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Golf simulator room size: the dimensions you actually need
The honest answer to "how big a room do I need for a golf simulator?" — minimum vs comfortable measurements for ceiling, width and depth, what changes by room type, and how to make a tight space work.
Last updated: June 2026 · See our methodology.
The three measurements that decide everything
Most people start by worrying about floor area. In practice the order of importance is ceiling height first, then width, then depth. Get the ceiling wrong and nothing else matters — you simply can't swing. Here's the full picture in one table:
| Dimension | Comfortable | Workable | Too tight |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ceiling height | 9–10 ft (2.7–3.0 m) | 8.5 ft (2.6 m) | under ~8 ft → irons & data only |
| Width (single golfer) | 11 ft+ (3.4 m) | 9–11 ft | under 9 ft |
| Width (right & left-handed) | 13 ft+ (4.0 m) | 11–13 ft | under 11 ft |
| Depth (length) | 16–18 ft (4.9–5.5 m) | 12–15 ft | under ~10 ft |
The single best move before you buy anything: run your exact room through the calculator. It applies these thresholds to your numbers and tells you which launch-monitor type and build actually fit.
Ceiling height: the make-or-break number
A full driver swing brings the clubhead well above your head at the top of the backswing. That's why 9–10 ft of clearance is the comfort zone and why ceiling height — not floor space — is what stops most builds. Crucially, measure to the lowest obstruction: a light fixture, an HVAC duct, a ceiling fan or a garage-door track, not the highest point of the ceiling.
- 9–10 ft: full swings with every club, including driver, for most players.
- 8.5 ft: workable for shorter players and flatter swings; taller players may feel cramped on driver.
- Under ~8 ft: stick to irons, wedges and putting — still fully playable with a launch monitor for data and simulated rounds.
Player height matters: the limiting factor is the arc of the club, so a 6'4" golfer needs more headroom than a 5'6" one at the same ceiling. Our deep-dive: golf simulator ceiling height.
Width: one golfer or two-sided?
Width is driven by how you'll use the bay. A single right- or left-handed golfer is comfortable from about 11 ft — enough for the hitting strip, a little side clearance and the screen. If you want both right- and left-handed players to play without repositioning the screen, plan for about 13 ft, because each handedness sets up on the opposite side of the bay.
In a narrow room, commit to a single hitting side and an offset position — tee placed off-centre so your swing plane clears the side walls. Your usable impact-screen width is roughly the room width minus 2 ft, typically landing between 8 and 12 ft.
Depth: leave room behind the ball
Depth has to cover three things stacked front-to-back: the gap between the screen and the ball (so the ball decelerates safely), the tee/hitting area, and space behind you for the backswing and follow-through. 16–18 ft is comfortable. You can compress to 12–15 ft with a short-throw projector (mounted close to the screen to avoid casting a shadow) and a shorter ball-to-screen distance of around 8–10 ft. Below ~10 ft total gets genuinely tight and limits club choice.
What changes by room type
| Room | Usual constraint | What to check first |
|---|---|---|
| Two-car garage | Ceiling & door track | Height to the garage-door rail; depth with the door closed |
| Basement | Ceiling (ducts/beams) | Lowest duct, beam or pipe — not the joists |
| Spare bedroom | Depth & width | Diagonal layout can buy depth; offset hitting position |
| Purpose-built room | Budget, not space | Spec the screen/enclosure to the room, then the launch monitor |
Garage specifics: will a golf simulator fit in a garage? Low or awkward ceilings: best simulators for low ceilings.
Recommended setup once your room checks out
For most home rooms that pass the calculator, a mid-range build — a quality launch monitor, a full enclosure with an impact screen sized to your bay, a short-throw projector and a commercial-grade mat — hits the sweet spot of realism and value. Carl's Place is a sensible first stop because they sell complete, room-sized packages (enclosure, screen, mat) rather than just a single component.
Browse room-sized simulator packages →
Check your exact room
Numbers in a table only get you so far. Enter your length, width and ceiling height in the free room-fit calculator for an instant verdict, the right launch-monitor type, and a build sized to your space.
FAQ
- What size room do you need for a golf simulator?
- Comfortable: ~9–10 ft ceiling, 12–15 ft width, 16–18 ft depth. Workable minimum: ~8.5 ft × 10 ft × 12 ft with a floor-based launch monitor and an offset hitting position.
- What is the minimum ceiling height?
- About 8.5 ft for a full swing for most players; 9–10 ft is comfortable with driver. Under ~8 ft you're limited to irons and short game.
- How wide does the room need to be?
- ~11 ft for a single golfer; ~13 ft if both right- and left-handed players need to set up without moving the screen.
- How much depth do I need?
- 16–18 ft is comfortable; 12–15 ft works with a short-throw projector and a shorter ball-to-screen gap.
Related
Ceiling height guide · Will it fit a garage? · Best low-ceiling simulators · Room-fit calculator