Film prices went up again. If you've bought a roll of Portra 400 recently, you already felt it — what used to be a $13 roll is now pushing $18 or more depending on where you shop. Across the board, US film prices climbed roughly 9% between February 2025 and early 2026, according to analog.cafe's film price tracking — though the same tracker reported average prices holding roughly flat since mid-2025. Kodak has raised prices repeatedly: dealer costs on 35mm and 120 film rose 10–25% in March 2023, and Kodak Alaris pushed through another 5–8% on most stocks in January 2025, per Kosmo Foto. Fuji has quietly discontinued or restricted stocks that were staples just a few years ago.
But here's the thing: film photography is growing faster than it has in two decades. According to wholesale market data published by Serrano Rey, 312 new film labs opened worldwide in 2025, wholesale film order volumes grew 127% between 2020 and 2026, and demand for Portra 400 alone is up 156% since 2020 — numbers we unpacked in our film revival deep dive. The economics are strange — prices rise because people genuinely want this stuff, and manufacturers can't scale fast enough to meet demand. So let's break down what film actually costs in 2026, why, and how to spend less of it.
US film prices climbed roughly 9% between February 2025 and early 2026, silver hit an all-time high in January, and demand keeps growing anyway. The strangest market in photography is also its healthiest.
Film Price Table: July 2026
Every price below was checked on July 3, 2026, at the retailer linked in its row. Film prices move quickly — treat anything older than a few months as a floor, not a quote.
One wrinkle before the numbers: since Eastman Kodak's March 2026 rebrand, Portra and T-Max are being phased out as names — the same emulsions now ship as Ektacolor Pro and Ektapan, and both old and new boxes are on shelves. We use the familiar names below; the full story of the rename is covered separately.
| Stock | Format | Type | Price (Jul 2026) | vs 2025 trend |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kodak Portra 400 (now Ektacolor Pro 400) | 35mm, 36 exp | Color negative, ISO 400 | $17.85/roll in a 5-pack ($89.24 at Film Supply Club); from £23 at Analogue Wonderland | Rising — comfortably under $14 in 2023 |
| Kodak Gold 200 | 35mm, 36 exp | Color negative, ISO 200 | $8.99 at Film Supply Club; from £9.95 at Analogue Wonderland | Up slightly after the January 2025 increase |
| Kodak ColorPlus 200 | 35mm, 36 exp | Color negative, ISO 200 | From £9.75 at Analogue Wonderland | Roughly flat |
| Kodak UltraMax 400 | 35mm, 36 exp | Color negative, ISO 400 | $9.99 at Film Supply Club; from £10.95 at Analogue Wonderland | Up slightly |
| Kodak Ektar 100 | 35mm, 36 exp | Color negative, ISO 100 | $16.00/roll in a 10-pack ($159.99 at Film Supply Club); from £20 at Analogue Wonderland | Rising |
| Kodak Ektachrome E100 | 35mm, 36 exp | Slide (E-6), ISO 100 | $24.01 at Film Supply Club | Rising — we quoted $18–22 in March 2026 |
| CineStill 400D | 35mm, 36 exp | Color negative, ISO 400 | $17.99 at Film Supply Club (sold out there on July 3) | Rising — launched at $14.99 in 2022 |
| CineStill 800T | 35mm, 36 exp | Color negative (tungsten), ISO 800 | $17.99 at Film Supply Club; £19.49 at Analogue Wonderland | Up from about $17 in 2025 |
| Kodak Tri-X 400 (Eastman Kodak boxes) | 35mm, 36 exp | Black & white, ISO 400 | $9.16/roll in a 10-pack ($91.60 at Film Supply Club); from £8.95 at Analogue Wonderland | Falling — Kodak Alaris cut Tri-X pricing in January 2025 |
| Ilford HP5 Plus | 35mm, 36 exp | Black & white, ISO 400 | $11.49/roll in a 10-pack ($114.90 at Film Supply Club); from £9.20 at Analogue Wonderland | Rising in the US — Harman's 11% tariff increase landed in April 2026 |
| Kentmere Pan 400 | 35mm, 36 exp | Black & white, ISO 400 | $8.49 at Film Supply Club; from £5.95 at Analogue Wonderland | Roughly flat |
| Fomapan 400 Action | 35mm, 36 exp | Black & white, ISO 400 | Under $6 as Arista EDU Ultra 400; $9–12 in Foma boxes depending on retailer (see our budget B&W shootout) | Roughly flat |
| Lomography Color Negative 100 | 35mm, 36 exp | Color negative, ISO 100 | $35.90 per 3-pack (about $11.97/roll) at Film Supply Club | Roughly flat |
| Lomography Color Negative 400 | 35mm, 36 exp | Color negative, ISO 400 | $44.90 per 3-pack (about $14.97/roll) at Film Supply Club | Roughly flat |
| Lomography Color Negative 800 | 35mm, 36 exp | Color negative, ISO 800 | $57.90 per 3-pack (about $19.30/roll) at Film Supply Club | Roughly flat |
| Lucky C400 | 35mm, 36 exp | Color negative, ISO 400 | Around $7 direct from importers as of July 2026 — see our full review; US shop stock is intermittent | Roughly flat |
| Lucky C200 | 35mm, 36 exp | Color negative, ISO 200 | $13.99 US import at Legacy Photo Lab (sold out on July 3); under $10 in most markets per 35mmc | New in late 2025 — pricing still settling |
Two things jump out of that table. As of July 3, 2026, a roll of Portra 400 works out to $17.85 even in a five-pack, while the cheapest fresh 35mm films — Kentmere Pan 400 at $8.49 and Kodak Gold 200 at $8.99 — cost less than half that. And Tri-X, of all things, is one of the few stocks that got cheaper, following Kodak Alaris's January 2025 price cut.
