How to rent your house to a film set and make $3,000 a day

Publish date: 2024-08-19

Mary Dalton’s gray-shingled house in Queens, NY, isn’t much to look at — it needs a lot of work, including new windows, she says — but it’s been nothing short of a financial windfall to her over the past decade.

Dalton, a single mom, has gotten much-needed help paying her bills by renting out the three-bedroom house as a location for TV productions including Showtime’s “Nurse Jackie,” HBO’s “Entourage,” “Law & Order: SVU” and the upcoming Netflix crime drama “Seven Seconds.”

She makes around $3,000 every time a production crew takes over her property and she’s used the money to pay for essentials such as plumbing repairs as well as splurges like a swimming pool for her four kids. “The extra money [has] a huge impact on my life,” Dalton said. “It really helps a lot. I would just be week-to-week paying bills…I’m telling you, it was a godsend.”

Dalton got into the business of renting her house out by chance after location scouts spotted it and put it in the pilot of “Nurse Jackie.” Those same scouts later returned when they needed a similar look for HBO’s “Entourage.” Since then she’s gotten steady business, in part because scouts like her house’s “blue collar look,” she said.

Owning a house is supposed to help you build wealth, but property owners like Dalton are putting a different spin on that old adage with this Hollywood-themed side hustle.

Fees vary widely depending on the size of the production, starting at about $2,000 per day on the low end and up to $10,000 a day if a house has a starring role in a big budget flick, said Ana Cuadra, a location scout who worked on the upcoming movie “Oceans 8.” With a record-setting number of productions filming in cities like New York, homeowners are starting to get savvy and demand more money, Cuadra said. “Now everybody is saying, ‘I’m not going to give you my house for $5,000, because ‘Billions’ or ‘Gotham’ paid me $10,000,’” Cuadra said.

As side hustles go, renting your house out for film or TV shoots is fairly easy work. The only requirement, besides having a house that strikes a director’s fancy, is having a very relaxed attitude about lots of strangers and equipment in your space.

“I recommend it to everyone,” said Cuadra. “This is a brilliant, beautiful way to make money.”

But pimping out your house to the movies comes with some caveats. The work is sporadic, so you can’t rely on it as a regular source of income. “You have hot years and years that are more dry,” said Brooklyn homeowner Jonathan Sharp, who makes between $10,000 and $50,000 a year renting his six-bedroom Victorian out for TV ads for the likes of Ruffles potato chips and Verizon and several “Saturday Night Live” skits. “It’s a nice supplement, but you can’t count on it,” Sharp said.

And if you do it for more than 14 days a year, you’ll have to declare your earnings as business income and you will be taxed on it, said Kevin McAteer, owner of Reel Locations, an online directory where location scouts search for properties.

Tips on getting into the house-as-film-set business:

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