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Practical home simulator buying guide

Golf Simulator Room Size Guide

Indoor golf simulator room layout with hitting area and full screen

A lot of buyers ask whether a room is big enough for a golf simulator. That is not quite the right question. The better question is whether the room will let you swing naturally, place the launch monitor correctly, and use the setup often enough that it still feels like a good buy six months later.

Still not sure the room works?

These pages help if ceiling height, room depth, or overall tightness still feel like the real problem.

The common mistake is treating minimum dimensions like recommended dimensions. A room can technically work and still make the whole build feel cramped, compromised, or annoying every time you set it up.

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Direct answer: You need enough width, depth, and ceiling height for safe full swings, realistic launch-monitor placement, and comfortable ball-to-screen spacing. The minimum workable room is smaller than the room that actually feels good to use. If you are building in a tighter room, the smartest move is usually changing the setup path, not pretending the space is bigger than it is.

Start with three questions

Width matters more than many buyers expect

Width is what usually decides whether a room feels playable or claustrophobic. Tight side clearance affects confidence long before it becomes a true safety issue. That matters even more for taller players, aggressive swings, and mixed-use rooms where you cannot always stand in the perfect spot.

If a room is narrow, the smarter path is often a smaller-space-friendly setup, a simpler enclosure, or a launch monitor that does not force extra compromises.

Depth decides how compressed the whole setup feels

Depth affects ball-to-screen distance, golfer comfort, and whether a radar-based monitor makes sense. It also affects whether the room feels like a simulator room or a forced practice corner.

Shallow rooms can still work, but they usually reward simpler, more indoor-friendly monitor choices and more realistic expectations about projector placement and enclosure size.

Ceiling height decides whether you trust the room

The real issue with ceiling height is not only physical clearance. It is confidence. If you feel the need to steer the club around the room, the simulator will not feel right no matter how good the rest of the gear is.

That is why ceiling height deserves its own page. Lower ceilings can still work, but the best answer often changes with golfer height, swing shape, and whether driver matters.

Minimum workable versus comfortable

Minimum workable

This is the room where the simulator can exist if you accept tradeoffs. You may need to position carefully, choose clubs more selectively, or live with a setup that feels more like practice than a polished sim room.

Comfortable

This is the room where the simulator starts to feel natural. You are not thinking about side walls, back walls, ceiling contact, or whether the launch monitor is barely getting by.

That difference matters because buyers routinely overspend on equipment trying to fix what is really a room problem.

How room type changes the answer

Garage

Often the most practical location because it can tolerate ball containment and swing noise better than the rest of the house. The tradeoffs are slab floors, temperature swings, shared-use space, and garage-door hardware.

Basement

Often the best place for a permanent sim room if the ceiling works. If the ceiling does not work, buyers often fool themselves because the room feels private and finished.

Spare bedroom or bonus room

These rooms can work very well when the dimensions cooperate, but they punish bad launch-monitor choices quickly.

One-car garage

Sometimes possible, often more compromised than buyers want to admit. That is why the one-car garage deserves its own decision page.

Launch monitor choice can make a room feel bigger or smaller

This is one of the biggest missed points in the whole category. A room that feels awkward with a radar unit may feel completely reasonable with a more indoor-friendly alternative. That is why the launch monitor should follow the room, not the other way around.

When a room is probably not worth forcing

Bottom line

A good golf simulator room is not just the room where the ball stays inside. It is the room where the setup feels easy enough, safe enough, and natural enough that you actually want to use it. Start with the room, then build the equipment around that reality.

Use the room-size answer to narrow the buying answer.