Perth Film Studios 

$233 million facility puts WA on the global stage

An aerial view of the Perth Film Studios
Photo: Perth Film Studios. Photo by Simon Westlake

Project overview

Perth Film Studios is Western Australia’s first permanent, purpose built screen production facility and will shine a spotlight on the local creative industry and place the state in a strong position to attract larger national and international film, television and gaming projects.  

The Studios were delivered through a partnership between the WA Government and industry and provide world class infrastructure for film, television, games and digital content production. They give Western Australia the scale, flexibility and infrastructure needed to attract large national and international productions. 

The WA Government has invested more than $290 million in Perth Film Studios. This includes $233.5 million for design and construction and $57 million to support operations and facilities management over the first 10 years through an agreement with Perth based operator Home Fire. 

This investment supports economic diversification, creates skilled jobs and helps people build creative careers in Western Australia. 

Perth Film Studios reached practical completion in December 2025 with the first screen production at the Studios in early 2026.  

Supporting the screen industry 

A key pillar of the Western Australian Government’s strategy to grow the screen industry is the development of Perth Film Studios.  As the largest of eight initiatives under the Western Australian Screen Industry Strategy, the Studios provide the infrastructure needed to support the Strategy’s 10-year vision, including increasing production activity, building a skilled local workforce, and growing the volume of locally produced content and stories from WA creatives.  Perth Film Studios plays a central role in the WA Government’s approach to growing the screen industry. 

The Studios support the WA Government’s Diversify WA framework by: 

  • growing the creative industries as a high value sector 
  • attracting national and international investment 
  • creating long term, skilled employment 
  • supporting Western Australian businesses and suppliers. 

Alignment with Creative WA, the state’s 10‑year vision to strengthen the creative, cultural and arts sector and grow employment across creative disciplines.  

Together, these strategies position screen production as an important driver of economic diversification and future growth in Western Australia.

The Arts and Culture Trust (ACT) owns the Perth Film Studios on behalf of the State. They hold an operational agreement with Home Fire Operations Pty Ltd and oversee operational management at the facility. 

Location

Just 25 minutes from Perth’s CBD, the Perth Film Studios site is located in Malaga.

An aerial photo of the Perth Film Stuios with the Perth CBD in the far distance

 

The 16 hectare site at Malaga offers the scale required for a world-class studio, proximity to the Perth CBD and airport, direct access to major road networks and alignment with current and future METRONET infrastructure. The site also provides flexibility for expansion and integration with broader precinct planning.  

The Malaga site allows Perth Film Studios to operate as a fully integrated production campus capable of servicing major international projects while remaining connected to a range of filming locations across the state. 

Studio facilities 

Perth Film Studios has been purpose built to meet international production standards, offering world-class facilities for local and global projects. 

Designed for scale, flexibility and confidentiality the Studios have 4 sound stages totalling 8,361m2 (90,000ft2), 2 annexes with dedicated hair and make-up facilities, production offices, green rooms and meeting rooms along with a screening room and 4 workshops with lockups. 

The 23,200 square metre back lot is the largest in the southern hemisphere and is larger than the playing field at Optus Stadium, providing plenty of space for filmmakers to build exterior sets for filming. This is supported by a boneyard for multifunction use as required by productions. 

Each sound stage, workshop and annex can function as a separate, secure and standalone screen production operation to enable multiple screen operators to use the site whilst protecting intellectual property and production confidentiality. Alternatively, a single large screen production can hire out the entire facility. 

2 photos of Perth Film Stuidos.  The makeup room, and a theatre room.
 
2 photos of the studio space at Perth Film Studios
 
2 photos of the amenities at Perth Film Studios - the covered outdoor area, and a cafe.
 
2 photos of the exterior of the Perth Film Studios complex
 
An aerial photo of the 4 buildings and large car park at the Perth Film Studios

 

Perth Film Studio backlot is 23,200m2  

Photos by Simon Westlake

Timeline

2020
First steps

WA Government seeks proposals from private sector to locate, build and operate Perth's first ever screen production facility, through a 'market-led proposal' process.

2021
Government funds facility

WA Government announces its support of $106.9 million towards the cost of building the screen production facility ($105m 2021-22 election commitment, $1.9m 2023-24 budget).

2021
MLP progress

Stage 1 and 2 of MLP process progresses. Announcement of film studio located in Fremantle.

2022
Negotiations and due diligence

WA Government invites Home Fire Creative Industries to progress to negotiations and conducts due diligence.

2022 Malaga site announced.

Change of location is announced with Malaga as the preferred site.

2023
Development application approval for the site

March 2023: Home Fire submitted development application with the City of Swan. 85% of responses supported the proposal. May 2023, development application granted for the Malaga site.

2023
Delivery agreement signed

Delivery agreement is approved by WA Cabinet, signed by Department of Finance and Home Fire. November 2023 Home Fire is granted approval to commence forward works.

2023
Design and construct agreement

Home Fire entered into a design and construct contract with Built Pty Ltd.

2023
Forward works commence

November 2023 Home Fire commences forward works at the Malaga site.

2024
Construction begins

Forward works are complete and construction begins.

2024
Operational agreement signed

In May 2024, the operational agreement between the Arts and Culture Trust and Home Fire Operations was signed.

December 2025
Practical completion achieved

2026
First production

Commenced first quarter 2026

First productions at the Studios 

Production activity at Perth Film Studios began in 2026 with Two Birds, a Stan Original series expected to generate more than $17 million for the WA economy and employ more than 100 local cast and crew.

The Studios also accommodated the production of Saltwater Cowboys of Shark Bay, a First Nations-led documentary series commissioned by NITV and SBS.  

News and updates

Perth Film Studios construction milestone preview tour

Apr 17, 2025, 15:16 PM by User Not Found
Construction of Perth Film Studios is now 60 per cent complete, on time and on budget, with the cameras expected to start rolling by April 2026.

Perth media got a sneak-peak of Studio 1 and the complex today.

When completed, the $233.5 million project will have a total of 8,200 square metres of interior production space within the studio complex.

Covering 16-hectares, the complex incorporates production offices, green rooms, dressing rooms, costume, makeup and laundry areas housed in the ‘breezeway’, between the four sound studios.

Two huge workshops will accommodate set build and storage while the 23,200 square metre back lot, which is larger than the playing field at Optus Stadium, will enable filmmakers to build exterior sets for filming.

The Perth Film Studio project is a key part of WA’s economic diversification strategy, designed to help grow jobs and attract investment.

It is anticipated that that, over the next 10 years, Perth Film Studios will attract up to 10 per cent of Australia’s annual screen productions, compared to the current one per cent.

More than 200 people are employed directly on the site with one-fifth of the workforce being apprentices or trainees and approximately six per cent of the workforce being First Nations peoples.

Local jobs have also been created through the use of local suppliers and manufacturers, including more than 1,670 tonnes of locally acquired and fabricated steel.

The Arts and Culture Trust will be the owner of Perth Film Studios on behalf of the WA Government, and operated under agreement by Perth-based company Home Fire.

2 photos of the huge Perth Film Studios construction.
Page reviewed 10 July 2026