How to Calculate Indoor Playground Capacity?

FEC investor reviewing an indoor playground capacity plan with zoning layout and capacity calculation worksheet

Why “Area ÷ 3㎡” is only a rough estimate.

When planning an indoor playground, soft play center, or indoor play area, many owners ask the same question:

“How many people can this venue hold at the same time?”

Some clients may find a simple formula online:

Capacity = Area ÷ 3㎡

This method can be useful as a rough reference, but it should not be used for the entire facility. More accurately:

Area ÷ 3㎡ can be used as a preliminary estimate for the children’s capacity in the main soft play area, but it should not be used as the basis for fire approval, building approval, or the maximum occupancy of the whole venue.

As an indoor playground designer and manufacturer, we usually recommend looking at capacity from two perspectives:

Capacity TypePurpose
Code Occupant LoadUsed for fire approval, exits, door width, egress, and business permits
Recommended Operating CapacityUsed for ticket sales, crowd control, staff planning, and guest experience

In simple terms:

Code Occupant Load is the maximum number allowed by local regulations.
Recommended Operating Capacity is the number of people recommended for daily operation.

For owners, the most useful number is not an exaggerated theoretical maximum, but a capacity that is safe, comfortable, manageable, and within local code limits.


1. Who Confirms the Fire / Building Occupancy?

The official fire and building occupancy for an indoor playground cannot be determined by the equipment manufacturer alone, and it should not be calculated only by an online formula.

In the United States, Europe, and many other regions, the final occupancy usually needs to be confirmed by:

  • Local architect
  • Fire consultant
  • Fire marshal / fire authority
  • Building department / building authority

They will review the project based on local regulations and factors such as:

  • Building use classification
  • Floor area and functional zoning
  • Number of exits
  • Door width
  • Travel distance
  • Corridors and escape routes
  • Fire alarm system
  • Sprinkler system
  • Local building and fire codes

Common References for U.S. Projects

U.S. projects often refer to:

  • IBC: International Building Code
  • IFC: International Fire Code
  • NFPA 101: Life Safety Code
  • ASTM F1918: Soft Contained Play Equipment

In the U.S., building and fire codes usually calculate occupancy using an occupant load factor. The basic logic is:

Occupant Load = Occupiable Area ÷ Occupant Load Factor for the Specific Function

This means different functional areas use different occupant load factors. The whole indoor playground should not simply be divided by 3㎡.

Common references include:

Area TypeCommon Reference Factor
Standing / queueing / high-density activity area5 sq ft / person
Concentrated activity area without fixed seating7 sq ft / person
Tables and chairs area, party room, dining / seating area15 sq ft / person
Child care / day care type space35 sq ft / person
Office area150 sq ft / person
Storage / equipment room300–500 sq ft / person

These figures are mainly used for fire safety, building review, egress routes, door width, and exit quantity. They do not mean how many tickets should be sold during daily operation.

Common References for European Projects

European projects follow a similar logic, but there is no single EU-wide formula for indoor playground capacity.

European projects usually refer to:

  • Local national building regulations
  • Local fire regulations
  • EN 1176: Playground Equipment and Surfacing
  • EN 1177: Impact Attenuating Playground Surfacing
  • Operator’s risk assessment
  • Insurance requirements

EN 1176 and EN 1177 are more related to playground equipment safety, fall protection, materials, installation, and maintenance. They are very important for indoor playground design, but they are not a simple “area divided by a number” formula for calculating total venue capacity.

Therefore, whether the project is in the U.S. or Europe, we can help provide a preliminary zoning-based capacity estimate and operating recommendation, but the final Code Occupant Load must still be confirmed by local professionals.


2. Capacity Calculation Is Not Just About Floor Area

Indoor playground capacity directly affects daily operation, not just design.

At the early stage of a project, owners should clarify the following questions:

How many children can be admitted in one time slot?

