Martinique

Hoodlum offers expert film fixer services in Martinique, helping international productions manage French overseas visa requirements, permits, location agreements, drone compliance, customs procedures and local production logistics.

Ultimate Filming Guide for Martinique

Capital

Fort-de-France

Main Cities

Le Lamentin, Saint-Pierre, Le Marin

Local Languages

French, Martinican Creole

Currency

Euro (EUR)

Climate

Tropical climate. Wet and hurricane season generally runs from June to November, with drier months from December to May.

General Visa Requirements:

Martinique is a French overseas department. Visa rules for French overseas departments may differ from mainland Schengen rules. EU/EEA nationals enter visa-free, while other nationalities should check France-Visas for the correct overseas-territory visa requirement.

Required Documents:

  • Valid passport
  • France-Visas application
  • Passport photo
  • Proof of accommodation
  • Return / onward ticket
  • Proof of funds
  • Travel medical insurance
  • Production invitation / purpose letter

Visa Application Process:

Processing Time:

Processing typically takes 15–30 days depending on consulate and visa type.

Cost:

Visa fees vary; confirm through France-Visas.

Accreditation Requirements:

French/EU employment and production rules apply. Non-EU crew should confirm visa and work authorisation requirements. A local production partner or film commission contact is recommended.

Required Documents:

  • Production company profile
  • Synopsis / script / treatment
  • Production schedule
  • Crew list with names, roles and nationalities
  • Passport copies for non-EU crew
  • Equipment and vehicle list
  • Insurance details
  • Location list
  • Local production partner / fixer details
  • Production invitation or purpose letter
  • Work authorisation documents, where required

Processing Time:

Allow approximately 2–4 weeks. Longer timelines may apply for non-EU crew, road control, public disruption, protected areas, drone activity or productions requiring multiple municipal approvals.

Cost:

No official fee stated. Any work authorisation, production accreditation or facilitation costs should be confirmed directly with France-Visas, local authorities, Film France, local production partners or the relevant consulate.

Issuing Organization:

Permits may be issued through local municipalities, the prefecture, public land managers and film-support bodies depending on the filming locations.

Required Documents:

  • Synopsis / script / treatment
  • Production schedule
  • Crew list
  • Equipment and vehicles
  • Insurance
  • Location list
  • Drone plan, if applicable

Processing Time:

Allow 2–4 weeks. Longer timelines may apply for roads, public disruption, protected areas or drones.

Cost:

Fees vary by municipality and services required.

Location Scouting / Location Permits Information:

Owner approvals and contracts are required for private locations. Beaches, marinas, heritage properties and protected sites may need additional approvals.

Location Scouting / Permitting Cost & Processing Time

Location costs vary by owner, municipality, site type, public services required and production duration.

Drone Regulations:

French/EU drone regulations apply. Professional drone filming must comply with DGAC and the French civil aviation framework.

Drone Importation Regulations:

EU/French documentation should be carried, including registration, pilot qualification, insurance and serial numbers.

Permit Issuance:

Drone activity is overseen by DGAC / French civil aviation framework.

Timing:

Allow 1–3 weeks depending on operating category.

Cost:

Fees vary.

Carnet Status:

France accepts ATA Carnets. Confirm routing and customs handling for Martinique.

Required Documents:

  • ATA Carnet or temporary admission
  • Equipment list and values
  • Customs declaration, if required

Issuing Organization:

Customs clearance is handled through French customs authorities and relevant customs or freight brokers.

Timing:

Clearance may take from same day to several working days depending on arrival mode.

Cost:

Carnet, broker, freight and handling costs may apply.

General Overview:

Martinique is generally safe and stable. Productions should account for weather, traffic, mountain/coastal terrain and marine safety.

