Crime scenes often need prop money that looks handled, believable, and natural on camera. Whether the scene is for a film, TV show, music video, commercial, photoshoot, crime drama, police training video, or social media production, the cash should match the story, setting, and camera angle.
The right amount of prop money for a crime scene depends on how the cash appears. A table covered in evidence, a duffel bag reveal, a briefcase exchange, a safe, a floor pile, a robbery scene, and a police evidence layout all need different amounts and different styling.
This guide helps producers, prop masters, filmmakers, photographers, set decorators, and content teams plan crime scene prop money using RealAged® cash, banded stacks, loose bills, bags, briefcases, table layouts, and production-ready cash setups.
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Crime Scenes Need Cash That Matches the Story
A crime scene usually needs a different prop money look than a clean bank scene or luxury briefcase reveal. Depending on the story, the cash may need to look handled, counted, hidden, seized, scattered, bagged, or displayed as evidence. The best setup starts with the camera angle and the scene action.
Quick Answer
Use RealAged® cash for handled crime scenes, clean stacks for evidence layouts, and bulk prop money when the shot needs more visible volume.
Crime Scene Prop Money Layouts
Handled Cash
RealAged®
Use RealAged® prop money when the cash should look worn, handled, hidden, counted, or seized.
Evidence Table
Cash Layout
Build table scenes with stacks, rows, loose bills, counting areas, and visible surface coverage.
Bag Scene
Duffel Bag
Plan duffel bag scenes around visible fill, bag size, movement, and whether the cash is revealed or dumped.
Exchange Scene
Briefcase
Use organized stacks for briefcase exchanges, controlled reveals, and character-driven handoff scenes.
Large Scene
Bulk Volume
For piles, safes, bags, wide shots, room dressing, and large scenes, bulk prop money is usually best.
Production
Movie Scenes
Plan the amount around the shot size, story action, camera distance, and how the money is handled.
More Scene Planning Guides
Use these guides to plan the right amount, layout, and prop money style for crime scenes and production cash visuals.
How to Stage a Crime Scene With Prop Money
Start by deciding what role the money plays in the scene. Cash used as evidence, stolen money, hidden money, counted money, or exchanged money should not all be arranged the same way.
Step 01
Define the Story Use
Decide whether the cash is evidence, stolen money, hidden money, a payoff, a bag reveal, or a table spread.
Step 02
Choose the Cash Condition
Use aged cash for handled scenes, cleaner stacks for organized evidence, and bulk money for larger reveals.
Step 03
Dress the Camera Side
Place the most camera-ready bills where the lens sees them first, then add depth where the shot needs volume.
What Prop Money Works Best for Crime Scenes?
RealAged® prop money is usually the best fit when the scene needs handled, worn, hidden, seized, or gritty-looking cash. Standard full print stacks can still work well for cleaner evidence layouts, organized briefcase scenes, bank-related crime scenes, or wide shots where the money is not seen up close.
Prop money is not legal tender and is made for production, photography, display, novelty, training, and creative use. Choose the amount and style based on shot distance, handling, realism level, scene action, and how close the camera gets.
Common Crime Scene Cash Mistakes
MISTAKE 01
Making It Too Clean
Many crime scenes need cash that looks handled, moved, hidden, seized, or interacted with.
MISTAKE 02
Ignoring Evidence Layout
Evidence scenes should feel arranged and readable, not randomly thrown together unless the story calls for chaos.
MISTAKE 03
Not Using Enough Depth
Bags, safes, piles, and wide shots can look underfilled if the camera sees empty spaces.
MISTAKE 04
Using One Look for Every Scene
A robbery scene, evidence table, hidden stash, briefcase exchange, and police training scene need different cash layouts.
Crime Scene Prop Money FAQs
What prop money should I use for a crime scene?
RealAged® prop money is usually a strong choice for crime scenes that need handled, worn, hidden, seized, or gritty-looking cash. Cleaner stacks can work better for organized evidence layouts or controlled briefcase scenes.
How much prop money do I need for a crime scene?
It depends on the shot. A close-up or evidence table may need fewer stacks, while a duffel bag, safe, pile, robbery scene, or wide shot may need bulk prop money for coverage and depth.
Should crime scene cash look clean or aged?
Aged cash usually works best for handled, hidden, seized, or gritty scenes. Cleaner stacks can work for police evidence layouts, bank-related crime scenes, briefcase exchanges, or controlled visual setups.
Can prop money be used for police training videos?
Prop money can be used for production, photography, display, novelty, training, and creative visuals when used appropriately. It is not legal tender and should not be used as real currency.
Where can I buy prop money for crime scenes?
Start with RealAged® prop money, bulk prop money, realistic prop money, and production-ready cash depending on the crime scene style, amount of visible cash, and camera distance.
Build a Better Crime Scene
Shop RealAged® prop money, bulk stacks, and production-ready cash options for crime scenes, evidence tables, duffel bags, briefcases, safes, movie scenes, and training visuals.
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