Picking from the long roster of animated video production companies has gotten harder, not easier, as the field has expanded. We have spent the last eighteen months reviewing portfolios, pricing models, and turnaround data across the studios our clients consider when they ask us for second opinions, and this guide reflects what we found. Some names you will recognize. A few are quieter shops that punch above their weight. The goal is not to crown a single winner, because animation is too fragmented for that. The goal is to help you match the right partner to the actual project on your desk.
Our team has produced animation for Nike, Coca-Cola, AT&T, the NFL, NBC, H&M, Calvin Klein, and SiriusXM, which means we sit on both sides of this conversation. We make animation in house, and we have also brought in specialists when a project demanded a particular visual style or pipeline we did not want to build twice. That perspective shapes the recommendations below. None of the studios listed paid to be here, and we did not exclude competitors. If a shop is on this list, we believe a smart marketing director could hire them and not regret it.
Why Animation Is Eating Live-Action Budgets
Animation went from a niche line item to a core part of the brand video toolkit because the math finally tipped. A live-action shoot in a major market still costs what it cost five years ago, plus overage fees on talent, location permits, and grip rentals. A two minute animated piece can be produced for a fraction of that, scaled across formats, and revised after launch without summoning the original cast back to set. That structural advantage is why the best 2D animation and motion design teams now run waitlists.
The shift is also creative. Audiences have stopped expecting stock-photo realism and started rewarding stylized, story-first work. According to Wyzowl’s annual video marketing report, animated explainers and motion-driven social cuts now outperform live-action equivalents on completion rates in several B2B verticals. We see the same pattern in our analytics. A motion piece we produced for a fintech client converted at roughly twice the rate of the live-action testimonial it replaced, and the production timeline was cut almost in half.
The other quiet driver is iteration. When a brand wants to A/B test ten openings or localize for fifteen markets, animation is dramatically cheaper to fork than a film shoot. That is why our creative services team spends a growing share of its weeks on motion work, even for clients who originally hired us for documentary or commercial production. Animation has stopped being a workaround for budgets that cannot afford live action and has become the first choice for brands that want speed, control, and visual specificity.
How We Ranked These Animated Video Production Companies
We weighted four factors when assembling this list. First, the consistency of the studio’s portfolio, because a single hero piece tells you almost nothing about whether the team can repeat the trick. Second, range across animation disciplines: 2D character work, motion graphics, 3D, mixed media, and visual effects. Third, transparent pricing or at least a clear scoping process that does not require six discovery calls before a number appears. Fourth, post-launch behavior, which includes how the studio handles revisions, file delivery, and licensing of source files. The last factor is the one most buyers underweight and later regret.
None of the animated video production companies on this list are bad. The question is which one fits the project. A scrappy SaaS launch needs a different partner than a Super Bowl spot, and a documentary needs a different partner than a six-second pre-roll. Treat this list as a sorted shortlist, not a strict ranking from best to worst.
The Best Animated Video Production Companies for 2026
The studios below cover a spectrum: full service shops that handle live action and animation under one roof, boutique animation specialists, and a handful of mid-sized studios known for specific styles. We have included our own team because excluding ourselves would be coy, and because clients deserve to see us evaluated on the same axes as everyone else.
1. C&I Studios
We are a full-service production company with a 30,000 square foot facility in Fort Lauderdale and offices in Los Angeles and New York. Our animation work spans 2D explainer pieces, 3D product renders, motion graphics for broadcast, and VFX heavy hybrid shoots. Where we differ from pure animation shops is the live-action stack underneath. When a project needs animated lower thirds laid over an interview, or product animation cut into a documentary, the same team handles both ends without an external handoff. Recent animation work includes campaign assets for Nike, motion-driven social cuts for SiriusXM, and explainer suites for AT&T product launches. Pricing for a polished two minute animated piece typically lands between $15,000 and $80,000 depending on complexity. See more on our VFX, compositing, and animation services page or browse our work for recent samples.
2. Buck
Buck is the studio most often named when someone says “the best animation in the world right now,” and the praise is earned. With offices in New York, Los Angeles, Amsterdam, and Sydney, Buck takes on flagship work for Apple, Google, Meta, and similar enterprise clients. Their 2D and 3D character work is widely imitated, rarely matched. The trade-off is access. Buck does not chase mid-market budgets, project timelines run long, and a single thirty second piece can climb past $250,000. If you are launching a global campaign and the brand can support that investment, Buck belongs on the shortlist. If you are launching a Series A SaaS product, look elsewhere.
