A small room doesn't mean you can't build a good simulator — it means you need to be more deliberate about every decision. The monitors, enclosures, and setups that work well in a 20 ft room often fail in a 12 ft one. This guide focuses specifically on what works in tight spaces and what to avoid.
What counts as a small space
For simulator purposes, a small space is anything under 15 ft of usable depth or under 10 ft of ceiling height at the hitting position. These constraints eliminate some options but don't eliminate a good simulator experience.
| Constraint | What it rules out | What still works |
|---|---|---|
| Under 14 ft depth | Radar monitors | Camera and overhead monitors |
| Under 9.5 ft ceiling | Overhead monitors | Camera monitors, side-mounted |
| Under 10 ft width | Full enclosures | Net setups, compact enclosures |
| Under 12 ft depth | Most setups | Net-only practice with floor monitor |
The right monitor for small spaces
Camera-based monitors are the only reliable choice for rooms under 14 ft deep. They measure at impact rather than tracking ball flight, so they work regardless of how short your room is.
Best options for small spaces:
- SkyTrak Plus (~$1,995) — works from 12 ft, most popular choice for tight rooms
- Bushnell Launch Pro (~$3,499) — same 12 ft minimum, better accuracy for coach work
- Rapsodo MLM2PRO (~$799) — camera+radar hybrid that handles shorter rooms better than pure radar
Enclosure sizing for tight rooms
A standard 10 × 10 ft enclosure works in rooms as narrow as 12 ft — you'll have 1 ft on each side for side panels. That's minimal but functional. A 8 × 8 ft enclosure fits more comfortably in narrow rooms and still provides a usable hitting area.
The screen-to-golfer distance matters more than enclosure width. You need at least 10 ft between the screen face and your hitting position for safety. In a 12 ft room, that leaves 2 ft for the enclosure frame depth and nothing behind you — which means you need to position the enclosure as close to the far wall as possible.
Net-only setups for the smallest rooms
If your room is under 12 ft deep or under 9 ft ceiling, a full simulator enclosure may not be practical. A net-only setup — a hitting net plus a floor-mounted launch monitor — lets you practice swing mechanics and track data without the space demands of a full enclosure.
The trade-off is no simulator software projection. You get accurate ball data and can track improvement, but you're not playing virtual courses. For many golfers who primarily want to work on their swing, this is the right call for a small room.
Ceiling height workarounds
If your ceiling height is between 8.5 and 9.5 ft, test your full driver swing before committing to any equipment. Stand on a mat (or something the same thickness), take your full backswing, and check clearance at the highest point of your arc. Even 1 inch of clearance at that point is workable — it's the difference between a safe swing and clipping the ceiling that matters.
Some golfers with 8.5–9 ft ceilings limit their simulator use to irons and fairway woods, using the outdoor range for driver practice. This is a practical compromise that maximises use of a tight space.
Frequently asked questions
- What's the absolute minimum room for any simulator setup?
- 12 ft deep × 10 ft wide × 8.5 ft ceiling at the hitting position. At these dimensions you can run a camera monitor with a compact enclosure and hit irons and short irons. Driver swings need a ceiling test first — 8.5 ft is marginal for most golfers.
- Can I use a garage with 8 ft ceilings?
- For iron practice with a camera monitor and net, yes. For full driver swings, test first — most golfers over 5'10" will clip the ceiling at 8 ft. A net-only setup is the safer approach at this ceiling height.
- Do I need side panels in a small room?
- Yes — more so than in a larger room. Mis-hits in a small room have less room to dissipate before hitting a wall. Even basic side netting significantly reduces risk. Don't skip side protection because you're already tight on space.
- Will a small room limit which simulator software I can use?
- No — software runs on your PC regardless of room size. Any simulator software that works with your monitor will work in a small room. The room size affects your monitor choice, not your software options.
We've done the research. Here are our recommendations by room size and budget.