New Pricing
Since the new year Fotolia, iStock and Dreamstime all
have updated their pricing. Getting your head around the various image sizes each
site is offering as well as what they are charging for the credit
packages they sell and lastly the variety of price levels the images can
have - is confusing to say the least.
The Table
To try make sense of some of the information and see how the agencies
compare, I have put the information for the top 6 microstock sites in a table.
The table shows what each site is currently selling images for at
their cheapest and most expensive offering. To calculate the most
expensive price I took the cost of the most expensive credit sold and
calculated what the cost of the most expensive type of image would be.
On iStock for example this would mean buying a package of 12 credits
then buying an exclusive image, for Dreamstime it would be a level 5
image etc. The cheapest image was calculated from using the most
expensive credit package purchase (giving the cheapest price per credit)
and buying the cheapest type of image.
The 'high end' collections, such as iStock Vetta, 123RF Evo etc.,
that some of the sites offer, have not been included in the table.
The table is color coded to hopefully help give a clearer picture of
how things compare. Each image size has a color, if there is no pricing
for a given image size for a site - the higher price (color) is used
because that is what the buyer would need to buy if they needed that
size. For example, if I needed a 3mp image and I were buying it from
iStock, you can see that the 3mp cell for iStock is colored the same as
it is for the 5mp image which means you would have to pay $9.50-$22.80.
|
Dreamstime
|
iStock
|
Fotolia
|
Shutterstock
|
123RF
|
StockXpert
|
.12 mp |
|
$0.95-$3.04 |
$0.80-$10.00 |
|
$0.68-$1.00 |
$0.80-$1.00 |
.16 mp |
$0.77-$12.60 |
|
|
|
|
|
.44 mp |
$2.31-$15.40 |
|
|
|
|
|
.5 mp |
|
$2.85-$7.60 |
$2.40-$30.00 |
|
$1.36-$2.00 |
$1.60-$2.00 |
1 mp |
|
|
|
$3.82-$4.08 |
|
|
2 mp |
|
$5.70-$15.20 |
$4.00-$50.00 |
$3.95-$9.80 |
|
$2.40-$3.00 |
3 mp |
$3.08-$19.60 |
|
|
|
|
|
4 mp |
|
|
$5.60-$70.00 |
|
$2.04-$3.00 |
$4.00-$5.00 |
5 mp |
$3.85-$21.00 |
$9.50-$22.80 |
|
|
|
|
8 mp |
$4.62-$22.40 |
|
$6.40-$80.00 |
|
|
$8.00-$10.00 |
10
mp |
|
|
|
|
$2.72-$4.00 |
|
12
mp |
$5.39-$23.80 |
$14.25-$30.40 |
|
|
|
|
13
mp |
|
|
|
|
$3.40-$5.00 |
|
15
mp |
|
|
$8.00-$100.00 |
|
|
|
16
mp |
|
$19.00-$38.00 |
|
|
|
|
20
mp |
|
|
|
|
$8.80-$10.00 |
|
21
mp |
|
$23.75-$45.60 |
|
|
|
|
Observations
So what does the table show us? Excluding Shutterstock for a second,
it is interesting to see that the three most popular sites offer the
widest range of prices. It appears to be working for them. Certain
buyers are willing to part with "big" money in order to purchase
desirable files, while the agencies still provide cheaper priced images
for to those buyers who want them.
Shutterstock is primarily a subscription site, so it is almost unfair
to include them in this table, but they do offer credit purchases and
at surprisingly cheap prices. Shutterstock, 123RF and StockXpert
haven't updated their prices for 2010 yet, so lets hope they have
something good in store for photographers.