Performance Journal

How Much Does a Magician Cost? The 2026 Pricing Guide

15 July 2026 · United States, Europe & Worldwide

A magician in a tailored navy suit fanning playing cards interleaved with hundred-dollar bills on a marble table in a luxury private club

Hiring a magician in 2026 costs anywhere from about $300 for a local part-time performer to $10,000 or more for a world-class international specialist. Most professional magicians for weddings and corporate events fall between $800 and $2,500; the premium end of the market runs $2,500–$5,000; and the luxury tier — full-time specialists flown in for high-end weddings, galas and private events — typically starts around $5,000 and ranges to $10,000+ per event.

The range is wide because "a magician" covers everything from a hobbyist with a deck of cards to a full-time professional with two decades of craft, international credentials and a client list of luxury brands. This guide breaks down what actually drives the price — and what you get at each level.

Magician pricing at a glance (2026)

Local & part-time performers — $300–$800. Weekend performers and hobbyists. Fine for casual parties; quality and reliability vary widely, and most carry no insurance or contract.

Established professionals — $800–$2,500. Full- or part-time working magicians with solid material and experience. The typical range for most weddings and corporate bookings.

Premium specialists — $2,500–$5,000. Full-time professionals with strong credentials, polished shows and professional conduct end to end: contracts, insurance, tailored material, reliable communication.

Luxury & international tier — $5,000–$10,000+. A small group of performers working global luxury events: five-star hotel galas, destination weddings, superyachts and celebrity celebrations. Fees vary with the event, format, exclusivity and travel.

What actually drives the price

Experience and credentials. Twenty years of stagecraft, membership in bodies like The Magic Circle, and a track record at demanding events price differently from a weekend hobby — because the risk of an awkward, forgettable performance disappears.

Format. Strolling close-up magic through a cocktail hour, a staged mentalism set as the evening's centrepiece, or both — the format changes preparation, material and fee.

The date. Saturdays in wedding season and December corporate weeks are premium dates everywhere in the market.

Travel and exclusivity. A destination wedding in Lake Como or a gala in Dubai includes travel days and often exclusivity — the performer is yours, and unavailable to anyone else, for the duration.

Customisation. At the top of the market, material is tailored to the couple, the brand or the host — not a stock act repeated identically every weekend.

Why the expensive magician is usually the cheaper decision

Entertainment is the one line of the budget guests actually take home. Flowers wilt and playlists blur, but nobody forgets the moment something impossible happened in their own hands. A performer who creates that moment reliably, guest after guest, is worth more than the difference between fee tiers — and a performer who falls flat costs far more than the money saved.

The practical rule: hire the best performer the budget allows, and size the format to fit — a shorter set from an exceptional magician beats a full evening from an average one, every time.

What the luxury tier looks like

At the luxury end of the market, the fee buys certainty and register: a performer at ease in a room of guests who have seen everything, discretion around high-profile hosts, and entertainment that matches the standard of the venue — whether that's a palace hotel on the Riviera or a private estate in the Hamptons.

Matteo Cammisa works in this tier. An international magician and mentalist — Member of The Magic Circle and FISM, with 500+ events across 30+ countries — his performance fees typically start around $5,000 and range to $10,000+ depending on the event, format and travel. Every engagement is quoted individually: share your date, venue and guest count below for an exact proposal within 24 hours.

Real guests. Real reactions.

Frequently asked questions

How much does a magician cost for a wedding?

Most professional wedding magicians charge $800–$2,500 for cocktail-hour close-up magic. Premium specialists run $2,500–$5,000, and the luxury international tier — typically booked for destination and five-star weddings — starts around $5,000 and ranges to $10,000+ depending on the event and travel.

How much does a magician cost for a corporate event?

Corporate rates run slightly above wedding rates at every tier: roughly $1,000–$3,000 for established professionals, $3,000–$5,000 for premium specialists, and $5,000–$10,000+ at the luxury tier for galas, conferences and brand events — where the entertainment often doubles as content for the brand's channels.

Why do magician prices vary so much?

Because the title covers everything from hobbyists to international specialists. The main drivers are experience and credentials, format (close-up vs. staged show), the date, travel and exclusivity, and how much the material is tailored to the event.

Do magicians charge for travel?

At the professional tiers, yes — travel and accommodation are quoted as part of the booking for out-of-town and destination events. At the luxury tier this is standard practice: the quote covers the performance, travel days and exclusivity as one figure.

How far in advance should I book a magician?

For a fixed date — especially a Saturday wedding in season or a December corporate evening — book as early as possible; in-demand performers are reserved months ahead, and the luxury tier often a year ahead for peak dates.

Planning something similar?

Share your event date and venue — Matteo responds within 24 hours.

We respond within 24 hours.

Prefer to message directly? WhatsApp·management@matteocammisa.com