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Practical home simulator buying guide

Golf Simulator Cost Guide

Golf simulator setup in a realistic home garage

The mistake most buyers make on cost is assuming the decision is simple: cheap setup versus expensive setup. The real question is whether you are spending at the right level for your room, your expectations, and how polished you want the experience to feel.

A lower-cost setup can be smart. A more expensive setup can also be smart. What gets expensive fast is buying the wrong level of simulator for the room and then trying to fix the mismatch with more gear.

How this site makes recommendations

IndoorGolfSetup.com sorts setups and products by room fit, budget realism, and long-term livability. Read How We Evaluate Golf Simulator Gear for the full methodology.

Direct answer: Most home simulator builds land in one of four tiers: starter, value-focused, serious home sim, and premium dedicated room. The biggest budget drivers are the launch monitor, mat, enclosure/screen, projector or display path, simulator software, and whether the room itself forces compromises.

What changes as you spend more

Starter budget: good enough, not glamorous

This tier works for buyers who want a way into simulator golf without pretending they are building the final dream room on day one. The right version of this build usually means a budget monitor, a simpler net or basic containment setup, and a willingness to leave some polish for later.

The mistake here is trying to fake a premium build instead of building an honest starter setup.

Value-focused budget: where many buyers should start

This is the sweet spot for a lot of home users. The setup starts to feel more complete, the monitor choice gets better, and you can stop spending every session thinking about what is missing.

This is usually where the site starts pushing buyers away from the absolute cheapest option and toward the smartest option for the room.

Serious home sim budget: where the setup starts to feel worth it

This is where buyers often stop asking, “Can I make this work?” and start asking, “What setup will I still be happy with next year?” Better indoor monitors, better mats, stronger projector paths, and cleaner enclosures all start making more sense here.

Premium dedicated-room budget: best for committed buyers

This tier is not just about better numbers. It is about a room that feels finished, less compromised, and easier to enjoy regularly. It makes the most sense when the simulator is becoming a real part of home life rather than a fun experiment.

Where the money actually goes

Where to save money first

Where not to cheap out

Cheapest possible is not the same as cheapest worthwhile

That line matters on this site. A cheap setup is only a good value if it still suits the room and the buyer. If the setup is frustrating enough that you avoid it, the cheaper build was not the bargain.

Bottom line

Spend enough to build the right level of simulator for your room and goals, then stop. The smart build is not the cheapest one or the flashiest one. It is the one that feels good enough to use regularly without regretting the spend.

Budget gets clearer once you decide what kind of setup you are actually building.