At SB Pictures, we specialize in helping filmmakers navigate the complex landscape of international production incentives. From tax credits and cash rebates to government-backed grants and tax shelters, our strategic consulting ensures you maximize available funding at every stage of development. Whether you're producing a feature film, series, documentary, or commercial, we guide you through location-based incentives that can dramatically reduce costs while elevating your production value.
“Soft money” refers to government-backed financial support provided to film and television productions. These include:
Tax Credits and Shelters
Cash Rebates
Development and Production Grants
Regional Film Funds
Co-Production Incentives
These programs are offered by countries seeking to promote their cultural assets, attract international productions, and stimulate local economic activity through the film and media industry.
Film and TV productions can tap into a variety of global incentives—including tax credits, cash rebates, government grants, and co-production funding—to significantly offset costs and boost production value. These tools are designed to attract international projects while supporting local talent, resources, and cultural storytelling.
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Tax credits reduce the tax liability of a production company based on qualified local expenditures. Tax shelters allow companies to attract private investment by offering tax relief to local investors. These tools are widely used to attract foreign productions.
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Tax credits reduce the tax liability of a production company based on qualified local expenditures. Tax shelters allow companies to attract private investment by offering tax relief to local investors. These tools are widely used to attract foreign productions.
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Many national and regional agencies offer grants to support storytelling that aligns with cultural or economic goals. These funds may be targeted at development, production, or post-production phases.
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Countries with official co-production treaties offer additional funding pathways that allow producers to qualify as a local production, unlocking greater financial benefits and distribution access.
Governments offer these programs to:
Strengthen and grow their local film and television industries.
Attract international investment and job creation.
Promote national culture, locations, and talent on the world stage.
Increase spending on local vendors, crew, and services.
In return, productions are required to shoot on location and utilize local resources, creating a mutually beneficial ecosystem.
We help clients:
Identify which countries and regions offer the best incentives for their project type.
Design financing strategies that incorporate multiple sources of “soft money.”
Ensure compliance with local requirements to secure maximum reimbursement.
Coordinate co-productions that unlock multi-country benefits.
Whether you're a domestic or international producer, SB Pictures helps you plan smart, spend wisely, and tap into global funding opportunities that increase your production's scale and profitability.
Across the United States and around the world, hundreds of regions offer powerful production incentives—from tax credits and rebates to grants and co-production funding.
These programs are designed to attract filmmakers, stimulate local economies, and showcase unique cultural and natural assets.
At SB Pictures, we guide clients in selecting the most strategic locations for their projects, helping them access the optimal blend of creative opportunity and financial advantage.
Most of the U.S. film subsidies and soft money sources are found at the state level. At the federal level, filmmakers and investors may qualify for tax breaks under the enactment of Section 181 of the Internal Revenue Code, which provides a tax incentive for domestic film and television productions. Most states provide some form of soft money film financing to production companies. Soft money are state subsidies in the form of tax credits, cash rebates and grants. They provide partial financing for productions, to cover pre-production, production and post-production expenses, including the costs of goods and services and wages or salaries paid to each resident and non-resident cast and crew.
State subsidies are designed to encourage production companies to produce film and television projects in the state, help create and maintain film industry jobs, promote tourism and the state’s image, and have a positive impact on the state’s economy. In fact, film incentives have served as engines of the film industry’s phenomenal growth in many of the states in the U.S..
25% rebate on qualified production expenditures, plus 35% rebate for resident labor. Minimum spend: $500,000.
20% rebate on qualified production expenditures (including salaries and wages paid to resident and nonresident above-the-line and below-the-line employees), plus 10% for below-the-line resident labor. Below-the-line does not include directors and producers but for purposes of the additional 10%, resident actors and writers are defined as below-the-line. Minimum spend: $50,000 for pre-production and production within a six-month period, $200,000 for post-production within a six-month period.
20% non-transferable tax credits (25% transferable tax credits for indie films), plus 5% for specified expenditures. Minimum spend: $1 million.
20% cash rebate. Residency requirement: Productions must hire a workforce comprised of at least 50% resident cast and crew. Minimum spend: $100,000 for Colorado-based production company, $1 million for out-of-state production company.
10% tax credit (for $100,000-$500,000 in-state expenses), 15% ($500,000-$1 million spend), 30% (over $1 million spend). At least 50% of principal photography or 50% of post-production expenses must occur in-state. Minimum spend: $100,000.
