How Much Do Child Models Earn in Australia? (2026 Pay Rates Guide)

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Bubblegum Casting

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Parents ask us this question more than any other: “How much will my child actually earn?” After 45 years placing Australian kids on commercials, catalogues, campaigns and TV sets, we’ve seen the full spectrum — from the six-year-old who banked $12,000 from a single supermarket campaign to the newborn who earned $450 for a nappy catalogue shoot before her first nap of the day.

There’s a lot of fluff written about child modelling pay in Australia. Most of it’s written by people who’ve never stood on a set negotiating a usage fee with a casting director at 6am. This guide is different. We run the agency. We cut the invoices. We know what the rates actually are in 2026 — not the aspirational figures floated online, but the numbers that hit the trust account after a job wraps.

If you’re weighing up whether to apply with your child, or you’ve already been offered a booking and want to sanity-check the money, this is the guide we wish every parent read before their first call.

How Much Do Child Models Actually Earn in Australia?

Here’s the honest answer: child modelling rates in Australia sit on a wide spectrum, and the final figure depends on four things — the job type, the usage, the child’s billing on the project, and whether the booking falls under MEAA (the Media, Entertainment and Arts Alliance) conditions.

For a working day in 2026, these are the ranges we’re seeing across Bubblegum’s bookings:

  • Commercial stills (day rate): $800–$3,500 per day, plus usage
  • Catalogue work: $300–$800 per day (buyout typically included)
  • TVC (television commercial) featured role: $750–$2,500 session fee, plus separate usage fees
  • TVC background/extra: $350–$650 per day
  • Editorial (magazines): $250–$600 per day (rates are famously modest — kids do editorial for the tearsheets, not the cheque)
  • Runway (kidswear shows): $200–$500 per show
  • Lookbooks and e-commerce: $400–$900 per day
  • Feature film or TV drama (minor speaking role): $850–$1,800 per day under MEAA minimums, with loadings

The average working child model on our Melbourne, Sydney and Brisbane books earns somewhere between $2,000 and $8,000 per year. That figure makes people wince or gasp depending on their expectations. It’s not a career — it’s pocket money that adds up, with the occasional bumper year when a kid lands a national campaign and brings home $15,000–$25,000 in one hit.

Top earners? We’ve had children on our books bank north of $40,000 in a single year from a featured TV role with strong usage. We’ve had babies in nappy campaigns pull $6,000 from two days’ work because the usage ran national for 12 months. These are outliers. They happen — but they’re not what you plan around.

What’s the Difference Between Commercial and Catalogue Rates?

This is where most parents get confused, and frankly where some agencies get away with underquoting. The difference between commercial and catalogue rates comes down to usage — how, where and how long the images are used.

A catalogue rate is typically a buyout. The client pays one flat day rate — say $500 — and owns the images for that catalogue’s print run and related online placement. No residuals. No top-ups. The child shows up, shoots 40–80 garments, and the family gets a single invoice.

A commercial rate works differently. The client pays a session fee for the shooting day, and then a separate usage fee depending on where the images will run. Usage is where the real money lives.

Typical 2026 usage structures we negotiate:

  • Social media only (6 months): +25–50% of the day rate
  • Online + in-store POS (12 months): +75–125% of the day rate
  • National print and digital (12 months): +150–250% of the day rate
  • National TVC broadcast (12 months): +200–400% of the session fee
  • International usage: negotiated separately, often 2–4x the national figure

Put simply: a $1,200 commercial day rate with 12-month national usage at 200% means the family invoices $3,600 for that single day’s work. A $500 catalogue buyout for the same shoot day stays at $500. That’s why experienced agents push hard on usage, and why we never recommend accepting a commercial brief quoted as a flat buyout unless the client is paying a genuine premium.

Do All Child Models Get Paid the Same?

No — and anyone who tells you otherwise hasn’t read a call sheet recently. Pay varies based on the child’s role on the project, the brand, the production budget, and the child’s experience level.