For example:

  • How many children can be admitted during weekend peak hours?
  • Should one time slot sell 80 children’s tickets or 120 children’s tickets?
  • Can walk-in guests and birthday parties be handled at the same time?
  • When the venue is full, will the site still be safe, comfortable, and manageable?

These questions should be answered through the Recommended Operating Capacity, not just by looking at the total floor area.


Will the venue feel too crowded?

An indoor playground is not only about whether people can physically fit inside. The real guest experience also matters.

For example:

  • Do children have enough activity space inside the main soft play structure?
  • Will children pile up at the slide exit?
  • Will the toddler area be affected by older children?
  • Are there enough seats in the parent seating area?
  • Will the reception, shoe storage, and queueing area become congested?

These questions need to be evaluated together with zoning layout, equipment type, age groups, circulation design, and staff management.


Is the business model reasonable?

Capacity also affects the return on investment.

For example:

  • If the venue can only admit 80 children per session, is the project still profitable?
  • Are more birthday party rooms needed?
  • Is the parent seating area enough for peak traffic?
  • Should some equipment be reduced to create more open activity space?
  • Is the staff plan enough to manage peak capacity?

Therefore, the purpose of capacity calculation is not to make the number as large as possible. It is to help the owner find an operating capacity that is safe, comfortable, compliant, and profitable.


3. Our Recommended Method: Divide the Venue by Zone First

When calculating indoor playground capacity, the first step is not to divide the total area by 3㎡. Instead, the 3D design should first be converted into a 2D area schedule by zone.

We recommend separating at least the following areas:

ZoneMain UsersCalculation Method
Main soft play structureChildrenEstimate by net playable area
Toddler areaToddlers + possible accompanying parentsMore conservative estimate
Ball pitChildrenEstimate by area and exit condition
Slide areaChildrenEstimate by slide lanes and flow
Trampoline areaChildren / usersEstimate by trampoline beds or lanes
Ninja courseUsersEstimate by routes and obstacles
Party roomChildren + adultsEstimate by area and actual seats
Parent seating areaAdults / parentsPrioritize actual seat count
Reception / queue areaShort-term waiting guestsCheck whether congestion may occur
Circulation, restrooms, storageSupporting spacesUsually do not increase play capacity

The purpose is to clarify:

Who is each area designed for?

A 100㎡ main soft play area, a 100㎡ party room, a 100㎡ queueing area, and a 100㎡ trampoline area all require different calculation methods.


4. How to Calculate the Main Soft Play Structure?

The main soft play structure is usually called:

Main Soft Play Structure
or
Soft Contained Play Equipment Area

It refers to the main play equipment made of steel pipes, soft padding, nets, platforms, slides, obstacles, climbing elements, and internal passageways.

It usually includes:

  • Multi-level soft platforms
  • Soft stairs
  • Ramps
  • Climbing nets
  • Net bridges
  • Crawl tubes
  • Maze passages
  • Obstacle posts
  • Punching bags
  • Rollers
  • Internal bridges
  • Internal play features
  • Slide entry platforms

It usually does not include:

  • Parent seating area
  • Party rooms
  • Reception
  • Restrooms
  • General walkways
  • Independent trampoline area
  • Independent ninja course
  • Independent arcade area

Key Point: Use Net Playable Area, Not Only Footprint Area

Many main soft play structures are multi-level. If only the ground footprint is used, the actual playable area may be underestimated.

For example, a main soft play structure has a ground footprint of 150㎡, but it also includes second and third levels:

AreaArea
Ground level platform150㎡
Second level platform100㎡
Third level platform70㎡
Ramps, tubes, and obstacle areas60㎡
Total internal area380㎡

However, the full 380㎡ should not be counted as 100% usable capacity area. Some spaces are only for passing through, while others are slides or safety clearance zones.

Therefore, we usually recommend calculating:

Net Playable Area

This means the effective area where children can stand, crawl, move, or stay briefly.