35% cash rebate on qualified production expenses subject to in-state taxation; 21% rebate on untaxed production expenses on vendors, cast, or crew; 30% rebate on below-the-line resident labor subject to in-state taxation; 10% rebate on untaxed expenses for below-the-line resident labor; 50% rebate on production company’s qualified job training expenditures; plus 25% rebate on production company’s base infrastructure investment. Minimum spend: $250,000.
20% transferable tax credits, plus 10% for screen credit. No residency requirements. Minimum spend: $500,000.
20% tax credit (Oahu), 25% (Big Island, Kauai, Lanai, Maui, Molokai). Residency requirement: make reasonable efforts to hire local talent and crew. Minimum spend: $200,000.
30% transferable tax credit, 30% for resident labor, plus 15% for resident labor from economically disadvantaged areas. Minimum spend: $100,000.
30% tax credit, 35% for resident labor, 30% for non-resident labor, plus 35% of qualified expenses for economically distressed areas. Minimum spend: $250,000.
25% tax credit on qualified in-state production expenditures (including resident and non-resident labor), 10% for in-state screenplay productions, plus 5% if outside of the New Orleans Metro Statistical Area. Minimum spend: $300,000 ($50,000 for in-state screenplay productions).
Productions can claim additional tax credits of 15% on compensation for services paid directly to a Louisiana resident (except to a loan-out company), plus 5% on qualified visual effects (VFX) spend (if at least 50%, or a minimum of $1 million of the production’s VFX budget is spent in-state).
5% tax credit, 10% rebate for non-resident above and below-the-line labor, plus 12% rebate for resident above and below-the-line labor. Minimum spend: $75,000.
25% tax credit. Minimum spend: $500,000.
25% transferable tax credits for production, plus 25% transferable tax credits for labor. No residency requirements. Minimum spend: $50,000.
20% rebate (minimum spend of $100,000 inside metro areas), 25% rebate (minimum spend of $1 million or shoot at least 60% of days outside metro areas). No residency requirements.
25% cash rebate (30% rebate for resident cast and crew), plus 5% for U.S. veterans. Must include screen credit. Residency requirement: At least 20% of below-the-line labor must be residents. Minimum spend: $50,000.
Discretionary Feature Film & TV grant; resident filmmaker grant of up to $50,000; development grant of up to $50,000 to resident filmmaker or production company for Montana-centric content; film festival grant of up to $5,000 for marketing and travel. Must shoot at least 50% of principal photography in-state. Must include screen credit. Minimum spend: $300,000.
15% transferable tax credit on production costs, 15% for resident above-the-line and below-the-line labor, 12% for non-resident above-the-line labor, plus 5% if more than 50% of below-the-line crew are residents, 5% if greater than 50% of the filming days occurred in-state, 5% within Rural County. At least 60% of the production budget, including pre-production, production, and post-production, must be incurred in-state. Minimum spend: $500,000.
(1) 25% tax credit. Must shoot at least one day of principal photography in-state. No residency requirements. Minimum spend: $0; or(2) 30% tax credit on resident labor for qualifying TV features.Additional 5% for(1) resident crew wages if filming at least 10 days at qualified production facilities, such as a soundstage or a standing set (15 days if budget is more than $30 million),(2) straight-to-series pilots where 30% applies to direct production expenditures (except nonresident actors), or(3) television series of at least six episodes budget of at least $50,000.00 each and where 30% applies to direct production expenditures (including payments to nonresident actors).
30% non-transferable tax credits for most below-the-line expenses, plus 10% for below-the-line wages in select upstate counties for productions over $500,000. No residency requirements. Minimum spend: $0.
25% rebate of qualified expenses (capped at $5 million for feature films, $9 million (avg) for television series per season, $250,000 for commercials). Must include screen credit. No residency requirements. Minimum spend: $5 million for feature-length films, $1 million per episode for television series, $250,000 for commercials.
30% transferable tax credit. No residency requirements. Minimum spend: $300,000.
35% rebate for resident above and below-the-line expense, plus 2% if a minimum of $20,000 is spent on music created in-state. Minimum spend: $50,000.