Current Film Prices by Category
Prices vary by retailer and region, but here's what you can expect to pay for a single roll of 35mm in early 2026:
Budget Color (C-41)
Kodak Gold 200, Kodak ColorPlus 200, and Fuji C200 (when you can find it) fall in the $8–12 range. These are honest, capable films that produce great images in good light. Kodak Gold in particular has earned a loyal following — the warm tones and visible grain give it a look that people actively seek out, not just tolerate as a compromise.
Mid-Range Color (C-41)
Kodak Portra 160 and Ektar 100 sit around $13–16 per roll. Portra 160 is a portrait workhorse with fine grain and gorgeous skin tones in controlled light. Ektar is the sharpest, most saturated color negative film available — it turns landscapes into postcards. Both reward careful shooting.
Professional Color (C-41)
Portra 400 and Portra 800 now run $15–22 depending on the retailer. That's a real jump from three years ago, when Portra 400 was comfortably under $14. The exposure latitude and color rendition are still unmatched, which is exactly why demand keeps climbing. These are the stocks that professionals and serious hobbyists build their work around.
Slide Film (E-6)
Kodak Ektachrome E100 and Fuji Velvia 50 sit at the top of the price chart: Ektachrome runs $24 at Film Supply Club as of July 2026, and Velvia typically costs as much or more where you can still find it. Add in E-6 processing (which costs more than C-41 at most labs) and you're looking at $40+ per roll, all in. Slide film demands precise exposure — use a reliable light meter or prepare for expensive disappointments.
Black & White
B&W remains the most affordable category. Ilford HP5 and Kodak Tri-X are $9–12 per the July 2026 listings in our table above — and Tri-X is the rare stock that got cheaper. Fomapan 400 and Kentmere 400 come in around $6–9, making them some of the cheapest film you can buy. B&W also has a significant cost advantage: you can develop it at home with minimal equipment, cutting out lab fees entirely.

Why Film Prices Keep Rising
Three forces are pushing prices up simultaneously, and none of them are going away soon.
Silver costs. Film emulsion contains silver halide crystals — that's the light-sensitive material that makes photography possible. Silver more than doubled over 2025 and touched an all-time high above $120 per ounce in late January 2026 before pulling back, per Investing News Network's market tracking. Photography still consumes roughly 25 million ounces of silver a year, according to the Silver Institute, and PetaPixel asked in December 2025 whether film prices would follow. So far the pass-through has been slower than feared — but there is no substitute for silver in an emulsion, so the pressure is real.
Limited production capacity. During the digital transition, Kodak and Fuji shut down most of their film manufacturing lines. Rebuilding that capacity takes years and massive capital investment. Kodak has been ramping up production at its Rochester facility — and took distribution of its film back in-house — but demand is outpacing supply; Chemical & Engineering News reported in April 2026 that manufacturers across the industry are struggling to keep up. Fuji has moved in the opposite direction — discontinuing Pro 400H in 2021, making Superia increasingly scarce, and showing little interest in expanding film output.
Surging demand. Gen Z discovered film photography through social media and embraced it as a counterpoint to the hyper-polished digital aesthetic. That's not a fad — it's been building steadily for five years. When demand grows faster than supply, prices rise. Basic economics, frustrating results.
The Good News
The same demand driving prices up is also building the ecosystem around film. Those 312 new labs that opened in 2025 — per the Serrano Rey data above — mean shorter turnaround times and more competition on processing prices. The 127% growth in wholesale distribution means more retailers stocking film, which helps with availability even if it doesn't fix pricing.
New manufacturers are entering the market, too. Lucky C400 from China offers a capable color negative stock for around $7 per roll direct from importers, as of July 2026. Fomapan from the Czech Republic continues to produce affordable B&W stocks, sold in the US as Arista EDU Ultra for under $6 a roll. Kentmere (made by Harman, the same company behind Ilford) provides budget B&W options at $8.49 per roll at Film Supply Club as of July 2026. These aren't Portra killers, but they're genuine alternatives that make shooting more accessible.