The billing hierarchy on a typical commercial shoot runs roughly like this:

  1. Hero/principal child: The face of the campaign. Biggest fee, biggest usage.
  2. Featured child: On-camera with a clear hero moment but not the sole focus. Usually 60–80% of hero rates.
  3. Secondary/family grouping: Playing siblings or friends in the scene. 40–60% of hero.
  4. Background/atmos: Filling a playground, classroom or party scene. Flat day rate, minimal usage.

Experience matters too, but less than parents assume. A debut six-year-old with the right look can out-earn a seasoned ten-year-old on any given booking — casting is ruthless about fit. What experience does buy you is reliability on set, which is why repeat bookings flow toward kids who’ve done the work before without meltdowns.

Age plays a role in raw hours. Babies (under 12 months) are capped at very short working windows under Australian child employment rules — often 2 hours on set maximum — but command strong rates because they’re notoriously unpredictable and clients need to book two or three babies to guarantee one usable take. Teenagers can work longer days and take on more complex briefs, which opens up higher-paying fashion and commercial work.

What Are MEAA Rates for Child Performers?

MEAA — the Media, Entertainment and Arts Alliance — sets minimum rates and conditions for performers working on productions covered by their agreements. Most scripted TV drama, feature films, and major TVCs produced by signatory production companies fall under MEAA.

For child performers in 2026, MEAA minimums cover things like:

  • Minimum daily performer fee for featured roles (indexed annually — always check the current rate card)
  • Overtime loadings after standard working hours (typically 150% then 200%)
  • Meal breaks and penalty payments if breaks are missed
  • Wardrobe, make-up and travel payments where applicable
  • Usage/buyout minimums for commercials, separate from the session fee
  • Chaperone and tutoring requirements that don’t directly pay the child but protect the working environment

MEAA minimums are a floor, not a ceiling. On any decent featured role for a national brand, we negotiate well above MEAA — often double or triple the minimum for children with strong casting history. Where MEAA matters most is on lower-budget productions: it stops families being offered token fees like $150 for a half-day on a drama set, which unfortunately still happens when children are booked directly without an agent.

If a production tells you they’re “not a MEAA show,” that’s not automatically a red flag — plenty of legitimate catalogue and social-first commercial work sits outside the MEAA umbrella. But if it’s a scripted TV drama or feature film and they’re dodging MEAA conditions, something is wrong. That’s where having an agency behind you pays for itself ten times over.

How Are Earnings Handled Legally for Minors?

This is the part most parents don’t think about until the first invoice lands. In Australia, a child’s modelling income is legally the child’s — not the parent’s — and it has to be treated that way. The specifics vary by state, but the overarching principle is consistent: a minor’s earnings must be protected from being spent on anything that isn’t for the child’s direct benefit.

Practically, this means:

  • The income is reported under the child’s Tax File Number (yes, children can and should have a TFN if they’re working)
  • Earnings are typically held in a trust account or dedicated minor’s bank account, not mixed with household money
  • Parents are trustees, not owners, of the funds
  • Reasonable expenses directly related to the work (travel to set, age-appropriate wardrobe for castings) can often be drawn from the account with records kept
  • Withdrawals for general household expenses are not permitted and can create serious legal and tax problems later

Work permits are required in several states for children under a certain age performing in paid entertainment work — NSW, Queensland and Victoria all have their own frameworks. A reputable agency handles this paperwork as standard. If an agency shrugs when you ask about permits, walk away.

How to Set Up a Trust Account for Your Child’s Modelling Income

We get asked to walk through this process constantly. Here’s the practical version — the one that actually works when you’re staring at a form at the kitchen table.

1. Apply for a Tax File Number for Your Child

Before anything else, your child needs their own TFN. Without one, any modelling income will be taxed at the highest marginal rate, and you’ll create a paperwork headache at the end of the financial year. Apply through the ATO — it’s free, and for a minor you can lodge the application as the parent or guardian with supporting ID.