A common adjustment method can be:

Area TypeSuggested Counted Percentage
Flat soft platform100%
Wide passage / connecting platform80%–100%
Ramp / soft stairs40%–70%
Climbing net / net bridge40%–70%
Crawl tube / narrow passage30%–60%
Dense obstacle area50%–70%
Slide bodyNot counted by area
Slide exit safety zoneNot counted
Maintenance access / safety clearanceNot counted

Example:

AreaActual AreaCounted PercentageEffective Area
Platform area250㎡100%250㎡
Ramp / stairs40㎡50%20㎡
Tube / maze50㎡50%25㎡
Obstacle area40㎡70%28㎡
Slide body40㎡0%0㎡
Exit safety zone20㎡0%0㎡
Total440㎡323㎡

The 323㎡ is more suitable for estimating the children’s capacity of the main soft play structure.


5. How Should “Area ÷ 3㎡” Be Used?

If it is applied to the net playable area of the main soft play structure, using 3㎡ / child as a preliminary operating estimate can be reasonable.

For example:

Net playable area of main soft play structure = 300㎡

Then:

300㎡ ÷ 3㎡ / child = 100 children

This means:

The main soft play structure can be estimated to hold around 100 children playing at one time.

However, in actual projects, we usually do not provide only one fixed number. We prefer to give a reasonable range:

Operating ConditionSuggested Factor
Comfortable and spacious3.5–4.5㎡ / child
Normal operation2.5–3.5㎡ / child
Busy but manageable1.8–2.5㎡ / child

If the net playable area is 300㎡:

CalculationResult
300 ÷ 3.5㎡About 85 children
300 ÷ 3㎡About 100 children
300 ÷ 2.5㎡About 120 children

A more professional way to express this is:

Main soft play recommended capacity: approximately 85–120 children at one time.

If a better guest experience is preferred, the capacity can be controlled at 85–100 children. During peak hours, with sufficient staff supervision, it may be closer to 100–120 children.


6. Other Areas Should Not All Be Calculated by Area ÷ 3㎡

Except for the main soft play structure, different areas should use different calculation methods.

Toddler Area

The toddler area usually needs a more conservative estimate because younger children are less stable, and parents may enter the area to accompany them.

Usage TypeSuggested Factor
Children only3.5–5㎡ / child
Child + accompanying parent4.5–6㎡ / group

For example, if the toddler area is 90㎡:

90㎡ ÷ 5㎡ / group = 18 child-parent groups

This can be expressed as:

Toddler area recommended capacity: approximately 15–18 child-parent groups.


Ball Pit

Children move more slowly in a ball pit, and crowding may happen more easily, especially near exits.

ConditionSuggested Factor
Comfortable2.5–3.5㎡ / child
Normal2–2.5㎡ / child
Busy1.5–2㎡ / child

For example, if the ball pit is 50㎡:

50㎡ ÷ 2.5㎡ / child = 20 children

This can be expressed as:

Ball pit recommended capacity: approximately 18–22 children.


Slide

Slides should not be calculated by area. They should be calculated by the number of slide lanes and the play flow.

Slide TypeSimultaneous Users
Single-lane slide1 child / lane
Double-lane slide2 children
Four-lane wave slide4 children
Enclosed tube slideUsually more conservative

The slide exit safety zone should not be counted as capacity. It is mainly a safety clearance area.


Trampoline Area

The trampoline area especially should not be calculated by area ÷ 3㎡.

Trampoline capacity is usually calculated by unit:

AreaSuggested Method
Standard trampoline bed1 user / bed
Basketball dunk lane1 user / lane
Foam pit / airbag lane1 user / lane
Performance trampoline1 user / unit
Dodgeball courtBased on court rules and staff management

Example:

ItemQuantityCapacity
Standard trampoline beds2020 users
Basketball dunk lanes22 users
Airbag jump lanes22 users
Total active users24 users

Queueing users should be considered separately.


Ninja Course

A ninja course should be reviewed based on route, obstacles, spacing, and waiting area.