3. Demo Duck
Demo Duck has built a sturdy reputation in the explainer space with a clean, character-driven 2D style that fits well for software, healthcare, and finance brands. They are based in Chicago, run a tight project management process, and tend to deliver on schedule. Pricing typically ranges from $20,000 to $60,000 for a sixty to ninety second animated piece, which puts them squarely in the mid-market. The main critique we hear from clients who shopped them against other options is that their visual range can feel narrow once you have seen ten of their pieces in a row. If your brand has a strong art direction already, Demo Duck adapts well. If you are looking for the studio to invent a visual language for you, push them in scoping.
4. Yans Media
Yans Media is one of the better remote-first animation studios working today. Based in Armenia with distributed staff, they produce 2D explainers, character animation, and whiteboard pieces at price points that look impossible until you remember the cost differential. Expect to pay $5,000 to $20,000 for a typical sixty second animated piece. The catch is communication overhead. Time zone gaps and asynchronous review cycles can stretch a four week project into six weeks if your internal review cadence is loose. For brands with a clear brief and a single empowered approver, Yans is a strong value play.
5. Wyzowl
Wyzowl is a UK-based animation shop that has industrialized the explainer process. They run a near-formulaic intake, scripting, and storyboarding workflow that produces predictable output in predictable time, usually four to six weeks. Their style leans heavily on flat 2D characters and clean kinetic type. Pricing sits between $5,000 and $15,000 for short pieces, which makes them attractive for in-house marketing teams that need three or four pieces a quarter. They are not the studio you hire for a brand-defining piece. They are the studio you hire when you need volume and reliability.
6. Explainify
Explainify is one of the longer-tenured animated video production companies focused exclusively on B2B explainers. They are particularly strong with abstract concepts: data flows, infrastructure, financial mechanics. Their team writes the script before they animate it, which sounds obvious but is rarer than it should be in this category. Pricing ranges from $20,000 to $50,000. We have referred technical clients their way when our own queue was full, and feedback has been consistently positive.
7. Thinkmojo
Thinkmojo carved out a niche by working closely with product marketing teams at companies like Slack, Square, and Atlassian. Their work tends toward UI animation, screen-recording driven explainers, and product launch films that need to feel native to the brand. They charge premium rates, often $40,000 to $100,000 per project, and their availability fluctuates with their enterprise client load. If your brief involves animating an actual product interface in a way that feels alive rather than like a screen capture, Thinkmojo is on the shortlist.
8. Sandwich Video
Sandwich is technically a hybrid studio, equally comfortable with live action, animation, and the seam between them. Founded by Adam Lisagor, they helped define the modern startup launch video aesthetic. Their animation alone is rarely the whole project, but their motion design within mixed-media pieces is among the best in the business. Pricing starts in the high five figures and climbs from there. Hire Sandwich when the project is a hero brand piece, not a recurring content stream.
9. Studio Pigeon
Studio Pigeon is a Polish animation house known for character-driven 2D work with a distinctive illustrative voice. They have produced animated series, music videos, and brand films that consistently look like nothing else on the platform they are sitting on. Pricing varies widely, from $15,000 for short branded pieces to $100,000-plus for longer original work. Their queue is real. Plan for a two to three month lead time even on small projects.
10. Vidico
Vidico is an Australia-based studio that has scaled into a credible global player over the last few years. They handle both live action and animation, but their animation portfolio is what gets them on this list. Strong art direction, fast iteration, fair pricing for the quality, typically $15,000 to $60,000 per project. Their main weakness is consistency at the highest end of the visual quality spectrum, where the very best post production services teams still pull ahead.
11. Epipheo
Epipheo built its reputation on the early explainer-video boom and has evolved its style alongside the market. They are particularly strong with thought-leadership pieces, internal communications, and anything that needs to convey a slightly more philosophical message than a feature walkthrough. Pricing typically ranges from $20,000 to $60,000. They are a safe choice for a corporate client who wants a polished result without surprises.
What to Look For in an Animation Partner
The portfolio matters less than people think, and the process matters more. We have inherited cleanup work from clients who hired beautiful portfolios attached to broken project management, and the recovery cost was higher than the original quote. When you evaluate animated video production companies, ask the following questions in your first call.
How does the studio handle revisions? Most shops cap rounds at two or three, which is fine if the rounds are well structured. Ask what happens on round four. Studios that quote a flat hourly rate after the cap are honest. Studios that get vague are not. Second, who owns the source files at delivery? Default contracts in this industry vary wildly. Some studios ship layered Adobe After Effects files. Others ship only the final render. If you ever want to repurpose a piece, that distinction matters.

