How Long Should a Screenplay Be? Pages, Runtime and the 1-Page-1-Minute Rule
Ninety to a hundred and twenty pages is the answer everyone gives. It is correct and almost useless on its own. Here is what page count really tells you about your script.
How long should a screenplay be? The stock answer is 90 to 120 pages for a feature, and it is correct. It is also almost useless on its own, the way "eat healthy" is technically correct nutrition advice. The number is easy. What the number is telling you about your story is the part worth understanding. So let me give you the range, and then the thing the range is actually measuring.
The foundation is the one-page-one-minute rule. Because a screenplay is set in monospaced Courier with fixed margins, one properly formatted page runs roughly one minute of finished film. So 110 pages is about a 110 minute film. That single fact organises everything else, and if you want the mechanics of why the format produces this, I covered them in screenplay format explained.
The numbers, honestly
Here is the working map, the one most professionals carry in their heads. The overviews at No Film School and ScreenCraft land on the same ranges.
- Feature film: 90 to 120 pages. The comfortable sweet spot for a spec script, the one you write on your own to get noticed, is closer to 95 to 110. Under 90 reads thin. Over 120 reads self-indulgent.
- Comedy: tends to run shorter, often 90 to 100 pages, because comedy dies when it overstays.
- Drama and epic: can stretch toward 120, occasionally beyond, but every extra page has to earn its place.
- Short film: anything under 40 pages, and most live between 5 and 20. A different animal, which I treat separately in short film versus feature.
If you are a first-time writer with no credits, keep your feature under 115 pages. A long script from an unknown name reads as a writer who cannot cut, and cutting is most of the job.
Why a spec script should lean short
Think about the reader on the other end. A script reader at a production company might work through six scripts in a weekend. They are tired. They are looking for a reason to stop. A 120-page script from a stranger is a bigger ask than a 100-page one, and the reader knows, before page one, that a leaner script usually signals a sharper writer.
Look at how the tight films operate. Whiplash runs about 106 minutes and never has a spare ounce on it. Every scene either tightens the screw between the drummer and his teacher or shows us the cost. That economy is not an accident of editing. It was built into the writing, where a lean page count forced every scene to justify itself. Length discipline is story discipline wearing a stopwatch.
A short script from an unknown says: I know what to cut. That sentence gets you read.
Page count is a symptom, not a disease
Here is the reframe that actually helps. When your script comes out at 140 pages, the problem is almost never that you wrote too many words. The problem is upstream. A bloated script is a story that has not decided what it is about. Scenes that repeat the same beat. Characters explaining things the audience already understood. Three versions of the same argument because you could not choose the best one.
So do not attack length by trimming adjectives. Attack it by finding the scenes that do not change anything. A scene that ends with the story in the same place it started is a scene you can cut, and cutting it will fix your page count as a side effect. This is why length and structure are the same conversation. If your second act sags to 70 pages, you do not have a length problem, you have a middle that lost its engine.
What the great short films teach the long ones
The most valuable exercise for a writer worried about length is to write something with almost no room at all. When I made CLICK, my one produced short, the discipline of a few minutes taught me more about economy than any feature draft had. With no space to hide, you learn that a single image can carry what you were spending three pages to say. Toy Story, at a lean 81 minutes, works the same way: not a wasted beat, every scene pushing Woody's jealousy forward, because the runtime never let the writers coast.
That economy is really the show-don't-tell instinct applied to structure. When you trust one true gesture to carry a feeling, as I argue in show, don't tell, your pages shrink on their own, because you stop over-explaining. A writer who shows writes shorter. A writer who tells writes long and calls it depth.
When longer is actually right
The honest caveat, because rules that pretend to be absolute are lying to you. Some stories need room. A sprawling ensemble, a period epic, a slow character study that builds through accumulation, these can justify 120 pages and more. The distinction is simple. Length that comes from ambition is fine. Length that comes from indecision is not. The question is never "is this long?" The question is "does every page change something?" If the answer is yes at page 130, you are fine. If the answer is no at page 95, you are already too long.
The practical move
So aim for 95 to 110 on your first feature, know that the number is a mirror rather than a target, and treat any bloat as a story signal rather than a word count to shave. Before you write a single page, the discipline starts even earlier, with a logline that forces you to know what your film is about, because a story you can say in one sentence rarely balloons to 140 pages. And if you have not built the spine yet, go back to the working method and start with the person and the want. Get those right and the length tends to take care of itself.