You can tell a lot about a photo booth company in the first five minutes – not from the booth photos on Instagram, but from how they handle the unglamorous stuff: timing, lighting, set-up, and what happens when the dance floor gets wild.
If you want a photo booth that feels like part of your wedding (not an awkward add-on in the corner), the right questions will save you from blurry keepsakes, long lineups, and last-minute surprises. Here are the questions to ask photo booth vendor teams, plus what the answers really mean for your event.
Start with the experience you want guests to have
Before you talk packages, ask questions that reveal whether the vendor is building an experience or just dropping off equipment.
1) âWhat booth styles do you recommend for our vibe and venue?â
A great vendor wonât push a single option for every event. A 360 video booth brings high-energy, social-first hype (and needs a bit of space), while a Magic Mirror style setup leans romantic, interactive, and polished for cocktail hour. A retro-style booth can feel nostalgic and timeless, especially with a classic print design.
If the answer is âtheyâre all basically the same,â thatâs a red flag. The best companies will ask about your layout, your timeline, and how you want the moment to feel.
2) âHow do you keep lineups moving without rushing people?â
Photo booths are supposed to feel fun, not stressful. Ask how the vendor manages flow – especially for weddings where guests tend to arrive in waves.
Listen for specifics: a dedicated attendant, a clear start point, quick sharing methods (text/email), and a booth workflow that doesnât involve fiddling with settings between every group.
3) âWhatâs included to make it feel âwedding-levelâ?â
This is where you separate premium providers from basic rentals. âWedding-levelâ usually means thoughtful styling (backdrops that photograph well), customized templates that match your stationery, flattering lighting, and an attendant who actually coaches guests into great shots.
Photo quality questions (because keepsakes should look incredible)
A booth can be entertaining and still disappoint in the photos. These questions help you protect the results.
4) âHow do you handle lighting in dim reception spaces?â
Niagara venues can be beautifully moody – which is amazing in person and tricky on camera. Ask whether they use professional lighting, how they avoid harsh shadows, and whether their setup is tested for darker rooms.
A confident vendor will explain how they create consistent, flattering light without blowing out white dresses or making everyone look washed out.
5) âCan we see full galleries from real events, not just highlight reels?â
Curated grids hide a lot. Ask for examples from a full night so you can see consistency: different skin tones, different group sizes, the chaos of late-night dance-floor energy.
If a vendor hesitates, it may mean the booth only looks great under perfect conditions.
6) âAre prints photo-lab quality, and how fast do they come out?â
Print speed and print quality both matter. Slow prints create lineups. Low-quality prints fade, streak, or look dull.
Ask what size options they offer, whether you can do duplicates (one for the guest, one for a guestbook), and what the print finish looks like under reception lighting.
Customization questions (so it matches your aesthetic)
The magic is in the details – the frame design, the fonts, the backdrop texture, the way it fits your colour palette.
7) âHow custom can the overlay, template, or 360 frame be?â
For prints, ask about custom layouts, monograms, and date formats (yes, it matters if you want a clean, Canadian look). For 360, ask about branded frames, song options, and whether the final video output feels modern and shareable.
The key is whether customization is truly guided, or whether youâre handed a basic template library and left on your own.
8) âCan you match our invitation suite or wedding signage?â
If youâve invested in a cohesive look, your booth design should feel like part of the day. Ask if the vendor can mirror your fonts and style, and whether theyâll provide a proof process so you can approve the final design.
9) âWhat backdrop options do you have, and what photographs best?â
Backdrops arenât just decor – theyâre your entire background in every keepake.
Ask whatâs available (sequins, solid tones, textured neutrals, luxe patterns) and what they recommend for your venue lighting. A great vendor will talk about reflections, colour casting, and how certain materials can either elevate or cheapen the final image.
Logistics questions (this is where weddings are won)
Your booth should feel effortless on the day. These questions make sure the vendor is organized enough to deliver that.
