Professional photographers sink serious money into their gear—sometimes $30,000, $50,000, or more in cameras, lenses, lighting rigs, and accessories. One break-in at your car. One stumble with your camera bag. One flood in your storage unit. Any of these wipes out your business overnight if you're not protected. Figuring out what you'll actually pay for insurance helps you plan your budget and pick coverage that makes sense for how you work.
You're looking at somewhere between $150 and $900 per year for equipment insurance if you're a working photographer. Why such a huge range? It depends on how much gear you own and what kind of protection you want.
Got a starter kit worth $5,000 to $10,000? Budget around $200 to $350 yearly. If your collection sits in the $15,000 to $30,000 range, you'll probably pay $400 to $650. Photographers hauling around $50,000-plus in equipment often see bills from $800 to $1,200 annually, though certain specialty insurers handle expensive collections more efficiently than others.
Paying monthly instead of all at once? You'll spend 10-15% more over the year. That $360 annual policy becomes $35/month, which adds up to $420 when December rolls around.
Your deductible choice makes a massive difference in what you pay. Drop from a $250 deductible to $500 and you'll cut your annual bill by 15-25%. Jump to $1,000 and you'll save even more—but you're on the hook for bigger out-of-pocket costs when something goe...