360 Photo Booth for Low Ceilings: Minimum Height and Alternatives
Not every venue has high ceilings. Basements, cellars, refurbished spaces or low marquees raise a very specific doubt: does a 360 photo booth fit in there? It depends on the type of equipment, and here we clear it up with actual measurements.
In Short
For low ceilings, the 360 spinning platform is the best option because its camera arm sits at the person's height, not above it: it needs about 2.3-2.5 m of clear height and has room to spare in normal venues. The Overhead 360 needs more height (around 2.7-3 m) because the arm orbits up top. With less than 2.3 m, go for the platform.
How Much Height Each Format Needs
The difference lies in where the camera moves.
360 spinning platform
The arm with the camera spins *around* the guest, at chest/head height. The critical height is set by the tallest person standing on the riser plus some margin. With 2.3-2.5 m clear it works without a problem in the vast majority of venues.
Overhead 360
Here the robotic arm passes *above* the head, so it needs more vertical room: count on 2.7-3 m for the overhead sweep to be comfortable and safe.
How to Measure Your Space
Before deciding, measure the real clear height from the floor to the lowest point of the ceiling in the area where the equipment will go (watch out for beams, lamps, air ducts or suspended ceilings).
Also subtract the height of the tallest guest you expect. There's a complete space guide at 360 photo booth: measurements and space, which helps you plan both height and floor area.
Tips for Really Low Venues
If your ceiling is tight, there's room to maneuver:
- Always choose the 360 platform over the overhead model
- Place the equipment in the highest area of the venue, away from beams and lamps
- A platform with a lower riser height gains valuable centimeters
- If it still doesn't fit, consider a magic mirror, which takes up height like a vertical panel
The Alternative: Magic Mirror
When the ceiling is too low even for the platform, the Magic Mirror (from €2,290) is the solution: it's a vertical panel where the guest poses head-on, with nothing spinning overhead. It doesn't deliver the 360 video effect, but it fits any height.
If you're set on the 360 effect, review the formats at buy a 360 photo booth and, if you're unsure about your venue, send us the measurements via contact and we'll tell you what fits.
Frequently Asked Questions
What minimum height does a 360 photo booth need?
The 360 spinning platform needs about 2.3-2.5 m of clear height, since the camera spins at the person's height. The Overhead 360 asks for more, around 2.7-3 m, because the arm orbits above the head.
Does a 360 photo booth fit in a low-ceiling basement or cellar?
The 360 spinning platform almost always fits if you have at least 2.3-2.5 m of clear height. The overhead model needs more vertical room, so for low ceilings the platform is the right choice.
Is the overhead 360 suitable for low ceilings?
It's not ideal. Since the robotic arm passes above the guest's head, it needs about 2.7-3 m of height. If your ceiling is below that, the spinning platform is the better choice.
What do I do if my ceiling is lower than 2.3 meters?
In that case the magic mirror is the best alternative: it's a vertical panel where you pose head-on, with nothing spinning overhead, so it fits any height even though it doesn't deliver the 360 video effect.
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