If you're evaluating a branded podcast, you've probably noticed that almost nobody in this market will give you a number. Agencies want a discovery call. Studios say "it depends." Meanwhile your CFO wants a figure and your CMO wants to know what the figure buys.
We publish our rates, so we'll do the same for the whole category: what each production model really costs in India in 2026, what the money actually buys, where costs hide, and — more important than any of it — the four returns a branded podcast should be measured on. If it can't deliver those, don't do it. We say that as a studio that makes money producing podcasts.
What You're Actually Buying
A branded podcast has four cost layers, and confusion between them is why quotes vary by 10x:
- Strategy — positioning, format, guest plan, and how the show ties to business goals
- Production — the recording itself: room, cameras, audio engineering, direction
- Post-production — editing, mastering, colour, clips, graphics, transcripts
- Distribution — publishing, channel management, promotion, repurposing cadence
Strategy and distribution can live in-house — most brand teams already have both muscles. Production and post-production are where amateur output gets exposed, and where outside help earns its fee.
The Three Models, With Numbers
| Model | Typical Cost (India, 2026) | What It Buys |
|---|---|---|
| Build in-house | ₹3–10 lakh setup + team time | Equipment and a treated room — plus the hidden cost: your team becomes a production crew |
| Studio-partner model | ₹10,000–30,000+ per video episode | Professional room, multi-camera recording, engineering, editing, clips — you keep strategy and distribution |
| Full agency program | ₹50,000 – several lakh per episode | Everything managed: strategy, hosting, booking, production, distribution |
All three models are legitimate — they solve different problems. The in-house build makes sense above weekly frequency, if you accept that equipment is the cheap part and the engineer who knows how to use it is the expensive part. The full agency program makes sense when nobody internal can own the show (though re-read that sentence next to our first point in why most brand podcasts fail — shows nobody owns internally fail at the highest rate).
For most brands in Delhi NCR, the studio-partner model is the honest middle: professional output at per-episode costs, no capital expense, no crew on payroll — and your team stays in charge of what the show says. A serious 24-episode year runs roughly ₹2.5–7 lakh all-in for production and post. For comparison, that's less than most brands spend on paid media in a single quarter — often less than one decent trade-show booth.
Whatever model you choose, get the quote in writing with every layer itemised. The ₹10,000 episode that becomes ₹25,000 after "editing, clips, and equipment charges" is the oldest trick in this market. At Content Studio the quoted price includes the room, all equipment, engineering, and the agreed edit — the number you're quoted is the number you pay.
What It Should Return
Here's the part most cost articles skip, and the part your CFO actually cares about. A branded podcast that works returns value through four channels — none of which is "downloads."
1. Relationship capital
For B2B brands this is the highest-value return and the fastest. Your guest list is a business-development instrument: the prospect who won't take a sales call will accept a thoughtful podcast invitation, and an hour of genuine conversation builds more trust than a quarter of follow-up emails. Shows run this way pay for themselves on relationships alone — one closed deal from one guest conversation can cover years of production budget.
2. Content economics
One well-produced episode yields 15–30 assets: the full episode, audio version, 6–10 vertical clips, quote graphics, a transcript, a newsletter piece, LinkedIn posts for host and guest. Brands that shoot content piecemeal pay agency day-rates for each asset separately; a podcast pipeline drives the cost per asset down to a fraction of that. This is the return that's easiest to put in a spreadsheet — compare your current cost per video asset against an episode cost divided by twenty.
3. An owned audience
Ad impressions expire the moment you stop paying. An audience that chooses to return is an asset that appreciates — and it's yours, not rented from a platform's auction. This return compounds slowly and is the reason the commitment must be measured in quarters, not episodes. (The full argument is its own piece: why brands are building podcasts instead of buying ads.)
4. Search and AI visibility
Every episode generates a transcript, a show page, and clips — original, substantive content in your executives' own words. As buyers shift from searching to asking AI assistants, the brands that get cited are the ones with a body of substance to cite. A podcast is the cheapest substance-generation engine a brand can run.
The Honest Timeline
The relationship return can start with episode one. Content economics kick in immediately — the clips exist whether or not anyone subscribes. Audience and search returns need 12–24 consistent episodes before they're visible. Budget for two quarters minimum, and decide that before episode one: a show cancelled at episode six pays full cost and collects almost none of the return. That's the single most expensive outcome in branded podcasting — worse than never starting.
Where Costs Hide
- Re-shoots from bad rooms. The boardroom recording that came back with echo and AC hum doesn't get fixed in the edit — it gets recorded again, at double cost. Audio quality isn't an aesthetic preference; it's re-shoot insurance. (Some of our clients' audiences listen at 2x speed for hours — at that playback rate a compromised room is unlistenable within a minute.)
- Coordination drag. Every hour your marketing manager spends arranging equipment, venues, and freelancers is payroll spent on production logistics. It never appears in a quote and it's often the largest line item.
- Editing scope creep. "Editing included" can mean a trim-and-export or a full multi-camera edit with graphics and clips. Ask which, in writing.
- Inconsistency. If every episode looks and sounds different because the venue changed, the show never builds a recognisable identity — a cost you pay in audience, not rupees.
When a Branded Podcast Is the Wrong Spend
Three honest disqualifiers, because a studio that says yes to everyone is a vendor, not a partner:
- If nobody internal can own it — fix that first, or the money is wasted regardless of who produces it.
- If the commitment is under twelve episodes — an abandoned show signals more about your brand than no show at all.
- If success means going viral — podcasts build depth with the right hundreds, not reach to random millions. If you need mass reach this quarter, buy ads; they're genuinely better at that.
Frequently Asked Questions
Want the number for your show?
Tell us the format and frequency; we'll give you a complete written quote — every layer itemised, no discovery-call theatre.
Call +91 8920249869