Security Requirements:

  • Secure equipment and valuables on location
  • Plan for traffic management where required
  • Use local support for beaches, marinas, mountains and protected sites
  • Monitor weather during wet / hurricane season
  • Confirm marine safety arrangements for boat or coastal work
  • Keep French permit documentation available on set

Rebates/Incentives:

French tax rebates and regional support may apply for qualifying productions. Eligibility should be confirmed with CNC, Film France and local partners.

Useful links:
https://www.cnc.fr/
https://www.filmfrance.net/

Available Support

French national tax rebates and regional production support may be available for qualifying productions, subject to eligibility and approval.

Who Can Apply

Eligibility depends on the specific French national or regional support scheme, production type, applicant structure and approval requirements.

How It Fits With Permits & Visas

Incentives, visas, work authorisations, filming permits, drone approvals and customs clearance are separate processes.

Best Practices for Productions

  • Check France-Visas for the correct overseas-territory entry category.
  • Coordinate early with local film support and municipalities.
  • Pre-clear roads, ports, beaches and protected areas.
  • Use EU-compliant drone operators.
  • Keep French permit documentation on set.

Meet our Local Team

Sid

Sid is a Caribbean-based producer, production manager, and fixer with extensive experience supporting international television and film productions across the region. Her work spans production management, local producing, and location coordination, with credits including Mr Loverman (Antiguan Line Producer), The Caribbean with Andi and Miquita (Local Producer), Alegría, and The Last Island. With strong regional knowledge, logistical expertise, and experience facilitating international crews, Sid provides reliable on-the-ground support, local access, and seamless production coordination, making her a trusted fixer for projects filming across the Caribbean.

Sid

Sid is a Caribbean-based producer, production manager, and fixer with extensive experience supporting international television and film productions across the region. Her work spans production management, local producing, and location coordination, with credits including Mr Loverman (Antiguan Line Producer), The Caribbean with Andi and Miquita (Local Producer), Alegría, and The Last Island. With strong regional knowledge, logistical expertise, and experience facilitating international crews, Sid provides reliable on-the-ground support, local access, and seamless production coordination, making her a trusted fixer for projects filming across the Caribbean.

Client Brief

Fill in our client brief and we’ll get back to you with everything you need to start filming in this region.

Services We Provide in Martinique

Accommodation

Airport Protocol & On-Ground Support

Casting & Talent

Catering

Crew Sourcing

Customs Clearance

Drone & Aerial Permits

Drone & Drone Operator

Equipment Rentals

Film Permits

Line Producers & Production Management

Local Film Fixers

Locations / RECCE’s

Logistics

Rebates & Incentives

Research

Risk Management

Security

Set Dressing / Production Design

Transport & Vehicles

Visas & Work Permits

The Overview

Martinique Film Production Guide for International Crews

Martinique is a strong French Caribbean filming destination for productions that need tropical coastlines, French infrastructure, volcanic landscapes, cultural depth and access to EU-aligned systems. For commercials, travel content, documentaries, branded films and factual entertainment, Martinique offers beaches, ports, towns, mountain roads, heritage settings, marine environments and varied island textures.

As a French overseas department, Martinique follows French administrative frameworks, which affects visas, work permissions, drone rules, customs procedures and potential production support. That structure can be helpful for crews familiar with European systems, but it also means documentation should be prepared properly and early.

A successful shoot depends on coordination. Film permits, French overseas visa checks, work authorisations, private location agreements, drone compliance, customs clearance and protected-area approvals should be reviewed before travel. Hoodlum supports international productions by helping visiting teams connect these separate requirements into one practical production plan.

Why Film Production Works Well in Martinique

Martinique works well for productions that need a Caribbean setting with French administrative structure and a wide range of natural and urban looks. Fort-de-France, Le Lamentin, Saint-Pierre and Le Marin can support different production needs, from city movement and marina access to coastal roads, heritage buildings, beaches and mountain terrain.

