IndoorGolfSetup.com
Indoor Golf Setup
Practical home simulator buying guide

Net vs Enclosure for a Golf Simulator

A golf net and a golf simulator enclosure are not competing versions of the exact same thing. They solve different problems. A net is usually the better answer when you are trying to start simple, keep the setup portable, or avoid spending enclosure money too early. An enclosure is the better answer when you want a cleaner simulator experience, better ball containment, and a more finished room.

The wrong move is assuming the cheaper option is always smarter or the bigger option is always better. The right move is matching the setup to the room, budget, and how permanent you want the build to feel.

The short answer

Choose a net when you need lower cost, faster setup, or a mixed-use room. Choose an enclosure when you want a more complete sim bay, better miss protection, and a projector-based setup that feels finished.

When a net makes more sense

When an enclosure makes more sense

What the manufacturers themselves suggest

Net products like the Spornia SPG-7 emphasize quick setup, easy storage, and automatic ball return. Enclosure companies like Carl’s Place focus on custom fit, impact-screen options, and leaving room for rear buffer space behind the screen. Those are different use cases, not just different price points.

Where buyers get this wrong

The smart upgrade path

For a lot of buyers, the smartest path is net first, enclosure later. That is especially true when the room is mixed-use or the budget is still being tested. Once you know the setup will stay and the room measurements are real, an enclosure becomes a more confident upgrade rather than an expensive guess.

Bottom line

A net is better when simplicity, portability, and cost matter most. An enclosure is better when you want a cleaner simulator room and a more immersive result. Neither is automatically the smarter buy. The room and the long-term setup plan decide that.