Photo Booth Rental Cost in Oregon: 2026 Pricing Guide | Apogee Event Productions
If you’re planning a wedding, corporate party, or big celebration anywhere in Oregon, there’s a good chance someone has already said, “We should get a photo booth.”
And they’re right.
But then the next question hits pretty fast… how much does a photo booth actually cost in Oregon in 2026?
I’m going to walk you through it like we’re sitting across from each other with coffee. No fluff, no vague ranges that don’t help. Real numbers, real scenarios, and the stuff people usually don’t tell you until it’s too late.
What Does a Photo Booth Cost in Oregon?
Most photo booth rentals in Oregon fall between $600 and $1,500, depending on the type of booth, hours, and level of service.
| Booth Type | Typical Price Range |
|---|---|
| Open-Style Booth | $600 – $1,200 |
| Enclosed Booth | $700 – $1,300 |
| 360 Video Booth | $800 – $1,500 |
| Mirror Booth | $900 – $1,800 |
| Roaming Booth | $500 – $1,000 |
| DSLR Premium | $800 – $1,500 |
Not all booths are even close to the same experience. Some are basically an iPad on a stand. Some feel like a full-on mini studio with lighting, a real camera, and someone guiding your guests through it. That difference is where your money goes.
Photo Booth Pricing by City in Oregon
| City | Typical Price Range |
|---|---|
| Portland | $900 – $1,500 |
| Salem | $700 – $1,200 |
| Eugene | $700 – $1,200 |
| Bend | $900 – $1,500 |
| Medford | $700 – $1,200 |
| Oregon Coast | $900 – $1,500 |
| Albany/Corvallis | $600 – $1,100 |
| Roseburg | $600 – $1,100 |
Portland and Bend tend to run higher because of demand and weekend volume. Salem, Eugene, and Medford are a little more balanced. The coast can jump depending on how remote the venue is.
The 7 Types of Photo Booths (And Who They’re Actually For)
This is where most couples get stuck. They see “photo booth” and assume it’s all the same. It’s not even close.
1. Open-Style Booth
This is the most common setup. Backdrop, camera, lighting, and space for groups. Best for weddings with large guest counts, corporate parties, and people who want big group photos.
We had a wedding at a vineyard outside Salem where 12 people somehow squeezed into one shot. The couple framed it and said it was their favorite photo of the night.
2. Enclosed Booth
Old school feel with curtains. More private, more goofy. Best for guests who loosen up when they’re not on display, and retro or vintage themed weddings. People get way sillier in these. Every time.
3. 360 Video Booth
This is the one you’ve seen on social media. Camera spins around guests in slow motion. Best for high energy parties, younger crowds, and big visual impact. It’s awesome, but it’s not a replacement for a traditional booth. It’s more of a feature moment than a constant flow.
4. Mirror Booth
A full-length mirror that interacts with guests. Animations, touch screen, very polished. Best for formal weddings, black tie events, and couples who want something unique but still classy.
5. Roaming Booth
Instead of guests coming to the booth, the booth comes to them. Best for packed dance floors, cocktail hour, and corporate mixers. We used this at a corporate holiday party in Eugene where people never stopped moving. It captured moments a stationary booth would have missed completely.
6. DSLR Premium Booth (Queen’s Booth)
This is where things step up. Real camera, studio lighting, sharp images. Best for couples who care about photo quality and weddings where photos double as keepsakes. Skin tones look better, lighting looks natural, and people actually keep these photos.
7. Glam Booth / AI Booth
This is where things get fun and modern. Glam booth gives that clean, high-end black and white look. AI booth can transform guests into different styles or scenes. Best for trend-forward weddings and guests who want something different.
Photo Booth vs 360 Booth
This is one of the biggest decisions right now.
Photo Booth: Runs all night, high volume, prints and digital keepsakes, easy for guests to use.
360 Booth: Slower (one group at a time), more of a spotlight moment, no prints, big visual wow factor.
A lot of our events actually do both. Photo booth for steady flow, 360 booth for highlight moments.
The Bundle Math That Most People Miss
Let’s say you book separately: DJ $1,500 – $2,500, photo booth $800 – $1,500. Total: $2,300 – $4,000+.
Now compare that to a bundle: DJ + Photo Booth Combo at $1,995. That’s not marketing fluff. That’s real math.
One team, one setup, shared staff, less duplication.
We had a couple in Salem who originally booked a DJ somewhere else and a booth through another company. Week of the wedding, timelines didn’t match. The DJ didn’t know when the booth was starting. The booth didn’t know when speeches were happening. They switched to our combo last minute. Everything lined up. Music hit when it should. Booth opened at the perfect time. Guests flowed naturally between both.
What Actually Affects Photo Booth Pricing?
Hours of service, prints vs digital only, quality of equipment, attendant vs drop-off, customization level, and travel distance.
The biggest one most people underestimate is staffing. A great booth has someone there guiding guests, fixing issues, and keeping the energy up. That alone can change the experience completely.
What to Look For When Booking a Photo Booth
Real Camera vs Tablet: Ask this directly. It changes everything about photo quality.
Lighting Setup: Good lighting is more important than the camera. If lighting is bad, photos are bad.
Attendant Presence: Is someone actually there helping guests? Or are you hoping it runs itself?
Custom Design: Templates should match your event, not look generic.
Backup Plan: What happens if something fails? Professional companies always have redundancy.
Reviews: Look for consistent feedback, not just a few good ones. We’ve built 370+ five-star reviews over the years, and that consistency is what matters.
One Last Story Before You Decide
We did a wedding on the Oregon Coast. Wind, cold, typical coastal night. The couple almost skipped the booth because they thought guests would stay inside and not use it.
We set it up just right near the main flow. By the end of the night, there was a line. People came in from outside, warmed up, laughed, took photos, went back out.
The bride told us later it became the “reset button” for the whole night.
That’s what a good booth does. It creates moments, not just pictures.
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Apogee Event Productions is based in Salem, Oregon and serves Portland, Eugene, Bend, Medford, Albany/Corvallis, Roseburg, and the Oregon Coast. 7 photo booth styles. 370+ five-star reviews. 20+ years of experience. Oregon’s only full-service event production company.
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