Third, what does the storyboard process look like? Studios that storyboard in low fidelity first and then ramp up are protecting your budget. Studios that go straight to final art are gambling with it. Fourth, who staffs the project? A studio of forty might have eight people you actually want on your work and thirty-two who are fine. Get names and request prior work from the specific animator and director assigned. The variance within a single studio is often larger than the variance between studios.
One more practical filter: ask about audio. Many animation shops outsource sound design and music, which is fine if the partner is good. We handle audio in house through our audio engineering services team because animation without considered sound is half a piece. Confirm whoever you hire treats audio as a first-class part of the project, not a final-week afterthought.
Pricing Benchmarks for Animated Production
Pricing in this category is genuinely difficult to summarize because the same sixty second piece can cost $5,000 from a remote-first shop and $150,000 from a flagship studio. Both can be the right call. Here are the benchmarks we share with clients during scoping calls.
Short-form 2D explainers, sixty to ninety seconds, typically run $8,000 to $40,000 from competent mid-market studios. Whiteboard or kinetic-type pieces sit at the lower end of that range. Character-driven 2D with original art direction sits at the upper end. Flagship work with bespoke illustration and complex transitions can climb past $80,000 even at sixty seconds.
3D product animation runs higher because the modeling and lighting work is front-loaded. Expect $15,000 to $50,000 for a sixty second piece featuring an existing 3D asset, and $40,000 to $150,000 if the studio is also building the model from scratch. Hybrid live-action and animation projects, which our corporate video production team produces frequently, generally cost twenty to forty percent more than the live-action piece would have cost on its own, because the animation is added on top of a full shoot.
Series work, where the studio produces multiple animated pieces under a unified visual system, is where pricing gets interesting. Most studios will discount five to twenty percent if you commit to a full series upfront. We do this for clients commissioning branded content series because the style guide and asset library investments pay off across multiple deliverables. If you have any plan to commission more than one animated piece in the next twelve months, negotiate the second one into the first contract.
2D vs 3D vs Mixed Media: Which Format Fits
The format choice shapes the budget, the timeline, and the partner you should hire. Brands often arrive at us asking for 3D when 2D would serve the message better, or asking for animation when a live-action shoot with motion graphics overlays would land harder. The decision should follow the message, not the trend.
2D animation is the right choice for explanations, abstract concepts, character-driven stories, and anything that benefits from stylization. It scales cheaply across formats and localizes well. Most of our explainer work for SaaS and fintech clients is 2D, and most of the best animated video production companies on this list earn their reputation in 2D.
3D animation is the right choice when the audience needs to understand a physical product, see a process inside a complex object, or feel the weight of something tangible. Industrial, automotive, hardware, and pharmaceutical clients pull toward 3D for legitimate reasons. The pipeline is longer and more expensive, so do not pick 3D for a piece that 2D could carry.
Mixed media is the right choice when neither format alone tells the full story. A live-action interview cut with animated data visualization. A product shot composited into a stylized illustrated environment. These pieces are harder to produce, which is why most pure animation shops avoid them, but they often outperform single-format work because they look like nothing else in the feed. Our content creation services team has spent the last several years building this hybrid muscle, and demand for it is the fastest-growing segment of our animation work.
Mistakes Brands Make When Hiring Animators
The same handful of avoidable mistakes show up in nearly every troubled animation project we are asked to rescue. We are listing them here in the order they tend to appear in the project lifecycle.

The first mistake is hiring on portfolio alone, without checking how the studio handles communication. A studio with a stunning reel and a Slack channel that goes silent for three days at a time will deliver late and over budget. The second mistake is approving the script too quickly. Animation is hard to change once production has started. Every word should earn its place before the storyboard begins. Studios that push you to lock the script before they animate are protecting both parties.
The third mistake is treating the brief as a list of requirements rather than a description of what success looks like. Telling the studio you want “a fun explainer with our brand colors” tells them nothing useful. Telling them the piece needs to drive a fifteen percent lift in demo bookings from a specific paid social campaign tells them everything. The best animated video production companies write better when the goal is sharper.
The fourth mistake is skipping audio. We see brands spend $50,000 on stunning visuals and then drop a stock music track on top because the timeline ran long. The animation reads as cheap, even though the visuals were not. Budget for original or licensed music and intentional sound design from the start.
