Gear on a budget: what actually matters
Where money changes outcomes in gear — and the line items that are pure vanity.
Spend on the two or three things that touch every session; go cheap or secondhand on everything else.
What happened
Price-performance in gear has quietly improved: entry-level options that were compromised a few years ago are now genuinely serviceable, and the secondhand market for indie filmmakers and short-film creators has matured.
Why it matters
The budget question is really a sequencing question. The first hundred dollars matters enormously; the fifth hundred barely registers. Knowing which purchases carry the outcome lets you stop guessing.
How to think about it
List every component of your gear setup, then rank by hours of contact per week. Fund the top of the list. Everything below the fold can wait, be borrowed, or be bought used.
- Entry-level quality is real now
- Secondhand markets are deep
- Communities publish honest budget builds
- Cheap tiers still hide a few traps
- Shipping and extras erode budgets
- Premium marketing targets beginners
The most expensive mistake in gear is buying the same category twice — once cheap and once right. For contact-heavy items, mid-tier first is often the cheaper path.
FAQ
What deserves the biggest share of budget?
Whatever you physically interact with the most, every single session.
Is secondhand safe?
Generally yes, if you buy from active community members and test before paying when possible.
When is premium worth it?
When you can name the specific limitation it removes. Otherwise it's decoration.