20% cash rebate on in-state goods and services, 10% rebate on resident and non-resident labor, plus 6.2% on resident labor. Minimum spend: $1 million.
25% tax credit, plus 5% if filmed at a qualified production facility. 30% tax credit for post-production expenses incurred at a qualified post-production facility. Minimum spend: 60% of budget.
40% tax credit on all payments to residents; 20% for non-resident above-the-line talent; 25% infrastructure tax credit on costs incurred in the development of a film studio or other eligible infrastructure project. Minimum spend: $100,000 for productions, $1 million for infrastructure projects.
25% transferable tax credit. Primary locations must be within the state. Minimum production budget of $300,000. Minimum spend: $0.
25% cash rebate for resident labor, 20% cash rebate for non-resident labor, 30% rebate for in-state vendor expenses, 20% tax credit (with a cap of $100,000 per taxpayer) to resident investors of an in-state motion picture, plus 20% tax credit (with a cap of $5 million) to resident investors of motion picture production and/or post-production facility. Minimum spend: $1 million.
25% cash rebate on expenses for in-state goods and services and the first $250,000 spent on resident labor. Minimum spend: $200,000 ($250,000 for labor).
5% cash grant for in-state expenses and resident labor (for a spend of $250,000-$1 million), 10% cash grant ($1 million-$3.5 million), 20% cash grant ($3.5 million-plus), plus 2.5% cash grant for economically distressed areas. At least 70% of above and below-the-line cast and crew, including extras, must be residents. Must shoot at least 60% of principal photography in-state. Minimum spend: $250,000.
20% tax credit for in-state spend of at least $500,000, 25% tax credit for in-state spend of at least $1 million, 20% cash rebate for in-state spend of $500,000-$1 million with 75% resident cast and crew (excluding extras and five principal cast members), 20% cash rebate for in-state budget of $500,000 or less with an in-state spend of $20,000-$500,000 and 85% resident above and below-the-line cast and crew.
15% tax credit (20% for economically distressed areas), plus 10% tax credit on resident labor for in-state spend of $250,000-$1 million or 20% tax credit on resident labor for in-state spend of $1 million or more, plus 10% tax credit on resident labor for first-time actors or crew. Discretionary grant also available. Minimum spend: $250,000 (no minimum for grant).
30% tax credit for film, 35% for TV series with six or more episodes, 15% for non-resident labor (if at least 85% production company’s labor force are residents). Minimum spend: $500,000 for film, $300,000 for TV.
27% transferable tax credits, plus 4% if employing at least 10 residents full time. Minimum spend: $25,000.
12% cash rebate for resident labor and in-state vendors, 13% for in-state props and product placement, 14% for in-state behind-the-scenes footage, 15% for Wyoming-set storyline, plus 12% to include screen credit. Must include screen credit. Minimum spend: $200,000.
16.5% tax rebate (the Australian Producer Offset) for production of large budget film and television projects (Location Offset), 30% tax rebate for post-production, digital and visual effects (PDV Offset), regardless of where the project is shot. Available to Australian or foreign resident companies with an Australian business number working through a permanent establishment in Australia. Minimum spend: (1) Location Offset: A$15 million for film, A$1 million (avg) per hour for television series, (2) PDF Offset: A$500,000.
20% grant of the production expenses, up to 25% grant for Austrian service production company (service productions). Project cap: €1.1 Million. Available to Austrian productions, Austrian-international co-productions and international productions obliged to work with an Austrian service production company. Austrian productions and Austrian-international co-productions must have a minimum budget of €2.3 million for feature films and of €350,000 for documentaries.
International productions with an Austrian service production company must have a budget of at least €8 Million for feature films, €1 million for documentary. Must shoot a minimum of five (5) days in Austria for feature films. Must pass a “Cultural Test”. “Film Industry Support Austria” (FISA) support can be combined with funding provided by other film subsidy institutions or government authorities. Minimum spend: €1 Million (for service productions).
Tax shelter investments: 40-45% tax credit to investors for qualifying expenses. Tax shelter investments are available to European and International productions. To qualify for tax shelter investments, the country of the foreign producer must be under co-production treaty or bilateral agreement with Belgium. Minimum spend: €250,000 (in the Flemish Region).
Economic funds: (1) Up to €400,000 of refundable advances for qualified expenses in the Flemish Region. (2) Up to €500,000 for production expenses in Wallonia (South of Belgium). (3) Up to €500,000 of refundable advances for qualified expenses in the Brussels-Capital Region.
