If you’re thinking of going out and renting a big giant building to build Star Trek sets on, don’t do it.

For starters, you can’t make money on replicating Star Trek sets unless your name of course is James Cawley, he can, and you can’t thanks to James snagging the rights to running official set tours.

The costs of a studio are massive, for example if Neutral Zone Studios gets no donations, they’ll need 71.42 days of shoots every year just to cover its yearly bill of almost $50,000 and considering most fan films are 15 minutes and under, it is hard to gauge just how many fan films are needed to hit the mark as it can be anywhere from 72 to 35 or 24 fan films per year if all shoot for three days, two days or one day but it is definitely a mixed bag.

Their latest report states ‘This year we are asking attendees for a donation of $20 per adult. It is not mandatory, but greatly appreciated.‘ this is from their latest newsletter regarding the Fan Appreciation Weekend.

Neutral Zone Studios recently received just over $19,000 in donations for their ‘Help Neutral Zone Beat the Heat…‘ fundraiser so you can see just how expensive it is to keep up with events like heat, covid and facility upgrades and repairs.

Ares Studios stated in January 2023 that they had about $4000 of expenses per month to pay so they must be in the neighbourhood of $48,000 a year, fans pay about half of that amount through Patreon.

Ares Studios is mostly idle, so they aren’t getting the fan films in like NZS does though Ares Studios reportedly has a couple of fan films being readied to be filmed there that will eat into that idleness.

Potemkin Pictures hoped to raise $2000 for 2023, that is about a twelfth of the total of one of the other two studios, Potemkin of course is smaller than the other two, but they have a transporter room, a bridge, briefing room and sick bay etc. plus lots of places outdoors so they can make a fan film just as good as the other locations just less room to step.

Paramount Global doesn’t seem to have guidelines on how much a studio can rake in through donations, back in the day it used to be a case of fundraising for whatever a you needed to make a fan film and making the fan film itself now you can fundraise for stuff to be done at a studio and fan films, makes the waters a bit murky.

You can’t go out and make merchandise for your studio with a big image of the NCC-1701 on shirts or sell Blu-ray discs of your fan films though Axanar has said they’ll do the latter despite it being prohibited so it is really hard to make an income stream to try offset expenses.

If you want to make your Star Trek adventures, do so at home or if you feel up to it, travel to one of the studios and make your fan film there because setting up a studio for yourself is just a money pit exercise and the pot of gold days of fan films when fans eagerly covered any and all expenses for a production are pretty much over and owners are now expected to pay a sizable portion of costs.