Strong production use cases include:

  • Travel and tourism campaigns
  • Commercials and branded films
  • Documentary interviews
  • Factual entertainment
  • Beach and marine filming
  • Cultural and heritage stories
  • Nature and mountain coverage
  • Small to medium international crews

French is the official language, while Martinican Creole is widely spoken. Productions should plan for French-language documentation and local translation support where needed, especially when dealing with municipalities, aviation authorities, protected areas or public land managers.

The island is useful when a production needs both Caribbean visuals and formal European-style processes. The creative range is strong, but beaches, marinas, protected sites, roads and public spaces may require additional coordination.

Best Time of Year to Film

Martinique has a tropical climate. The wet and hurricane season generally runs from June to November, while the drier months usually run from December to May.

For exterior filming, the drier months are usually the more reliable window. This is useful for:

  • Beach commercials
  • Resort campaigns
  • Drone filming
  • Marine scenes
  • Road movement
  • Travel programming
  • Mountain and coastal coverage

Filming during the wet season may still be possible, but productions should build in contingency. Tropical rain, rougher marine conditions and hurricane-season risk can affect transport, exterior continuity, equipment protection and location access.

Crews filming in Martinique should also consider traffic, heat, humidity, mountain roads and coastal exposure. Hoodlum helps productions build realistic schedules around weather windows, location access and French-language coordination.

Visa and Entry Requirements for Crew

Martinique is a French overseas department, but visa requirements for French overseas territories may differ from mainland Schengen rules. EU and EEA nationals enter visa-free. Other nationalities should check France-Visas for the correct overseas-territory visa requirement before travel.

For professional filming in Martinique, crews should not assume that a mainland Schengen visa or ordinary visitor route automatically covers the project. Purpose of travel, length of stay, nationality and employment status can all affect what is needed.

Typical visa or entry documentation may include:

  • Valid passport
  • France-Visas application
  • Passport photo
  • Proof of accommodation
  • Return or onward ticket
  • Proof of funds
  • Travel medical insurance
  • Production invitation or purpose letter

Processing is typically 15 to 30 days depending on consulate, nationality and visa type. Productions should start earlier when crew lists, invitation letters, work status and filming permissions need to align.

Hoodlum helps visiting teams prepare supporting information so visa planning stays connected to the production schedule.

International Crew Accreditation and Work Permissions

French and EU employment and production rules apply. Non-EU crew should confirm entry and work authorisation according to nationality, duration, employment status and role.

Typical documentation may include:

  • Production company profile
  • Project synopsis or treatment
  • Crew list with roles
  • Passport copies
  • Shooting schedule
  • Location list
  • Equipment list
  • Insurance details
  • Local production contact

For Martinique, paperwork should be consistent across visa, permit and production submissions. The crew list used for travel support should match the crew list used for location and municipality requests. Insurance should reflect the actual production activity, and drone plans should match aviation submissions.

Hoodlum helps productions keep these requirements organised so the approval process does not become a paper jungle with vines in triplicate.

Film Permits and Production Approval

Filming permits are generally coordinated through local municipalities, the prefecture, public land managers and film-support bodies depending on the locations involved. The correct approval route depends on the production scale, public impact and site type.

Typical permit information may include:

  • Synopsis, script or treatment
  • Production schedule
  • Crew list
  • Equipment and vehicles
  • Insurance
  • Location list
  • Drone plan, if applicable
  • Police or traffic needs, if applicable
  • Local fixer or production partner details

Martinique productions should allow two to four weeks for standard planning. Shoots involving roads, public disruption, protected areas, ports, beaches or drones may need longer.

A good permit request should be clear and specific. It should explain what will be filmed, where it will happen, how many people are involved, what equipment is being used and whether traffic, public access, environmental management or aviation permissions are affected.

Hoodlum helps productions prepare accurate submissions and coordinate with local stakeholders.

Private Locations, Beaches, Marinas and Protected Sites

Owner approvals and contracts are required for private locations. Beaches, marinas, heritage properties and protected sites may need additional approvals, depending on how the shoot affects access, safety, conservation or public use.

