TL;DR Residential exterior render of medium quality: R$ 600–1.400 per image. High-end interior: R$ 900–2.200. Commercial: R$ 1.200–3.500. Charge per image (not per package) and itemize revisions: a good render kills the budget of anyone who charges "per contract".

The 3 levels of render

Level 1 - Volumetric/concept

Massing, shadow, no final materials. Useful for study. Symbolic charge or included in the project.

Level 2 - Client presentation

Real materials, treated lighting, furniture, vegetation. This is the render that sells the project. This is where most of it lives.

Level 3 - Hyper-realistic

A render that gets mistaken for a photo. Heavy post-production, people, context, atmosphere. For developers, marketing, high-end.

Table by typology (per image)

TypologyLevel 2Level 3
Residential exteriorR$ 600–1.400R$ 1.500–3.000
Residential interiorR$ 700–1.600R$ 1.800–3.500
Apartment interiorsR$ 800–1.800R$ 2.000–4.000
CommercialR$ 900–2.200R$ 2.500–5.000
Development/launchR$ 1.500–3.500R$ 4.000–8.000+

How to charge (3 models)

  1. Per image. The most transparent. You define how many, the client pays by the number.
  2. Closed package. Ex: "5 exterior images + 3 interior for R$ 9.500". Good for a client who wants predictability.
  3. Built into the project. Only if it is level 1. A level 2/3 render built in without being highlighted turns into a loss.

Extras that cost money

  • Furniture revision (client swapped an armchair): R$ 150–400 per image.
  • Lighting change (day ↔ night): R$ 250–600.
  • People inserted: R$ 80–200 per person.
  • Animation/walkthrough: R$ 80–200 per second.

Put everything in the contract. Render is where scope "leaks" the most: the client thinks they can ask for 12 revisions because "it's just pushing a button".

Limify

Render as a separate line in the budget

Limify builds the budget with the render highlighted, revisions registered and automatic extras. The client sees the value, and you bill every extra revision.

Try it free