2. Choose a Minor’s Account or Formal Trust

You have two realistic options. For most working child models, a minor’s savings account (opened in the child’s name with the parent as signatory) is sufficient and simple. For higher earners — kids pulling $20,000+ per year or banking significant lump sums from campaigns — a formal discretionary or bare trust set up through an accountant gives you stronger legal structure and clearer tax treatment. Talk to an accountant if you’re unsure which one fits.

3. Open the Account With Correct Documentation

Bring the child’s birth certificate, your ID as the guardian, and the child’s TFN. Make it absolutely clear at the bank that this is a minor’s account and that the funds are the child’s. Some banks will offer a standard children’s savings product; others will flag it for a junior-specific account type. Either is fine as long as the name on the account is the child’s.

4. Notify Your Agency of the Account Details

Once the account is open, provide your agency with the BSB and account number so earnings are paid directly into the child’s account — not a joint parent account. At Bubblegum we lodge these details on the talent file and pay every invoice through to the child’s nominated account. This single step protects both the child and the parent if anything is ever questioned down the track.

5. Keep Records of Every Invoice and Withdrawal

Treat it like a small business: keep every invoice, every statement, and every receipt for expenses drawn from the account. If you ever withdraw funds for work-related costs — travel, castings wardrobe, headshot updates — note what it was for. This protects you if the ATO or a family court ever asks questions.

6. Lodge an Annual Tax Return in the Child’s Name

If your child earns over the tax-free threshold for minors (much lower than the adult threshold — rules on unearned versus earned income apply), a return needs to be lodged. Earned income from genuine work, including modelling, is generally taxed at adult marginal rates, which is usually favourable. An accountant who has handled child performer returns before will make this painless.

7. Review the Account Annually With Your Child as They Grow

As the child gets older — particularly once they hit their teens — start involving them in understanding the account. By the time they reach 18, the money is legally theirs to access, and kids who understand where it came from and what it means tend to make better decisions with it. We’ve had former child models buy their first cars, put deposits on apartments, and fund uni outright from their trust accounts. That’s the dream outcome.

Can Modelling Be a Real Income Source for Kids?

Here’s the straight talk we give every parent at sign-up: child modelling is not a reliable income source. It’s a supplementary income, it’s an experience, and for a small number of children it becomes a genuine financial head-start. But it is never a replacement for a parent’s job, and any agency that implies otherwise is selling a fantasy.

What it can be:

  • A meaningful savings pot by the time the child turns 18 — we’ve had kids exit with $30,000–$80,000 in their accounts from steady work through primary school
  • A confidence-building creative outlet that teaches professionalism early
  • A genuine career launch pad for the small percentage who move into acting or on-camera work
  • Extra family income that can fund holidays, school camps, and extracurriculars without touching the household budget

What it isn’t:

  • A replacement for work
  • Predictable month-to-month
  • The same for every kid (siblings on the same books often have wildly different casting rates)
  • Something that should ever cost parents thousands in upfront fees — any agency demanding large upfront payments for portfolios or “exclusive training” is not operating the way legitimate Australian agencies operate

The kids who do best on our books are the ones whose parents treat it as a relaxed opportunity rather than a pressured pursuit. Castings are frequent and bookings are rare — a child who books one job for every fifteen castings is doing brilliantly. Parents who can keep that perspective end up with children who enjoy the work and stick with it for years. Parents who expect every casting to turn into a booking burn out within a season.

If you’d like to see what current briefs look like, we publish live open casting calls regularly across Melbourne, Sydney and Brisbane — it’s the clearest window into what clients are actually paying for in 2026.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does a child model earn per photoshoot?

A single photoshoot day in 2026 pays anywhere from $300 for a catalogue buyout to $3,500+ for a hero commercial role, before usage fees are added on top. The average working day for a child on our Bubblegum books sits around $750–$1,200 plus usage where applicable. One-off editorial days pay less — often $250–$400 — because editorial work is considered prestige exposure rather than a commercial fee.