Cultural funds: (1) Flanders Audiovisual Fund (VAF) discretionary grant for expenses in Flanders (Flemish Community) and international co-productions with Flanders-based producers. (2) Centre du Cinéma et de l’Audiovisuel (CCA) discretionary financial grants and advances on receipts for expenses in the French-speaking Community (or “Wallonia-Brussels Federation”).
To qualify for these economic and cultural funds, foreign producers can co-produce with a Belgian producer. These co-productions will normally be undertaken within the framework of bilateral co-production agreements signed with countries, such as Canada, China, France, Germany, Italy, Israel, Morocco, Tunisia and Switzerland.
British Columbia: 33% tax credit (35% for Canadian content) for resident labor. Budget must be greater than C$1 million for feature film, C$200,000 per episode for series or pilot over 30 minutes. Minimum spend: C$0.
Alberta: (1) 25% grant (26% if shoot more than thirty (30) days in Alberta) for resident labor and vendor services. Alberta company must own less than 50% of the production company. Must have at least 4 resident department heads; or (2) 29% grant (30% if shoot more than thirty (30) days in Alberta) for resident labor and vendor services, if Alberta company owns more than 50% of the production company. Must have at least 8 resident department heads. Minimum spend: C$50,000 for projects with a commercial license agreement, C$100,000 for projects without a commercial license agreement.
40% cash rebate, plus 10% business tax rebate of qualifying production expenditures in China’s Qingdao Region. At least 50% of qualified spend must be at the Dalian Wanda Studios. Project cap: 120 million RMB. Minimum spend: 30 million RMB.
40% cash rebate of pre-production, production and post-production expenses for resident labor and vendor services, 20% rebate for “film logistical services” (hotel, food, and transportation), plus 41.23% transferable tax credit on qualifying spend by foreign investor or foreign co-producer. Production company must be at least 20% Colombian-owned. The director and one (1) principal actor (or one (1) principal actor and 2 department heads) must be Colombian. Project cap (for tax credit): US$600,000. Minimum spend: US$600,000.
20% rebate on expenses for resident labor (cast and crew) and goods and services. Available to Croatian producer, co-producer or production service provider. Must (1) have already secured at least 70% of the financing to cover production costs, (2) pass the cultural test, and (3) cast and crew consist of at least 30% nationals or citizens, for productions filming partially in Croatia, or 50% for productions filming entirely in Croatia. Minimum spend: $0.
Discretionary funding is available to co-productions with foreign producers under a bilateral treaty or the European Convention on Cinematographic Co-Production. Croatian share of financing must be at least 10% of the production’s overall budget. Croatia currently has bilateral co-production agreements with Canada, France, Germany and Italy. Minimum spend: 60% of the approved budget.
20% cash rebate on expenses for goods and services provided by residents, plus 66% rebate on withholding tax paid in the Czech Republic on salaries paid to foreign above-the-line talent. Must pass cultural and production test. Minimum spend: US$594,300 for a feature, animated or TV film, US$79,200 for a documentary, US$316,700 for a TV episode, US$39,600 for an episode of animated series.
25% transferable tax credit on all development, pre-production, production and post-production expenses incurred in the Dominican Republic. Must include screen credit. Minimum spend US$500,000.
Up to 30% discretionary cash rebate. The maximum (30%) grant can be applied if the film production uses Estonian-based filmmakers, actors and other production crew, Estonian story and/or Estonian-set storyline.
Tartu Film Fund: 10-20% rebate for eligible expenditure incurred in the Tartu area by local film production companies providing production services to international co-productions. The film fund is capped at €150,000 annually.
Viru Film Fund: discretionary cash rebate or co-financing for qualified expenses incurred in the Eastern region of Estonia, including above and below-the-line expenses (except producer’s fee in excess of 7% of the total eligible expenditure). No residency requirements. The film fund is capped at around €50,000 annually. Minimum spend: €0.
Up to 47% film tax rebate on local spend. Available to fully-funded off-shore productions. Project cap: FJ$28.2 million. Minimum spend: FJ$250,000 for large format films, feature films, short films and television shows, FJ$50,000 for television commercials.
