Prop money should be organized before it arrives on set, controlled while it is being filmed, and stored properly after the scene is complete. Good transport and storage planning helps productions avoid missing stacks, mixed cash styles, continuity problems, and last-minute confusion during filming.
This guide is built for prop masters, assistant prop masters, production assistants, set decorators, producers, photographers, music video crews, commercial teams, and content creators moving prop money between prep, set, storage, transport vehicles, and shoot locations.
Use it to plan labeled bags, stack groups, hero money, fill money, backup stacks, RealAged® cash, Close-Up bills, duffle bag scenes, briefcase scenes, safe reveals, and reset kits for production.
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Treat Prop Money Like a Controlled Production Prop
Prop money works best when every stack has a purpose. Separate what is for close-ups, what is for fill, what is for actor handling, what is for backup, and what should stay boxed until needed.
Quick Answer
Transport and store prop money by labeling hero stacks, fill stacks, handled stacks, backup stacks, and unused money before shoot day.
Before Transport
Label the Money by Scene Use
Do not move all prop money as one mixed box. Separate close-up money, fill money, RealAged® money, container money, and backup stacks so the crew can find what the shot needs quickly.
View Shoot Day Checklist →
After Filming
Return Each Group to Its Place
After a take or scene, collect loose bills, rebuild stack groups, return unused money to storage, and keep backup stacks ready for the next setup.
View Continuity Guide →
Prop Money Transport and Storage Checklist
| Storage Group |
How to Label It |
Why It Matters |
Shop / Guide |
|
Hero MoneyClose-up stacks, feature bills, insert-shot money, and camera-facing cash. |
Label by scene number, shot type, and whether the money is for close-up use only. |
The best money should not get mixed into background fill or hidden areas. |
Shop Close-Ups |
|
Fill MoneyStacks used for tables, safes, bags, briefcases, piles, and wide-shot coverage. |
Label by setup type, visible area, and whether the stacks are foreground or background fill. |
Fill money creates volume and depth, but it should still be easy to reset and control. |
Plan Bulk Money |
|
RealAged® MoneyHandled, gritty, worn, hidden, recovered, or evidence-style cash. |
Label by scene tone, aging style, and whether it should stay separate from clean stacks. |
Aged and clean cash should not mix unless the scene intentionally calls for it. |
Shop RealAged® |
|
Container MoneyCash used inside duffle bags, briefcases, safes, boxes, drawers, or cases. |
Label by container, top layer, front row, hidden support, and backup fill. |
Container scenes depend on the visible opening, not just the total amount inside. |
Shop Duffle Bags |
|
Handled MoneyMoney counted, grabbed, tossed, carried, dumped, passed, or used with props. |
Label by actor action, starting position, reset position, and backup stack. |
Handled money moves between takes and needs a clear reset plan. |
View Money Counter |
|
Unused BackupExtra stacks held for continuity, deeper fill, camera changes, and emergencies. |
Label as backup only and keep separate from active scene money. |
Backup money helps solve problems without disturbing the prepared setup. |
Stack Simulator |
Build a Prop Money Transport Kit
A transport kit keeps the money organized before the scene, during the shoot, and after the final reset.
Kit Item 01
Labeled Bags
Use separate bags for hero stacks, fill stacks, backup stacks, RealAged® stacks, and handled money.
Kit Item 02
Scene Cards
Write scene number, setup name, shot type, cash style, reset notes, and container use on each label.
Kit Item 03
Reference Photos
Keep photos of table layouts, bag openings, safe shelves, case rows, and money positions for continuity.
Kit Item 04
Backup Box
Keep extra stacks boxed and separate so they are ready for changes without disrupting the active setup.
The Prop Money Movement Workflow
Use this workflow whenever prop money moves from storage to set, from set to reset, or from one shoot location to another.
Step 01
Check Out
Confirm which labeled groups are leaving storage and which scene they are assigned to.
Step 02
Stage
Place only the money needed for the active setup. Keep backups nearby but separate.
Step 03
Film
Track which stacks are handled, moved, counted, dumped, carried, or placed in containers.
Step 04
Reset
Rebuild the layout from reference photos and return loose bills to their correct group.
Step 05
Return
Box unused money, label changed groups, and store everything separately from real currency.
Storage Notes by Scene Type
Bags
Duffle Bag Scenes
Keep top-layer stacks separate from support fill so the bag can be reset quickly after opening, carrying, or dumping.
Shop Duffle Bags →
Cases
Briefcase Scenes
Store the front row, top row, and background fill separately so the case reveal stays consistent between takes.
Shop Briefcases →
Safes
Safe Scenes
Label shelf rows, front stacks, and dark-corner fill so the safe looks full from the camera angle.
Safe Scene Guide →
Tables
Cash Table Scenes
Keep foreground rows, background rows, loose bills, and reset stacks separated before the table is dressed.
Cash Table Guide →
Counting
Money Counting Scenes
Separate starting stacks, counted piles, loose bills, machine-use stacks, and backup reset money.
View Money Counter →
Evidence
Evidence Table Scenes
Store labeled groups separately so seized cash, documents, envelopes, and table sections reset cleanly.
Evidence Table Guide →
Transport and Storage Do’s and Don’ts
Do
- Label prop money by scene, shot type, and purpose.
- Separate hero money from background fill.
- Keep RealAged® and clean stacks separate unless intentionally mixed.
- Store unused backup stacks away from active shooting areas.
- Return loose bills to the correct group after each take.
Don’t
- Move all prop money in one mixed container.
- Let close-up money become hidden fill.
- Mix prop money with real currency or personal items.
- Leave loose bills uncontrolled after filming.
- Forget to photograph layouts before breaking down the scene.
Shop and Organize Prop Money for Production
Use these links to choose, organize, transport, and store prop money for close-ups, wide shots, bags, safes, tables, and production resets.
Prop Money Transport and Storage FAQs
How should prop money be transported to set?
Prop money should be transported in labeled groups, such as hero money, fill money, handled money, RealAged® money, container money, and backup stacks. Keep it separate from real cash and personal items.
How should prop money be stored after filming?
After filming, collect loose bills, rebuild stack groups, return unused money to labeled storage, and keep backup stacks separate for future resets or scene changes.
Should clean and aged prop money be stored separately?
Yes. Clean prop money and RealAged® prop money should stay separate unless the scene intentionally uses a mixed cash look.
What is the best way to label prop money for a shoot?
Label prop money by scene number, shot type, cash style, intended use, container, reset notes, and whether it is hero money, fill money, handled money, or backup money.
Where can productions buy prop money and storage-friendly props?
Productions can shop Full Print prop money, RealAged® prop money, Close-Up bills, bulk prop money, duffle bags, briefcases, money counters, and planning tools through Prop Money Inc.
Keep the Prop Money Organized From Prep to Wrap
Shop Full Print, RealAged®, Close-Up bills, bulk prop money, duffle bags, briefcases, money counters, and stack planning tools for production scenes.
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