Do babies get paid to model?

Yes, and sometimes very well. Baby campaigns — particularly nappies, formula, baby skincare and maternity brands — pay competitive rates despite babies working very short hours. Expect $450–$1,200 per session for a catalogue baby shoot, and $1,500–$4,000 plus usage for a featured baby role in a national commercial. The catch is that babies are replaced frequently during shoots (clients often book two or three for one role), so bookings can be inconsistent compared to older children.

How much do TV commercial kids earn?

For a featured child role in a national TVC, expect a session fee of $750–$2,500 for the shoot day, plus usage fees that typically add 200–400% for 12 months of national broadcast. A well-negotiated national TVC booking for a featured child commonly lands between $6,000 and $15,000 total. Background and non-speaking roles sit much lower, around $350–$650 for the day with minimal usage.

Is child modelling income taxed in Australia?

Yes. Modelling income earned by a minor is taxable and should be reported to the ATO under the child’s own Tax File Number. Because it’s earned income (not passive investment income), it’s generally taxed at adult marginal rates rather than the punitive minor’s rates that apply to unearned income. A tax return needs to be lodged annually once earnings cross the threshold. Most families use an accountant for the first return and then handle subsequent years themselves.

How do child modelling trust accounts work?

A trust account — or, more commonly for working child models, a minor’s bank account held in the child’s name with a parent as signatory — holds the child’s earnings separately from household money. The agency pays invoices directly into this account. Parents manage the account as trustees, meaning funds can only be used for the child’s direct benefit or reasonable work-related expenses. The child gains full access at 18. For higher earners, a formal bare trust set up through an accountant gives additional legal structure.

Can a child’s modelling income affect family benefits?

Generally, income legitimately held in a minor’s account as earned wages is the child’s income, not the parent’s, and should not affect Family Tax Benefit or childcare subsidy calculations — but this depends on how the account is structured and whether funds are genuinely kept separate. Centrelink reviews each situation on its facts. If your child is earning enough for this to matter (typically $10,000+ per year), speak to an accountant or a Centrelink Financial Information Service officer before lodging any returns. Getting the structure right from day one is much easier than unwinding it later.

Ready to See What Your Child Could Earn?

Bubblegum Casting has been placing Australian children in commercials, catalogues, campaigns and TV since 1981 — longer than any other kids’ agency in the country. We know the rates because we negotiate them every week, across Melbourne, Sydney and Brisbane, for everything from supermarket campaigns to feature films.

If you’re curious whether your child is right for the industry, the first step is simple: submit an application. There’s no cost to apply, and we’ll let you know honestly whether there’s a fit. For more on how we work, have a read through our frequently asked questions — they cover everything from audition etiquette to what to bring on a shoot day.

Forty-five years on, the question parents ask us hasn’t changed. The answer has — rates, usage structures and legal protections have all matured. What’s stayed the same is this: the best outcomes come from realistic expectations, proper paperwork, and an agency that actually knows what it’s doing. That’s what we’re here for.

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At Bubblegum, we represent some of Australia’s brightest young stars, but even so, we’re always on the lookout for fresh new faces and talent.

If your child is aged anywhere from 3 months to 18 years of age, and you think they might have what it takes to shine in front of a camera or on stage, then we want to hear from you.

We’ll set up a quick informal chat where we’ll get a feel for your child’s suitability for working in the industry.

The lucky kids that make it onto our books benefit from in-house workshops and coaching sessions to help them brush up on their skills. They’ll also get great advice and tips from the Bubblegum team, some of whom have worked as child models and actors themselves! We’ll even arrange a portfolio shoot with our in-house photographer.

We want all the kids on our books to have their chance to shine and if that means working twice as hard to make it happen, then that’s what we’ll do!

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