F1/F2 investments: 125% or 150% tax rebate to Fiji investors/taxpayers against their tax liability. Project must be fully financed.
To be eligible for the 125% or 150% tax rebate, production must have (1) distribution in place, and (2) minimum spend of (a) 40% of the budget for a large format film, a feature film or broadcast television programs, (b) 50% of the budget for a direct to video program or video disk program, and (c) 55% of the budget for an audio recording.
Fiji taxpayers can claim the 150% tax deduction if (1) the project is written or based on the creative idea of a citizen or a resident, (2) an audio recording is produced or composed by or is the performance principally of a resident or citizen; (3) computer software is based on the original creative idea developed by a resident or citizen; or (4) the storyline represents a satisfactory portrayal of Fiji, the history or life of the people of Fiji and Fiji’s flora and fauna.
30% tax rebate of qualified expenditures for international productions. Must pass cultural test. Must shoot a minimum of five (5) days in France for live action, and 50% of the qualified spend for VFX and post-production. No residency requirements for actors and crew (except director and production staff). Project cap: €30 million. Minimum Spend: the lower of €250,000 or 50% of the production budget.
French regional funds: available to 100% French projects or official co-productions (productions based in EU, a European Convention on Cinematographic Co-Production member state, or one of the 56 countries which have co-production agreements or treaties with France, including Canada and UK).
The Automatic Subsidies (“Compte de Soutien”): A percentage of the film’s sales revenue from the French box office, video (DVD, Blu-ray, VOD) and TV broadcasting rights.
Sofica Funds: private equity investment for 100% French projects or official co-productions. Available mostly as gap funding. Soficas are equity funds financed with tax-related money, hence, we have placed them in the “soft money” category.
The Advance upon Receipts (“Avance sur Recettes”): A discretionary refundable grant to French-speaking projects, chosen at the script stage for their cultural value.
New Technologies in Production Fund: A subsidy to producers of movie or TV projects who work in 3D, or who use innovative digital technologies (digital visual effects, synthetic, imaging, development of specific processes).
Aide aux Cinemas du Monde (ACM): A discretionary support grant to co-productions for production and post-production. Minimum spend: 50% of the amount of the grant. There is no need to have any financing in place to qualify for the grant. Must be produced under a bilateral or co-production treaty if budget is greater than €2.5 million.
20% non-repayable grant of the qualified production expenses. The aid may not be cumulated with other state aid. Must pass cultural test. A German producer/applicant must contribute at least 5% of the total production costs.
For international co-productions, a German producer/applicant must(1) provide at least 20% of the total production costs or at least €5 million (if the budget is over €25 million);(2) produce the film either alone or as a co-producer with majority participation (if the international co-production involves a producer from a country which is not an European Economic Area (EEA) member state); and(3) be a person who is co-responsible and actively involved in production of the film.
Project cap: (1) €4 million, or (2) €10 million if (a) the qualified spend is at least 35% of the total production budget, or (b) obtain at least two thirds of the possible total points on the cultural test. Minimum budget: €1 million for feature films, €200,000 for documentary films, €2 million for animated films. Minimum spend: 25% of the budget (20% if budget is more than €20 million). No minimum spend requirement if qualified production costs are at least €15 million.
Up to 25% tax rebate in the form of a cash refund (post-financing) on all the direct film production costs (Hungarian or non-Hungarian). However, the non-Hungarian eligible spend is capped at 25% of the Hungarian eligible spend. Must pass a cultural test. To qualify for the full 25% tax rebate, the non-Hungarian spend must be no more than 20% of the total production budget (that is, qualified expenses include some of the services provided by foreign taxpayers, up to 20% of the budget), otherwise there is a reduction in the amount of the incentive.
Project cap: (1) 50% of the production budget, (2) 50% of the Hungarian contribution for international co-productions with a co-producer from a non-EEA Member State, (3) 60% of the Hungarian contribution for international co-productions with a co-producer from another EEA Member State, (4) 100% of the budget or the Hungarian contribution for low-budget films produced in Hungarian language, or (5) 100% of the budget or the Hungarian contribution for documentaries, animation, shorts, experimental films, etc., whether or not produced in Hungarian language.
The Hungarian National Film Fund also provides a discretionary grant to Hungarian companies, Hungarian citizens or resident of a EEA Member state, for script development, project development (to cover pre-production costs) and production (for Hungarian live action, animation and documentary features primarily intended for theatrical release).
