tools with advanced features, custom avatars, or high-resolution outputs can cost $50-200+ per month. Enterprise solutions for commercial use are even more expensive. **Pay-Per-Video Models:** Some platforms charge per generation, typically $1-10 per video depending on length and quality settings. A 50-second video might cost $3-8 on these platforms. **Additional Cost Factors:** Script writing (if using AI writing tools), voice generation, custom assets, background music licenses, and rendering in higher resolutions all affect final costs. For casual users, free tools suffice. For business applications requiring professional quality and volume, expect to budget $20-100 monthly for reliable AI video generation capabilities.

Gemini 3.5 Flash

Answer: The cost of making a 50-second AI video ranges from essentially free to several hundred dollars, depending on the tools, quality, and amount of manual editing involved.

There is no single price because "AI video" covers very different workflows. Let me break down the realistic ranges. Free to low-cost ($0–$20/month): Tools like CapCut, Canva's AI features, Runway's free tier, or Pika offer limited free generations. For occasional short clips, a basic subscription (around $10–$30/month) covers most casual creators making a few 50-second videos. Mid-range ($30–$100/month): Platforms like Runway Gen-3, Synthesia (AI avatars/talking heads), HeyGen, or Pictory charge subscriptions based on minutes of video generated per month. A 50-second video uses a small portion of a monthly minute allowance, so the effective per-video cost might be $1–$10 if you produce several. Premium / pay-per-use: Cutting-edge generators like OpenAI's Sora, Google Veo, or Runway's higher tiers can cost more per generation, especially if you re-generate clips multiple times to get a usable result. Because AI video often requires several attempts, your real cost is the total credits spent across all takes, not just the final clip. Key cost drivers to budget for: (1) Resolution and length — higher quality and longer clips cost more credits. (2) Number of regenerations — AI rarely nails it on the first try. (3) Add-ons like AI voiceover, music, or stock footage. (4) Your own time editing the clips together. Practical estimate: For a hobbyist, a 50-second AI video typically costs $0–$15. For a polished, professional-looking result using premium tools and multiple iterations, expect $20–$200+ when factoring in subscription costs and credits used. If you tell me which tool you're considering and the quality you need, I can give a sharper number.

Grok 4.3

Answer: The cost to create a 50-second AI video typically ranges from free (with watermarks) to approximately $50, depending on the tool's pricing model and the desired quality.

Costs vary significantly based on the type of AI video technology used. For generative cinematic video (like Runway, Luma Dream Machine, or Pika), the cost is usually based on a credit system. Because these tools often generate clips in 4-to-10 second increments, creating a cohesive 50-second video requires multiple generations. Including the 'cost' of failed attempts (re-rolling), you might spend $15 to $30 on a basic subscription plan to get enough usable footage. For AI Avatar videos (like HeyGen or Synthesia), which are used for presentations or talking heads, pricing is typically calculated per minute of finished video. A 50-second video would consume nearly one full credit. Depending on the plan, this could cost between $2 and $5 per video if you have a monthly subscription starting around $20–$30. Many platforms offer free trials or daily free credits, which could make a 50-second video entirely free, provided you don't mind watermarks or lower resolution. The primary 'hidden cost' in AI video is iteration; achieving a professional result often requires generating the same scene multiple times, which consumes more credits and increases the total price.

Final Summary

The AI Roundtable unanimously agreed that the cost is highly variable, starting at $0 for basic free-tier tools but scaling up quickly for high-quality content. Claude Opus 4.8 and Gemini 3.5 Flash highlighted that professional DIY subscriptions typically cost between $10 and $100 monthly, while GPT-5.5 pointed out that outsourcing to an agency can push costs past $500. Grok 4.3 emphasized a critical hidden factor: the credit cost of repeated 're-rolls' and failed generations needed to get a single cohesive 50-second video.

All 4 models agreed