A strong location agreement should confirm:

  • Approved filming areas
  • Shoot dates and hours
  • Crew size
  • Equipment access
  • Parking and loading
  • Drone use, if relevant
  • Guest or public privacy rules
  • Environmental restrictions
  • Fees and payment terms
  • Restoration responsibilities

Martinique has valuable coastal, heritage and nature locations, but sensitive sites need careful handling. Mountain roads, protected landscapes, busy beaches and marina areas can all bring special rules around vehicles, generators, lighting, noise, drones and crew movement.

Hoodlum helps crews identify realistic locations, secure the correct permissions and keep the creative plan aligned with local rules.

Drone Filming Requirements

French and EU drone regulations apply. Professional drone filming must comply with the DGAC and the French civil aviation framework. Depending on the operating category, location and risk profile, flight authorisations may be required.

Typical drone documentation may include:

  • Drone registration or compliance documentation
  • Pilot certification
  • Insurance
  • Flight plan
  • Proposed dates and times
  • Take-off and landing areas
  • Nearby sensitive zones
  • Location permissions
  • Safety procedures

Crews should allow one to three weeks for drone planning, depending on the operating category. More time may be needed near populated areas, airports, ports, coastlines, protected sites or public events.

Drone importation should be supported by registration, pilot qualification, insurance and serial numbers. Hoodlum helps align drone paperwork with locations, permits and the wider schedule.

Equipment Customs Clearance

France accepts ATA Carnets, but productions should confirm routing and customs handling for Martinique before travel or shipment.

Typical customs documentation may include:

  • ATA Carnet or temporary admission paperwork
  • Equipment list with serial numbers and values
  • Proof of ownership
  • Customs declaration, if required
  • Production support letter
  • Permit support documentation
  • Freight or airway bill details, where relevant

Clearance can take the same day or several working days depending on arrival mode, shipment type and documentation. Freight shipments may need more time than equipment carried as passenger baggage.

Productions should prepare clean gear lists for cameras, lenses, drones, batteries, lighting, grip, sound equipment and specialist items. Hoodlum helps crews prepare customs documentation so the gear plan supports the shoot schedule.

Safety and Security for Productions

Martinique is generally safe and stable, but productions should account for weather, traffic, mountain and coastal terrain, marine safety, heat and hurricane-season conditions.

Key safety considerations include:

  • Secure storage for equipment
  • Supervised vehicles during location moves
  • Weather monitoring during hurricane season
  • Marine safety for boat or beach activity
  • Heat and hydration planning
  • Traffic control where required
  • Medical access for remote nature locations
  • Insurance aligned with the shoot activity
  • French-language safety communication where needed

A safe destination still needs production-specific planning. A mountain road shoot, marina scene, beach setup and drone day each carry different operational risks. Hoodlum helps productions build safety planning around the real shoot footprint.

Film Incentives and Production Benefits

French tax rebates and regional support may apply for qualifying productions, subject to eligibility and approval. Productions should confirm requirements with CNC, Film France and local partners before budgeting.

Incentives should never be assumed. Eligibility may depend on production type, spend, cultural criteria, approval timing, local activity, finance structure and official application requirements.

Before budgeting support, crews should confirm:

  • Whether the project qualifies
  • Which scheme applies
  • Whether approval is needed before spend
  • What costs are eligible
  • Whether French or local partners are required
  • What documentation is needed
  • Whether regional support is available
  • Whether customs, permits and location fees remain separate

Here, incentives and facilitation should be treated as a finance and compliance process, not a shortcut around permits.

How the Main Approvals Fit Together

Incentives, visas, work authorisations, filming permits, drone approvals and customs clearance are separate processes. One approval does not automatically unlock the others.

