The Real Cost of a 10×10 Booth
If you’ve ever walked a trade show floor and wondered what each of those 10×10 booths actually costs, the answer is: a lot more than most exhibitors expect. As a trade show consultant, one of the most common mistakes I see is companies budgeting only for the floor space, then getting blindsided by a cascade of additional invoices — drayage, electrical, labor, shipping, and more.
The floor space rental alone is just the entry ticket. The full cost of exhibiting in a 10×10 booth, when all expenses are accounted for, typically ranges from $10,000 to $30,000 or more per show, depending on the city, the show’s prestige, and how polished your presentation needs to be.
Here’s a thorough breakdown of every cost category you’ll encounter.
Floor Space: The Baseline Cost
The first expense is the booth space rental — the 100 square feet of convention center floor you’re paying the show organizer to occupy.
Floor space is priced per square foot, and rates vary enormously depending on the show and its location. The industry average sits around $20–$40 per square foot for most shows, meaning a 10×10 space typically runs $2,000–$4,000 at mid-range events. However, major national shows in gateway cities like New York, Las Vegas, or Chicago can push that rate to $100–$150 per square foot, putting floor space alone at $10,000–$15,000.
A widely-cited industry rule of thumb: your total trade show budget should be roughly three times the cost of your floor space. So if your booth space costs $3,000, plan to spend approximately $9,000 in total across all expenses.
Floor Space Cost by Show Type
| Show Type / City | Est. Cost per Sq. Ft. (10×10) |
| Small regional show | $20 – $40/sq ft → $2,000–$4,000 |
| Mid-size national show | $40 – $80/sq ft → $4,000–$8,000 |
| Major national show (Las Vegas, NYC) | $100 – $150/sq ft → $10,000–$15,000 |
| Premium / flagship industry event | $138–$200+/sq ft → $13,800–$20,000+ |
Booth Display: Buy, Rent, or Portable?
Your second major cost is the physical exhibit structure itself — the backwall, display frame, signage, and any furniture. You have three main options:
- Portable displays (tension fabric, pop-up frames): Starting around $550–$3,000. Lightweight, easy to transport, and no drayage or labor needed. Best for frequent exhibitors or budget-conscious first-timers.
- Rental booths: Typically $1,000–$10,000 per show for a 10×10 space. A good option if you exhibit fewer than three times per year, want flexibility in design, or don’t want to deal with storage between shows.
- Custom-built or purchased booths: $5,000–$15,000+ for a 10×10 build. Best for companies attending four or more shows per year, where the long-term economics of ownership beat repeated rental costs.
If you go the custom route, factor in that booth displays have an average lifespan of about five years, while graphics typically need refreshing annually.
The Hidden Costs That Catch Exhibitors Off Guard
This is where budgets go sideways. Beyond space and display, you’ll face a second tier of expenses that most first-time exhibitors underestimate:
Drayage (Material Handling)
Drayage is the fee charged by the show’s general contractor to move your exhibit from the loading dock to your booth space — and back again at teardown. It’s charged by weight, and rates typically run $1.50 to $4.00 per pound. A standard 10×10 kit can weigh 200–400 lbs, putting drayage alone at $300–$1,600. Tip: shipping everything consolidated in one load minimizes minimum handling charges.
Electrical
Electricity is almost never included in floor space rental. Expect to pay $100–$600 or more per show depending on your power needs and the city. Convention center electrical rates vary dramatically — a connection in a union-heavy city like New York will cost noticeably more than in a smaller market.
Labor (Installation & Dismantle)
If your show requires union labor, you’ll pay for every hour spent setting up and tearing down. Rates vary by city and whether the work falls on straight time, overtime, or double time. Budget anywhere from $200 to $1,500 for I&D on a 10×10, depending on your location and booth complexity. Portable displays reduce or eliminate this cost entirely.
Shipping
Getting your booth to and from the show costs money — typically around 10% of your total show budget. Working with an exhibit house that has warehouses near major convention cities can dramatically reduce freight costs by enabling short-haul shipping.
Carpet & Flooring
Most trade show venues require flooring in your booth. Renting carpet through the show’s official contractor typically runs $150–$250 for a 10×10, while purchasing your own carpet or interlocking tiles costs $150–$600 and can be reused across shows.
How the Full Budget Breaks Down
According to EXHIBITOR Magazine and industry sources, here is how a well-planned trade show budget typically allocates across categories:
| Budget Category | % of Total Budget |
| Booth floor space | 33–35% |
| Exhibit design & display construction | 11–18% |
| Travel & lodging | 14–18% |
| Show services (labor, electrical, drayage) | 12–13% |
| Shipping & freight | 9–10% |
| Graphic design, production & promotion | 6–10% |
| Miscellaneous | 2–5% |
Total Cost Examples: What to Expect
To make this concrete, here are three real-world scenarios for a 10×10 booth:
Scenario 1: Small Regional Show (Budget-Conscious)
- Floor space: $2,000
- Portable display kit: $1,500 (amortized over 5 shows)
- Carpet rental: $200
- Electrical: $150
- Shipping (self-managed): $300
- Travel & hotel (1 staff, 2 nights): $800
- Promotional materials: $400
Estimated Total: ~$5,350
Scenario 2: Mid-Size National Show
- Floor space: $5,000
- Booth rental: $3,500
- Drayage: $600
- Electrical: $350
- Labor (I&D): $700
- Shipping: $900
- Travel & hotel (2 staff, 3 nights): $2,500
- Graphics & promotional materials: $1,200
Estimated Total: ~$14,750
Scenario 3: Major Show (Las Vegas or NYC)
- Floor space: $12,000
- Custom exhibit rental: $6,000
- Drayage: $1,200
- Electrical: $600
- Labor (I&D, union rates): $1,500
- Shipping: $1,800
- Travel & hotel (2 staff, 4 nights): $4,000
- Graphics, giveaways & promotion: $2,000
Estimated Total: ~$29,100
Key Takeaways for First-Time Exhibitors
If you’re new to trade shows, the cost complexity can be overwhelming. Here are the most important principles to keep in mind:
- Use the 3x rule: Budget three times your floor space cost to cover all expenses.
- Book early: Prime booth locations sell out quickly and last-minute orders for show services carry steep surcharges.
- Portable displays save money: They reduce or eliminate labor, drayage, and shipping costs — often the biggest surprises on your invoice.
- Union rules matter: If your show is in a union city, learn the labor rules before you arrive. Setting up something yourself in a union hall can result in fines and rework costs.
- Ask for advance rates: Almost all show services — electrical, carpet, freight — are significantly cheaper when ordered before the show’s advance deadline, often 2–4 weeks out.
- Measure ROI: The average cost per lead generated at a trade show is around $112. Track your leads carefully and compare cost per acquisition against other channels.
Final Thought
A 10×10 booth is one of the most accessible entry points into trade show marketing — but ‘accessible’ doesn’t mean inexpensive. Savvy exhibitors treat the floor space fee as just the beginning of the conversation, not the end. Understanding the full cost picture is what separates companies that consistently generate ROI from trade shows from those who walk away wondering where the money went.