TypeSuggested Method
Single route3–5 users at the same time
Double routesCalculate each route separately
High-difficulty obstaclesMore conservative
Landing areaNot counted as capacity
Starting queue areaCalculate separately

Party Room

The capacity of a party room mainly depends on two factors:

  1. Room area
  2. Actual number of seats

If the party room is 60㎡, it can be preliminarily estimated by 1.5–2㎡ / person:

CalculationResult
60㎡ ÷ 1.5㎡About 40 persons
60㎡ ÷ 2㎡About 30 persons

However, if there are only 28 seats in the room, the recommended operating capacity should be close to 28 people, not 40 people based only on area.

Therefore, for party rooms, we recommend using:

The smaller number between the area-based estimate and the actual seat count.


Parent Seating Area / Cafe Seating

For the parent seating area, the actual seat count should also be the priority.

Example:

DataQuantity
Area-based estimate70 persons
Actual seats55 seats

In this case, the recommended capacity should be:

55 adults / guests

Instead of using the area to force a 70-person capacity.


Reception, Queueing, and Shoe-Changing Area

The reception and queueing area is a short-term waiting space, not a play space.

ConditionSuggested Factor
Comfortable queueing1.2–1.8㎡ / person
Normal queueing0.8–1.2㎡ / person
Short-term dense queueing0.5–0.8㎡ / person

This area is mainly used to check whether congestion may occur during peak hours, not to increase the total operating capacity.


7. Do Not Simply Add All Zone Capacities Together

This is one of the most common mistakes in indoor playground capacity estimation.

For example:

ZoneEstimated Capacity
Main soft play structure100 children
Toddler area18 groups
Ball pit20 children
Party room40 persons
Parent seating area55 adults
Reception / queue area25 persons

You should not simply say:

Total capacity = 100 + 18 + 20 + 40 + 55 + 25

Because:

  • The same child may move between different play areas
  • Parents may stay in the seating area most of the time
  • Party room users and play area users may shift between spaces
  • Queueing area users are temporary and transitional
  • The ball pit and slides may already be part of the main soft play structure

A better approach is to build a peak operating scenario model.


8. Build a Peak Operating Scenario Model

The real question is:

How many people should be allowed inside the venue during peak hours?

We usually divide people into several groups:

  • Children actively playing
  • Accompanying parents / adults
  • Staff
  • Queueing / shoe-changing / transition guests

For a normal weekend peak scenario:

GroupRecommended Number
Children actively playing100–115
Accompanying parents75–90
Staff10
Queueing / shoe-changing / transition guests10–15
Recommended total operating capacity195–230 persons

This number is closer to real daily operation than simply adding all zone capacities together.


9. What Final Results Should Be Provided?

We recommend preparing two final numbers.

Code Occupant Load

This number is used for:

  • Fire approval
  • Building approval
  • Exit quantity
  • Door width
  • Egress routes
  • Occupancy sign
  • Business permit
  • Insurance

In a report, it can be written as:

Code Occupant Load: To be confirmed by local architect / fire marshal / building department.

This means:

The fire / building code occupancy should be confirmed by the local architect, fire consultant, or approval authority according to local regulations.


Recommended Operating Capacity

This number is used for:

  • Ticket sales
  • Peak-hour crowd control
  • Party bookings
  • Staff planning
  • Parent seating planning
  • Shoe storage planning
  • Guest experience control
  • Business model evaluation

For example, it can be expressed as:

Recommended Operating Capacity: approximately 195–230 total persons

With a breakdown such as:

GroupRecommended Number
Children100–115
Adults / guardians75–90
Staff10
Queue / transition guests10–15

The relationship between the two numbers is simple:

Code Occupant Load is the upper limit. Recommended Operating Capacity is the daily operating recommendation.

The daily operating capacity must be lower than the locally approved fire / building occupancy. In real projects, we also recommend not operating too close to the code limit, leaving some buffer for queues, staff, temporary visitors, and peak-hour transitions.


