Photobooth’s Still the Best side hustle in 2025/2026?

Short answer: yes—if you pick the right format and price it smartly.

Demand for event content is still rising (weddings, proms, corporate brand activations), and booth tech has got lighter and easier to run solo. Below is a quick, UK-focused comparison of the three most popular options, with current market prices you can actually quote against.

Average UK Hire Prices (2025)

Booth typeTypical price per eventNotes / sources
360 “spinning” video booth~£445 avgUK-wide average across suppliers. Regional pages show similar mid-£400s.
Selfie pod~£380 avgUK-wide average; London listings show entry prices from ~£170; many national operators charge ~£350–£400 for 3–4 hours.
Magic mirror£280–£500 typical UK (London avg ~£658)UK range from aggregator data; London commands a clear premium; individual operators often £500± for 3–4 hours.

Which booth makes the best side hustle?

1) 360 Spinning Booth

Why it wins in 2025/26: It’s still the “wow” experience brands and Gen-Z/Gen-Alpha guests recognise from socials. Packages upsell well (instant sharing microsites, custom overlays, lighting rigs, props).

  • Gross per booking: ~£445 avg; many operators get £500–£650 with lighting/branding or longer hours.
  • Starter cost to buy: from ~£1000 (phone-based capture), with cheaper imports from china widely available.
  • Pros: High perceived value; strong corporate demand; easy digital-only delivery (no print costs).
  • Cons: Needs safe footprint and good venue access; more moving parts (arm, platform, lighting).

Owner-operator pocket math (example):
£525 day-rate (common with add-ons) –
£30 fuel/parking –
£15 consumables/insurance allowance –

£480 Profit (You as attendant)
£420 Profit (Hire an attendant £15/h for 4 hours )

2) Selfie Pod

Why it’s dependable: Lowest running faff, quick setup, solo-friendly. Ideal for weddings and retail promos where footprint matters.

  • Gross per booking: ~£380 avg; national operators list £350–£399 for 4 hours.
  • Starter cost to buy: wide spread—from ~£1,200–£1,900 for iPad-based pods; premium kiosk units higher.
  • Pros: Fast setup, small car friendly, digital galleries/QR sharing, minimal failure points.
  • Cons: Lower ceiling on price unless you bundle prints/backdrops/roamers.

Owner-operator pocket math (example):
£379 day-rate (common with add-ons)
£25 travel
£10 consumables

£344 Profit (You as attendant)
£288 Profit (Hire an attendant £15/h for 4 hours )

3) Magic Mirror

Why it still sells: The big mirrored fascia is a crowd magnet at weddings and black-tie events; feels premium with red-carpet rope & stanchions.

  • Gross per booking: £280–£750 typical UK, but London averages ~£658, and many national brands list ~£499–£525 for 4 hours.
  • Starter cost to buy: new mirror rigs commonly ~£1,100–£3,500
  • Pros: High perceived luxury; prints add tangible value; great upsell with guest books.
  • Cons: Heavier kit; print media management; mirrors scratch—protect in transit.

Owner-operator pocket math (example):
£499 day-rate (common with add-ons)
£25 travel
£10 consumables

£464 Profit (You as attendant)
£404 Profit (Hire an attendant £15/h for 4 hours )


So…which should you launch (or double-down on)?

  • Highest ceiling (corporate/brand activations): 360 booth. It consistently commands the strongest rates and branding upsells
  • Easiest solo start, lowest hassle: Selfie pod. Great “first booth” to learn ops, build reviews, then ladder up.
  • Wedding premium play: Magic mirror. Strong in wedding season; price higher in big cities (London avg ~£658).

Verdict: If you’re entering in late-2025, go Selfie Pod → 360 Booth as your 1–2 punch. If you already have mirror bookings coming in, keep it—but consider adding a 360 to unlock higher corporate rates.

Pro tips to boost margins in 2026

  1. Go digital-first on 360/selfie. Prints are lovely but eat margin—sell them as an add-on.
  2. Tier by outcomes, not hours. “Standard • Social • Brand Activation” with deliverables spelled out.
  3. Bundle content rights. Corporates will pay for usage rights and branded edits.
  4. Off-peak incentives. Discount weekdays; keep Saturdays premium.
  5. Protect the kit. Cases, wheelboards, and clear load-in terms—downtime kills profits.

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