A prop money shoot day checklist helps the production team avoid last-minute cash scene problems. Before the camera rolls, the money should be counted, sorted, staged, labeled, tested, backed up, and ready for reset between takes.
This checklist is built for prop masters, assistant prop masters, set decorators, production assistants, producers, music video crews, commercial teams, photographers, and content teams preparing prop money for film, TV, photoshoots, training videos, and production scenes.
Use it before filming cash tables, safe reveals, duffle bag scenes, briefcase opens, money counting shots, bank counters, evidence scenes, close-ups, wide shots, and large cash visuals.
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Shoot Day Is Not the Time to Guess
The best prop money scenes are prepared before the first take. Know which money is for close-ups, which stacks are for fill, which cash is backup, and who is responsible for resets after the scene changes.
Quick Answer
Prep prop money by separating hero stacks, fill stacks, backup stacks, handled money, and reset money before filming starts.
Shoot Day Prop Money Prep Flow
Use this sequence before the money is placed on set so each stack has a purpose and the scene can reset quickly.
Step 01
Confirm the Scene
Review the shot list, camera distance, action, and amount of visible money needed.
Step 02
Separate the Money
Sort hero stacks, fill stacks, aged stacks, close-up bills, and backup money before set dressing.
Step 03
Dress the Frame
Place the strongest cash where the camera sees it first, then add depth behind it.
Step 04
Test the Action
Run counting, grabbing, carrying, dumping, opening, or handoffs once before filming.
Step 05
Photo the Reset
Take reference photos so the layout can be rebuilt between takes and angles.
Prop Money Shoot Day Checklist
| Checklist Item |
What to Prep |
Why It Matters |
Shop / Guide |
|
Hero MoneyMoney closest to camera or handled in featured shots. |
Separate close-up bills, best-looking stacks, and camera-facing money before the setup begins. |
The closest money is the most visible, so it should be the most carefully selected. |
Shop Close-Ups |
|
Fill MoneyMoney used for tables, bags, safes, briefcases, and background depth. |
Estimate visible coverage and prepare stacks for the areas the camera will actually see. |
Fill money creates scale without wasting the best stacks in hidden areas. |
Stack Simulator |
|
Scene StyleClean, aged, mixed, organized, gritty, or handled cash. |
Decide whether the scene needs Full Print, RealAged®, or a mix before filming starts. |
The wrong cash style can make the scene feel too polished, too messy, or visually inconsistent. |
Shop RealAged® |
|
Container ScenesDuffle bags, briefcases, safes, drawers, boxes, or cases. |
Build the top layer, front rows, and visible opening before adding hidden support. |
Container scenes depend on what the camera sees first when the bag, case, or safe opens. |
Shop Duffle Bags |
|
Action MoneyCounting, grabbing, dumping, carrying, handoffs, or machine use. |
Create a starting stack, action stack, reset stack, and backup stack for repeated takes. |
Handled money moves during the scene and can break continuity if it is not reset properly. |
View Money Counter |
|
Backup MoneyExtra stacks for resets, camera changes, and last-minute adjustments. |
Keep backup stacks labeled and off-camera until they are needed for fill, continuity, or replacements. |
Backup money protects the shoot when the director changes the frame or action. |
Plan Bulk Money |
Set Up 6 Prop Money Stations
Station 01
Camera-Ready Money
Keep the best stacks and close-up bills separate so they are only used where the lens can clearly see them.
Station 02
Fill Money
Keep volume stacks ready for table depth, bag fill, safe shelves, briefcase rows, and background coverage.
Station 03
Handled Money
Keep the stacks actors will count, carry, grab, or move separate from the money that stays dressed on set.
Station 04
Reset Money
Keep duplicate or backup stacks ready for rebuilding the scene after takes, spills, movement, and camera changes.
Station 05
Container Money
Keep stacks for duffle bags, briefcases, safes, and drawers sorted by top layer, front row, and hidden support.
Station 06
Unused Money
Keep extra money boxed, labeled, and away from active shooting areas until it is needed for the scene.
Use the Stack Simulator Before the Shoot
If the scene needs tables, bags, safes, briefcases, piles, or wide shots, estimate the visible stack count before the shoot day. It is easier to plan fill before the crew is waiting on set.
Open Stack Simulator →
For Tables
Estimate visible rows, foreground stacks, background depth, and empty surface areas.
For Bags
Estimate the top layer, open shape, visible corners, and support stacks below the camera-facing money.
For Safes and Cases
Estimate front rows, shelf depth, dark corners, and the first layer seen during the reveal.
Shoot Day Do’s and Don’ts
Do
- Separate hero money before set dressing.
- Keep fill stacks and backup stacks labeled.
- Test handling action before the first take.
- Photograph the final layout for continuity.
- Store unused prop money away from active shooting areas.
Don’t
- Mix close-up money with background fill.
- Wait until camera is ready to estimate stacks.
- Use all backup money in the first setup.
- Let handled cash disrupt the dressed layout.
- Leave loose prop money uncontrolled after the scene.
Shop and Prep for Shoot Day
Use these product and planning links to prepare prop money for close-ups, wide shots, bags, safes, counting scenes, and production resets.
Prop Money Shoot Day FAQs
How should prop money be prepared before filming?
Separate hero money, fill money, handled money, container money, reset money, and backup stacks before filming. Test the scene from the camera angle and photograph the final layout for continuity.
What prop money should be used closest to camera?
Use the best-looking money closest to camera. Close-Up / hero bills are useful when stack faces, hands, bills, or money details are featured tightly in frame.
Do I need backup prop money on shoot day?
Yes. Backup stacks are useful for continuity, resets, camera changes, deeper fill, actor handling, bag shape, safe shelves, table adjustments, and last-minute blocking changes.
How do I reset prop money between takes?
Take reference photos before filming, track any handled money, separate reset stacks, and rebuild the scene from the camera angle before rolling again.
Where can productions buy prop money for shoot day?
Productions can shop Full Print prop money, RealAged® prop money, Close-Up bills, bulk prop money, duffle bags, briefcases, money counters, and stack planning tools through Prop Money Inc.
Prep the Money Before the Camera Rolls
Shop Full Print, RealAged®, Close-Up bills, bulk prop money, duffle bags, briefcases, money counters, and planning tools for production shoot days.
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