The fifth mistake is forgetting about distribution. An animated piece designed for fifteen second TikTok pre-roll has different pacing, framing, and end-card requirements than a ninety second YouTube hero piece. Studios that ask about distribution upfront save you the cost of producing the piece twice. Our advertising services team often joins the kickoff call specifically to define distribution before the script is written.
How to Brief an Animation Studio Without Wasting Six Weeks
The brief is where most animation projects either accelerate or stall. A good brief is roughly two pages long and answers eight questions: what the piece is for, who watches it, where it runs, what they should think or do after watching, what the brand voice is, what visual references the team likes, what visual references the team has explicitly rejected in the past, and what the budget and timeline are.
The negative references matter as much as the positive ones. Saying “we want it to feel like the Apple AirPods Pro launch film” is helpful. Saying “we do not want it to feel like the Mailchimp explainer style that has been everywhere for five years” is more helpful still. Studios that have to guess what you do not want will guess wrong at least once, and revisions are expensive.
Budget transparency saves the most time of all. Studios that know your budget at intake can scope the project to fit, propose creative solutions within constraints, or honestly tell you they are not the right fit. Studios that have to guess your budget will pad estimates, propose oversized scopes, and waste two weeks of your timeline before the real conversation happens. Tell us your budget. We will tell you what is possible inside it.
City Coverage and Production Hubs
Animation is largely remote-friendly, which means a studio in Warsaw can serve a client in Atlanta without anyone losing sleep. The exception is hybrid work that requires live-action production, which is where geography matters again. We maintain crews and studio space in three major US production markets. If your project blends animation with on-camera work, the partner’s physical presence in the city of the shoot is non-trivial.
We service the Los Angeles market through our video production Los Angeles team, which handles a large share of our entertainment-industry animation work. We service the New York market through our video production New York team, which weights heavily toward financial services and editorial clients. And we service the Florida and broader Southeast market from our video production Fort Lauderdale studio, which is also our largest facility and houses our motion graphics suites. Most of our animation clients work with whichever office is closest to them, but the production talent is shared across all three.
Frequently Asked Questions About Animated Video Production Companies
How long does an animated video production project take? A standard sixty to ninety second 2D explainer takes six to ten weeks from kickoff to final delivery. Faster timelines are possible if the script and brand assets are already locked. 3D and hybrid pieces typically run ten to sixteen weeks. Studios that promise a finished piece in two weeks are either using templates, charging a rush premium, or both.
What software do top animation studios use? Most professional 2D work happens in Adobe After Effects, with character animation often handled in Toon Boom Harmony or Cavalry. 3D work is split across Cinema 4D, Blender, Maya, and Houdini depending on the studio. The software matters less than the senior talent operating it. Per Think with Google data, audience engagement on animated content correlates with creative quality far more than with any specific tool.
Should we hire a freelancer or a studio? A senior freelance animator can produce excellent work at lower cost, but you are the project manager. A studio handles producing, art direction, animation, sound, and revisions under one contract. For projects under $5,000, a freelancer often makes sense. Above that, a studio almost always pays for itself in saved hours.
How many revisions are normal? Two to three rounds of revisions are standard at the storyboard, animatic, and final animation stages. More than five rounds at any stage is a red flag that the brief was unclear or the studio is not steering the project well.
Do animated video production companies offer scripting? Most do, and you should generally take them up on it. A studio that animates a script written by your in-house team will follow the script literally, even when a small rewrite would make the animation work harder. Studios that own the script can shape it for the medium.
What is the difference between motion graphics and animation? Motion graphics typically refers to type, shapes, and graphic elements in motion. Animation more often refers to character or environment work where things move with weight, timing, and personality. Most animated video production companies handle both, but a few specialize in one or the other.
The Shortlist: Where to Go From Here
If your project is a flagship brand piece with global reach, talk to Buck or a comparable top-tier studio. If your project is a recurring series with predictable scope, talk to a mid-market shop like Demo Duck, Vidico, or Explainify. If your project blends animation with live action or sits inside a larger video program, talk to a full-service team that handles both, which is where C&I Studios fits in the landscape. Animation is one of several disciplines we run inside our broader video production services, and the integration is what most pure animation shops cannot offer.
The studios on this list are all credible. The wrong move is hiring on reputation alone without testing fit. The right move is shortlisting two or three, briefing them with the same document, and reading carefully how each one responds. The studio that asks the sharpest questions in the first call is usually the studio that delivers the sharpest piece. If we can help, our team is reachable through the contact page, and we are happy to weigh in even if you ultimately hire someone else. Animation is a long enough game that good referrals tend to come back around.






