A visa may allow a crew member to enter, but it does not approve filming. A film permit may allow a location shoot, but it does not automatically authorise drones. A location contract may secure access, but it does not replace protected-area permissions. Customs clearance may allow equipment into Martinique, but it does not decide where that equipment can be used.

A proper plan connects:

  • Crew entry status
  • Work authorisation checks
  • Film permits
  • Municipal or prefecture approvals
  • Protected-area permissions
  • Drone authorisations
  • Customs clearance
  • Insurance
  • Safety planning

Hoodlum helps productions turn these separate requirements into one usable workflow.

When This Destination Is the Right Choice

Martinique is a strong choice when a production needs French Caribbean visuals, tropical locations, European-style systems, Creole culture, beaches, marinas, heritage towns, mountain terrain and marine access.

It is especially suitable for:

  • Tourism campaigns
  • Beach commercials
  • Cultural documentaries
  • French Caribbean stories
  • Nature and mountain filming
  • Travel programming
  • Documentary interviews
  • Branded social content
  • Small to medium crews

It may be less suitable for productions that need simplified English-only administration, large studio infrastructure, dense urban scale or very fast informal approvals. Those shoots may still be possible, but they require more preparation and stronger local coordination.

Film Production Services in Martinique are most effective when the concept fits the destination’s strengths: French Caribbean administration, tropical nature, coastal settings, heritage locations and multilingual field support.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Most production problems come from assuming mainland Schengen rules apply automatically, leaving permissions too late or underestimating protected-location requirements.

Avoid:

  • Assuming a Schengen visa always covers French overseas territories
  • Leaving film permit requests until the final week
  • Treating drone approval as automatic
  • Ignoring protected beach, mountain or heritage rules
  • Arriving with incomplete equipment lists
  • Forgetting French-language documentation
  • Underestimating wet-season weather
  • Assuming incentives apply without written confirmation
  • Booking private sites without owner authorisation
  • Working without local support on complex shoots

Film Fixers in Martinique help crews avoid these issues by checking requirements early, coordinating with the right stakeholders and keeping the production plan realistic.

How Hoodlum Supports Local Production

Hoodlum provides practical support for international crews filming in Martinique, from early research through on-the-ground execution. The aim is to make the shoot workable before the crew arrives and keep every moving part aligned during production.

Support may include:

  • Local fixer coordination
  • Film permit support
  • Location research and access
  • Municipality and location coordination
  • Protected-site planning
  • Crew and supplier coordination
  • Visa documentation support
  • Drone planning
  • Customs preparation
  • Transport coordination
  • Accommodation support
  • Safety planning
  • Weather contingency
  • French-language production support
  • On-the-ground logistics

Production Support Martinique is most valuable when crews need one clear route through visas, permits, protected sites, customs, aviation checks and daily logistics. Hoodlum helps reduce uncertainty so the production can focus on the shoot instead of the paperwork.

FAQ Section

Do international crews need a visa to film in Martinique?

Visa requirements depend on nationality, stay length and purpose of travel. EU and EEA nationals enter visa-free, while other nationalities should check France-Visas for the correct French overseas-territory entry category.

How long should productions allow for permits?

Crews should generally allow two to four weeks. Shoots involving roads, public disruption, protected areas, drones, ports, beaches or heritage sites may need longer.

Can productions use drones in Martinique?

Drone filming may be possible, but French and EU drone rules apply. Professional operators must comply with DGAC requirements, and some locations may need specific flight authorisation.

Is Martinique good for commercial filming?

Martinique is strong for tourism campaigns, beach commercials, cultural content, nature films, travel programming, branded social content and documentary interviews.

What documents are usually needed for filming approval?

Productions may need a synopsis, script or treatment, schedule, crew list, equipment and vehicle details, insurance, location list and drone plan where applicable.

Are there film incentives in Martinique?

French tax rebates and regional support may apply for qualifying productions. Eligibility should be confirmed with CNC, Film France and local partners before budgeting.

External Authority Links to Add