How to Spend Less on Film
You don't have to accept retail pricing as the final word. Here are the most effective ways to cut your per-frame cost:
Bulk Loading
Buy 100-foot rolls of your favorite stock and load your own cassettes. A bulk roll of Kodak Gold or HP5 typically ran $50–60 in the retailer listings we tracked in mid-2026 and yields roughly 18 rolls of 36 exposures. That works out to about $3 per roll — a savings of roughly 40% compared to pre-loaded cassettes. You'll need a bulk loader ($25–40, one-time purchase) and reusable cassettes. The process takes about two minutes once you get the hang of it. If you buy in bulk, storing film properly keeps those savings from expiring on a warm shelf.
Budget Film Stocks
Fomapan 400 (under $6 as Arista EDU Ultra), Kentmere Pan 400 ($8.49 as of July 2026), and Lucky C400 (around $7 from importers) are all capable films that produce legitimate results. Fomapan has a distinctive old-school grain structure that many photographers find charming — our budget black and white shootout compares it frame by frame against Kentmere and Lucky's SHD400. Kentmere is smooth and predictable. Lucky C400 is the newcomer with surprisingly pleasant color rendition — we put the cheapest color film of 2026 through a full review. None of them are Portra, but they don't need to be — they're excellent for practicing, everyday shooting, and keeping your costs manageable.
Home Developing
Lab processing runs $10–18 per roll for develop-and-scan. Do it yourself and the chemical cost drops to about $1–2 per roll. A basic B&W developing setup costs around $80–100 upfront: changing bag, tank, reels, chemicals, and a thermometer. C-41 home developing is slightly more involved (temperature control matters more) but still very doable with a sous vide or temperature-controlled water bath. Over 50 rolls, you'll save $400–800 compared to lab processing.
Find Affordable Labs
Processing prices vary enormously between labs — among the labs listed in Pellica's own lab map as of July 2026, develop-and-scan menus run from $8 to $20 for the same service (Pellica data). Use Pellica's lab map to find a film lab near you, compare options in your area, and check which services each lab supports. Mail-order labs can sometimes beat local prices, especially if you batch multiple rolls to split the shipping cost.
Price Comparison: What a Roll Really Costs
Budget color: Kodak Gold 200 ($9) + lab develop & scan ($12) = ~$21/roll = ~$0.58/frame
Professional color: Portra 400 ($18) + lab develop & scan ($14) = ~$32/roll = ~$0.89/frame
Slide film: Ektachrome E100 ($24) + E-6 lab processing ($18) = ~$42/roll = ~$1.17/frame
Budget B&W: Fomapan 400 ($6) + home develop ($2) + self-scan ($0) = ~$8/roll = ~$0.22/frame
Bulk-loaded B&W: HP5 from 100ft roll ($3) + home develop ($2) = ~$5/roll = ~$0.14/frame
Is Film Still Worth the Cost?
At $0.50–1.00 per frame for color negative (film plus processing), film is objectively expensive compared to digital, where the marginal cost of a photo is effectively zero. But framing it as “film vs. digital cost” misses the point.
Film changes how you shoot. When every frame costs money, you slow down. You think about composition before pressing the shutter. You learn exposure because you have to — there's no chimping the LCD and trying again. That constraint produces better photographers, and the images have a texture and character that no digital filter replicates convincingly. The cost per frame is the cost of that process.
The math gets easier when you optimize. Shoot budget stocks for practice, save the Portra for work that matters. Develop B&W at home. Bulk load when possible. A photographer shooting 2–3 rolls per month on budget color film spends roughly $50–65/month all in. That's less than most streaming subscriptions combined, and you're building a physical archive of images with actual negatives you can hold. Pair that with one of the best 35mm film cameras under $100 and the whole hobby stays surprisingly affordable.
Frequently asked questions
How much does 35mm film cost in 2026?
As of July 3, 2026, budget color negative runs $9–12 per roll (Kodak Gold 200 is $8.99 at Film Supply Club), professional color like Portra 400 works out to $17.85 per roll in five-packs, black and white spans roughly $6–12, and Ektachrome E100 slide film costs about $24 per roll.
Why are film prices going up?
Three forces, as of July 2026: silver more than doubled in 2025 and hit a record above $120 per ounce in January 2026; coating capacity is limited after decades of downsizing; and demand keeps climbing, with wholesale film volumes up 127% between 2020 and 2026 per Serrano Rey's market data.
What is the cheapest 35mm film in 2026?
For black and white, Fomapan 400 sold as Arista EDU Ultra runs under $6 per roll in the US, with Kentmere Pan 400 at $8.49 as of July 2026. For color, Lucky C400 costs around $7 from importers, and Kodak Gold 200 is the cheapest widely stocked option at $8.99.
Track Your Cost Per Frame with Pellica
When every frame costs money, knowing what works and what doesn't becomes a financial question, not just an artistic one. Pellica's film roll tracker logs your film stock, camera, and exposure settings for every shot. When your scans come back, import them and match each image to its data.
Over time, you'll see which stocks give you the results you want, which situations burn frames, and where your keepers come from. That's how you stop wasting $0.89 frames on shots that were never going to work — and start spending them on the ones that will.