25% cash rebate or reimbursement on production expenses. Project cap: 85% of the total production budget. Minimum spend: 80% of the total production budget. 35% rebate for productions that shoot for at least 30 working days in the country, create 50 local jobs and have a minimum budget of $2.7 million.
Up to 37% tax credit on eligible production, post-production and/or VFX expenses for local and International cast and crew, and goods and services. 90% of the tax credit can be available up front upon proof of either (1) 68% of eligible expenditure is deposited into the project’s production account, or (2) production company obtains a completion guarantee, bond, production loan or similar banking instrument secured against the 90% payment of the tax credit. Must pass a cultural test. Project cap: the lower of €70 million or 80% of the total production budget. Minimum budget: €250,000. Minimum spend: €125,000.
Up to 40% tax credit of qualified production expenses. Must pass a cultural test
Tax shelter investments: Up to 100% of taxable income invested in film production and distribution.
20% tax credit on qualified production expenses. Must pass cultural test. Must shoot a minimum of three (3) days in Lithuania (except for animation). Animation projects require at least 10% of all or at least 20% of two of the following be created or produced in Lithuania: (1) shooting, (2) developing and/or creating visual or graphic design of characters, set and props, (3) compositional layout of a frame, storyboards, and (4) animatic, visual and special effects. At least 51% of the crew must be citizens of Lithuania or of another EEA Member state. Minimum spend: €43,000.
20% cash rebate of eligible expenditure, including resident crew labor. Minimum spend €100,000.
30% cash rebate on all qualifying expenditure. At least 30% of the production crew must be residents or citizens. Minimum spend (for foreign productions or co-productions): MYR 5 million for production, MYR 1.5 million for post-production, MYR 385,000 per hour for television series.
Up to 40% cash rebate on all eligible expenditure subject to local employment and a cultural test. Minimum spend: the lower of €100,000. No annual capping. Hybrid ATL Cap.
Up to 35% cash rebate for film productions and 30% for high-end TV-series. No cultural test for the cash rebate. International co-productions must be with foreign producer from a country under a bilateral treaty or European Convention on Cinematographic Co-production. Minimum budget of €1 million for feature films and feature-length animated films; €250.000 for feature length documentaries. Project cap: €1.5 million. Minimum spend: €100.000. For high-end TV-series, these minimum production budgets apply: drama series: €12,000 per min., animated series: €8,000 per min., documentary series: €3,500 per min., drama for children: €8,000 per min., single episodes: €1 million.
20% cash grant of qualifying production expenditure, 20% cash grant for the first NZ$25 million of post-production, Digital and Visual Effects expenditure and 18% thereafter, plus 5% Uplift for certain projects that can demonstrate significant economic benefits to New Zealand. Minimum spend: NZ$15 million for feature film, NZ$4 million for television and other non-feature film, NZ$500,000 for post, digital and visual effects.
Up to 25% cash grant of approved production costs. Must pass a cultural and citizenship test. Production must have at least 30% international financing. Minimum total budget of NOK 25 million for feature films, NOK 10 million per episode for drama, NOK 10 million for feature docs, and NOK 5 million per episode for doc series. Minimum spend: NOK 2 million.
Zefyr: provides support and investments to audiovisual projects in the west and south of Norway in the form of:
Public funding: NOK 10 million per year in non-recoupable funding. Projects that contribute to the development of producers, directors and screenwriters in the region are prioritized.
Private equity / Gap: NOK 40 million, to be recouped in 1st position / alongside other private investors. Project must be for Norwegian theatrical distribution.
Norwegian Film Institute (NFI): non-recoupable funding up to 50% of the Norwegian part of the budget or €100,000 – €500,000. Available to international co-productions with a Norwegian producer participating as a minority co-producer. Must pass a cultural test.
15% cash rebate of qualified production costs. Minimum spend: $3 million.
Up to 50% subsidy of the qualified costs for features, documentaries and animated films or up to 70% of the production costs in the case of a difficult film project. For international co-productions, a local producer must contribute a minimum of 20% (in the case of a bilateral co-production) or 10% (in the instance of a multilateral co-production) of the planned costs of the project. Local producer must have a minimum artistic contribution to the project.