10. A Practical Calculation Example

Assume an indoor playground has the following preliminary area schedule:

ZoneData
Main soft play net playable area300㎡
Toddler area90㎡
Ball pit50㎡
Trampoline area20 trampoline beds
Party room60㎡, with 30 actual seats
Parent seating area55 seats
Reception / shoe-changing / queue area35㎡
Staff10 people

Main Soft Play Capacity

300㎡ ÷ 3㎡ / child = 100 children

Recommended expression:

Main soft play: 90–110 children


Toddler Area Capacity

90㎡ ÷ 5㎡ / group = 18 child-parent groups

Recommended expression:

Toddler area: 15–18 child-parent groups


Ball Pit Capacity

50㎡ ÷ 2.5㎡ / child = 20 children

Recommended expression:

Ball pit: around 18–22 children


Trampoline Capacity

20 trampoline beds × 1 user = 20 users


Party Room Capacity

The party room area may suggest 30–40 people, but since there are only 30 actual seats, the recommended capacity is:

Party room: around 30 persons


Parent Seating Capacity

There are 55 actual seats, so the recommended capacity is:

Cafe seating: around 55 adults / guests


Recommended Operating Capacity

All zone capacities should not be simply added together. A more realistic weekend peak model would be:

GroupRecommended Number
Children actively playing100–115
Accompanying parents75–90
Staff10
Queueing / shoe-changing / transition guests10–15
Recommended total operating capacity195–230 persons

The final conclusion can be written as:

Based on the preliminary design, the recommended daily operating capacity for this project is approximately 195–230 total persons, including around 100–115 children, 75–90 adults / guardians, 10 staff, and 10–15 queueing or transition guests. The final fire / building code occupancy must be confirmed by the local architect, fire consultant, or approval authority.


11. How We Can Help

As an indoor playground designer and manufacturer, we can assist in the early stage of the project by:

  • Preparing a preliminary 2D area schedule based on the 3D design
  • Estimating the net playable area of the main soft play structure
  • Estimating the recommended children’s capacity for different equipment zones
  • Reviewing whether the parent seating area, party rooms, and queueing area are sufficient
  • Providing a recommended daily operating capacity
  • Preparing basic information for communication with the local architect or fire consultant
  • Adjusting the equipment layout and functional zoning based on the target capacity

Please note:

Our capacity recommendation is based on equipment design and operating experience. It does not replace the official review by local architects, fire consultants, or government approval authorities.

The final Code Occupant Load must still be confirmed by local professionals according to the regulations of the project location.


12. Summary

Indoor playground capacity should not be calculated by simply dividing the total area by 3㎡.

A clearer and more practical method is:

  1. Convert the 3D design into a 2D area schedule by zone
  2. Use net playable area for the main soft play structure, not only footprint area
  3. Use 3㎡ / child as a preliminary operating estimate for the main soft play area
  4. Calculate toddler area, ball pit, slides, trampolines, party rooms, and parent seating separately
  5. Do not simply add all zone capacities together; build a peak operating scenario instead
  6. Prepare two numbers: Code Occupant Load and Recommended Operating Capacity
  7. Keep the recommended operating capacity below the locally approved fire / building occupancy

In one sentence:

Code Occupant Load determines the maximum number that may be approved, while Recommended Operating Capacity determines how many people should be admitted during daily operation.

For indoor playground investors and operators, the real goal is not to make the capacity number as large as possible, but to find the most reasonable operating capacity based on safety, comfort, compliance, and business performance.

Picture of Kay

Kay

With over a decade of hands-on experience in the Family Entertainment Center (FEC) and indoor playground industry, Kay is the driving force behind Leban's operational excellence. Having successfully managed large-scale outdoor amusement parks in his early career, he possesses a rare, 360-degree understanding of both equipment manufacturing and park management. Over the years, Kay has partnered with investors across the globe, helping them overcome complex spatial limitations and design challenges. His mission is simple: to transform challenging venues into highly profitable, safe, and visually stunning entertainment destinations.

Need a Free 3D Custom Design?

Share your venue dimensions with us, and our experts will create a custom design for you.

Quick Navigation

Scroll to Top