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Best golf simulator under $2,000

A sub-$2,000 build is where most home golfers start — and it's genuinely good. Here's exactly where the money goes and how to get a real, playable setup without overspending.

Last updated: June 2026 · See our methodology. Prices indicative — confirm on the retailer's page.

Short answer: spend the budget on the launch monitor (Garmin R10, ~$600), add a net or starter enclosure + a quality mat, and use a laptop you own. Skip the projector at first. That's a real sim under $2,000. Disclosure.

Where the money goes

PartBudget pickApprox. cost
Launch monitorGarmin Approach R10~$600
Hitting net / starter enclosureNet or budget frame + screen~$150–600
Hitting matQuality mat + landing pad~$150–400
DisplayLaptop / tablet you own$0
SoftwareGSPro or E6 (subscription)~$200/yr

The smart way to spend it

The launch monitor is what makes it a simulator — put the money there first. Everything else (screen, projector, fancy enclosure) can be added later. A net plus a great mat and the Garmin R10 gives you accurate data and playable rounds on a laptop today, and a clear upgrade path tomorrow.

Fits a low ceiling

This build is naturally low-ceiling friendly — the R10 is a floor unit, and a net needs no overhead mount. Just confirm your hitting depth with the room-fit calculator, since the R10 likes a little room to read ball flight.

Recommended starting point

If you'd rather buy a matched bundle than source parts, retailers package budget net-and-mat kits that pair well with the R10.

Check Garmin R10 price → Browse budget bundles →

Reader-supported: some links are affiliate links — we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you. Picks reflect value and fit, not commissions. Details.

Check it fits your room

Run your measurements through the free room-fit calculator for a verdict and a build sized to your space.

FAQ

Can you build a golf simulator for under $2,000?
Yes — Garmin R10 (~$600) + net/starter enclosure + a quality mat + a laptop you own + software. Real and playable, well under budget.
What is the cheapest launch monitor that works well?
The Garmin Approach R10 (~$600) — portable radar, genuinely useful data, low-ceiling friendly.
Do I need a projector under $2,000?
No — hit into a net and view on a laptop/TV. Add a short-throw projector and screen later.

Related

Under $5,000 · Garmin R10 review · Best low-ceiling simulators · Room-fit calculator