Inflatables hire in Reading
Planning ratios, honest guide prices and local site knowledge for inflatables around Reading and the RG1 area.
Bouncy castle hire typically costs £60 to £120 per day for private garden parties and £150 to £350 per day for public events, where an attendant and PIPA-tested equipment are expected. Each unit needs a blower on constant power and proper anchorage: wind is the real safety factor.
Hiring inflatables around Reading
Reading sits in Berkshire (RG1), inside EventSpeed's launch corridor. Thames-side commercial centre whose festival weekend is part of British music history.
Entertainment kit around Reading carries one extra question: curfews and neighbours. Deep corporate demand plus big-event heritage: AV, staging and power expertise are strong locally. Confirm the site's noise expectations in writing and pass them to the supplier with the brief.
Typical prices
| Item | Typical guide price | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Bouncy castle, garden party | £60–£120 / day | |
| Castle at public event, attended | £150–£350 / day | |
| Assault course / slide | £200–£500 / day | |
| Adult-rated unit | £150–£400 / day |
Guide prices exclude VAT and vary with season, region and site access. Quotes from suppliers are always the real number.
Inflatables hire in Reading: quick answers
Do inflatables suppliers deliver to Reading?
Yes. Reading (RG1) sits inside the Oxfordshire–Cotswolds–M4 corridor where most event hire depots quote a 20 to 30 mile radius, so it is covered from several directions. Delivery is normally included within that radius; confirm the exact drop position and access when you book.
When should I book inflatables for an event in Reading?
For May to September weekends around Reading, book 2 to 4 months ahead; premium items and peak Saturdays go earlier. Off-season and midweek dates are far more flexible, often at better prices.
What will a Reading supplier ask me before quoting?
Four things, every time: the date, the guest count, the exact site (a RG1 postcode plus what the ground is like), and access: how close a vehicle gets to where the kit goes. Have those ready and quotes come back faster and more accurate.
What is PIPA testing and do I need it?
PIPA is the UK inflatable-play inspection scheme: a tagged unit has passed an annual safety inspection to BS EN 14960. For private garden hire it is good practice; for public events it is what councils, insurers and event plans expect to see.
Can inflatables run in wind or rain?
Light rain is manageable on covered units; wind is the decider. Above 24mph gusts (Beaufort 5 to 6), operation must stop: most serious inflatable accidents are anchorage failures in wind. Operators should measure on site and make the call.