FROM OUR EXPERIENCE
After reading everything about golf simulators — the components, the costs, the space requirements — the question most people still need help with is: what should I actually build? This is the post that directly answers that question. We’ve structured it around the three variables that determine the right build: your space, your budget, and your primary goal.
There is no single right answer to ‘which golf simulator should I build?’ The right answer depends on who you are, what space you’re working with, what you want to spend, and what you actually want to use it for. This guide gives you a decision framework that accounts for all four.
Step 1: Assess Your Space Honestly
Everything else follows from this. Your available space determines your screen size, your truss configuration, your projector choice, and in many cases your launch monitor options. Before looking at any equipment, measure your room carefully — width, length, height at the lowest point — and identify any overhead obstructions that reduce effective ceiling height.
If your space is tight (under 10 × 14 × 8.5 feet)
A full-swing simulator is genuinely difficult below these dimensions. Consider a shorter-format setup focused on iron play and chipping rather than full driver simulation. A compact launch monitor setup with a smaller screen (8–9 feet wide) and a practice-focused software platform may be more appropriate.
If your space is workable (10–12 × 15–18 × 8.5–9 feet)
This is the most common home build space — a basement or garage at the lower end of usable dimensions. A properly specified 10-foot-wide screen with a short-throw projector works well here. Ceiling height is the critical factor: verify swing clearance with an actual driver swing test in the space before purchasing. A freestanding modular truss like TruSim’s TruTruss XT™ is strongly preferred in this space.
If your space is comfortable (12–14 × 18–22 × 9–10 feet)
This is the target residential build space. You have room for a 12-foot-wide screen, comfortable hitting distance from the screen, flexible projector placement, and potentially a seating area beside the bay. This space supports any launch monitor technology, any screen type, and any projector configuration. Build quality is limited by budget, not by space.
If your space is generous (14+ × 20+ × 10+ feet)
You have a premium build space. Wide enough for 14-foot screens, tall enough for overhead launch monitor mounting, deep enough for a full hitting area plus seating and spectator space. This space is appropriate for high-end home builds, multi-bay commercial facilities, and training academies.
Step 2: Match Your Budget to the Right Tier
Budget build ($3,000 – $8,000): Recreational starter
Who it’s for: casual golfers who want to try simulation before committing to a larger investment. Launch monitor recommendation: Garmin Approach R10 (~$600) or Bushnell Launch Pro (base configuration). Software: GSPro one-time purchase or WGT free tier. What to expect: works well for course play and basic fun. Data accuracy on spin is limited. Plan to upgrade within 2–3 years if you use it heavily.
Mid-range build ($8,000 – $20,000): Serious home golfer
Who it’s for: golfers who play regularly and want to practice seriously year-round. What you get: a quality photometric launch monitor (Foresight GC3 ~$5,000, Uneekor QED ~$3,500, or SkyTrak+ ~$2,000), a multi-layer impact screen, a 1080p short-throw projector, and TruSim’s TruTruss XT™ modular enclosure. What to expect: this is where the simulator experience becomes genuinely excellent.
Premium home build ($20,000 – $40,000): Dedicated enthusiast
Who it’s for: golfers who want the best available home experience. What you get: a radar-based launch monitor (Trackman 4 ~$20,000), a 4K laser projector, TruSim’s High Contrast Elite Triple Layer screen, full acoustic treatment, performance drapes, TruBack™ backer, TruGuard™ overhead mesh, and professional installation.
Commercial build ($40,000+): Business or training facility
Who it’s for: golf entertainment venues, training academies, country clubs. Multiple bays, commercial-grade components, NFPA 701 fire compliance, dedicated electrical circuits, and professional installation. Consult TruSim directly for commercial specifications.
Step 3: Match Your Build to Your Primary Goal
Goal: Year-round recreational play
Spend more on a high-quality screen and projector for visual immersion, and choose a simulation platform with a strong course library (E6 Connect or GSPro). A mid-range launch monitor is sufficient — you don’t need tour-level spin accuracy for recreational play.
Goal: Serious swing practice and improvement
Prioritize the launch monitor above all other components. A Foresight GC3 or GCQuad on a basic enclosure with a modest screen is better for this goal than a beautiful setup with an entry-level launch monitor.
Goal: Social entertainment
4K projector if budget allows, the largest screen your room supports, and a software platform with strong multiplayer and easy game setup (E6 Connect excels here).
Goal: Coaching and instruction
The highest-quality launch monitor your budget allows (Foresight GCQuad is the photometric standard for teaching), a software platform with robust data display and logging, and an enclosure that allows the coach and student to both see the data display comfortably.
FROM OUR EXPERIENCE
The most common mistake we see: people choose their launch monitor based on budget, their screen based on price, and end up with a system that’s imbalanced. Build balanced. If budget is limited, build a smaller system completely rather than a larger system incompletely.
Frequently Asked Questions
Should I buy a pre-packaged simulator bundle or build component by component?
Bundles offer convenience and guaranteed compatibility but often pair a good launch monitor with mediocre screen and enclosure components. Building component by component typically produces a better-quality result at an equivalent budget, but requires more research.
Is it better to start small and upgrade, or build the right system from the start?
Build the right system from the start whenever budget allows. The two-stage approach almost always costs more in total — you pay installation costs twice, sell used equipment at a loss, and live with a suboptimal experience during the interim period.
How long should I expect the planning process to take before building?
For a simple home build, 4–8 weeks of planning is typical and appropriate. Rushing the planning phase is the most common cause of regret in simulator builds.
By The TruSim Build Team | Backed by Canwil Textiles’ manufacturing expertise | 30+ years in technical fabric production | Hundreds of simulator builds