Regional Film Funds: up to 50% of the film budget. There are a number of Polish regional film funds that differ in terms of the budgets they manage, the form of support they provide and the sums which must be expended in the city, town or region during the production of the film. Support most often takes the form of the institution managing the fund participating in the production as a co-producer with its own financial contribution or contribution in kind or in the form of non-repayable grants or refunds.
Eurimages European Cinema Support Fund: A conditionally repayable, interest-free loan. Project cap: The lower of 17% of the total production budget or €500,000. Must have at least two independent producers from different member states of the Fund. The combined percentage contribution of co-producers from non-member states of the Fund must not exceed 30% of the total co-production budget.
The European Union’s Creative Europe initiative: offers non-repayable grants to producers, distributors, sales agents, and operators of new digital technologies and VoD platforms.
The Polish-German Film Fund: €70,000 subsidy for project development, plus €150,000 for film production. Must be a project development/co-production agreement between at least one Polish producer and one German producer. Can have producers from third countries. Each producer must contribute at least 20% of the total production budget including the subsidy. Supports maximum production budget of €750,000.
Up to 40% cash rebate on pre-production, production and post-production expenses. Minimum spend: $200,000 per fiction feature film; $50,000 per documentary; and $50,000 per animation project. Minimum number of production days to qualify for the cash rebate is 5 days.
20% cash rebate on expenses for local goods and services and below-the-line resident labor. Minimum spend: €300,000.00 for feature films, TV films and TV series; €150,000.00 for animated film, audio and/or visual postproduction of an audiovisual work; €100,000.00 for special-purpose film/TV commercials; €50,000.00 for Documentary films. Minimum spend: €0.
20% of qualified production spend, plus 2.5% for qualified post-production spend of at least R1.5 million (5% if post-production spend is R3 million and above). Project cap: R50 million. Minimum spend: R12 million for production, R1.5 million for post-production.
15% tax deduction (35% in the Canary Islands) of eligible expenditure by foreign productions. Minimum spend: €1,000,00020% tax deduction on the first €1 million of eligible expenditure and 18% on expenditure above €1 million (40% and 38%, respectively, in the Canary Islands) by local productions and co-productions. Must obtain Spanish nationality and pass a production test. Project cap: 40% of production budget.
The tax deduction is a tax credit deducted from the producer’s corporate income tax.
Up to 35% cash rebate of qualifying production expenditure (12.5% of US$100,000 – US$499,999; 15% of US$800,000 – US$999,999; 35% of US$1 million – US$8 million), plus 20% on resident above and below-the-line labor. Project cap: US$3,760,000. Minimum spend: US$100,000.
30% cash rebate on qualifying production expenditure for goods and services and resident and non-resident below-the-line labor. must shoot a least one (1) day of principal photography in Abu Dhabi. Project cap: US$5 million for feature films (US$250,000 for post-production), US$1 million for television programs or series (US$150,000 for post-production), US$500,000 for commercials (US$150,000 for post-production). Minimum spend: US$70,000 for feature films, US$15,000 for television programs or series, US$10,000 for commercials.
UK Film Tax Relief: Up to 25% cash rebate of qualifying expenditure. Must pass a cultural test or qualify as an official co-production (that is, made under UK’s co-production treaties). Project cap: 80% of qualifying expenditure. Minimum spend: 10% of qualifying production expenditure.
National Funding: National funding incentives available to international producers include BBC Films, BFI Production & Development Funding, Film4 and Pinewood Pictures.
Regional Funding: Regional incentives include the following:
(1) the Yorkshire Content Fund (will invest the lower of up to 10% of the total production budget or up to £500,000);(2) Ffilm Cymru Wales Production Funding (provides grants of up to £300,000 for writers, directors and producers who are either born or currently residing in Wales working in English or Welsh);(3) Creative Scotland Screen Funding (provides single project development Funding of £3,000-£50,000, Slate Development Funding of £50,000-£100,000, production funding of £50,000-£500,000, and distribution and exhibition funding of £5,000 – £15,000);(4) Northern Ireland Production Funding of a maximum of £800,000 for feature film and television production and £500,000 for interactive content production, up to a ceiling of 25% of the overall project budget. Funding is in the form of a recoupable loan with profit participation or in limited circumstances a grant. Available to productions with more than 65% of funding already in place.
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