Questions to ask photo booth vendor teams about timing
10) âWhen do you arrive for set-up, and how long does it take?â
Youâre looking for a vendor who builds in buffer time and doesnât need to set up during key moments.
If your venue has a tight load-in window, ask whether theyâve worked there before and how they coordinate with venue staff.
11) âDo you need anything from us – power, Wi-Fi, floor space?â
This should sound like a checklist, not guesswork. For example, a 360 setup typically needs more space than a classic booth, and Wi-Fi can affect real-time sharing (although some systems work well without it).
The best answer includes a clear footprint, power requirements, and a plan B if Wi-Fi is unreliable.
12) âWho is onsite, and what do they handle?â
Ask whether an attendant is included and what their role is: guest coaching, troubleshooting, prop management (if props are used), and keeping the area tidy.
For premium events, an engaged attendant is the difference between a booth that sits quiet and one that becomes the centre of gravity.
13) âWhat happens if something fails mid-event?â
Tech happens. What you want is a vendor whoâs prepared.
Listen for backup equipment, tested processes, and a calm approach. The goal isnât perfection – itâs resilience without dragging you into the problem on your wedding night.
Sharing and delivery questions (modern guests expect instant)
Weddings are real-time now. Guests love a print, but they also want something they can post before the late-night snack arrives.
14) âHow do guests receive their photos or videos?â
Ask if sharing is by text, email, QR code, or all of the above – and how quickly it sends.
Also ask whether guests can share on the spot without creating an account or downloading an app. The easier it is, the more your booth gets used.
15) âDo we get a full gallery, and how soon?â
Make sure you know whatâs delivered after the event: an online gallery, a downloadable folder, and whether it includes both images and boomerangs/GIFs/video (depending on the booth type).
Timing matters because post-wedding excitement is a real thing – the sooner you get the gallery, the sooner you relive it.
16) âCan you brand the sharing screen or landing experience?â
This is especially useful for corporate events and also a surprisingly fun touch for weddings: a welcome screen with your names, a matching background, and a cohesive look that feels intentional.
Money, contracts, and the fine print (ask kindly, ask clearly)
Premium vendors wonât be offended by these questions. Theyâll respect you for protecting your budget and your peace of mind.
17) âWhatâs included in your package price, and whatâs an extra?â
Clarify travel, set-up/tear-down, custom design, backdrop upgrades, extra hours, prints, duplicate prints, and attendants.
If pricing feels vague, youâre more likely to get surprised later.
18) âWhatâs your deposit, payment schedule, and cancellation policy?â
Wedding plans change. Weather changes. Life changes.
Ask what happens if you need to reschedule, and whether your deposit can move to a new date. Also ask when final payment is due so you can align it with your other vendor payments.
19) âDo you carry liability insurance?â
Many venues require it. Even if they donât, itâs a sign youâre working with a professional team that plans for the real world.
20) âCan you coordinate directly with our planner or venue?â
This is an underrated stress-saver. If your vendor can connect with your planner about load-in times, room flips, and placement, you get to stay focused on the fun parts.
A vendor who insists everything must go through you may add friction when your timeline gets tight.
The âfitâ question (the one that protects your whole night)
21) âIf you were in our shoes, what would you choose and why?â
This question invites honesty. A good vendor will talk through trade-offs: how a 360 booth brings wow-factor but needs room, how prints are timeless but require smart flow, how an audio guest book captures voices and emotion, and how a screen-free digital disposable option can pull guests into candid, unplugged storytelling.
If youâre in Niagara and want a photography-first, full-service booth experience that feels designed around your wedding – not dropped into it – you can always start with a consultation at Pic Booth and talk through what fits your venue, your timeline, and your guest list.
The best question isnât âWhatâs your cheapest package?â Itâs âWhat will our guests talk about on the drive home?â Ask for the kind of experience that makes people laugh, gather, and keep the keepsakes on their fridge long after the last song.
