10x10 Booth Rentals in Orlando: Costs, Venues, and What Ships
Orlando's Orange County Convention Center is the second-largest in the U.S. by usable space, and shows here trend toward consumer-facing categories like attractions, healthcare, and golf. Booth styling typically leans warmer and more open than the colder palette common at tech shows. For exhibitors at shows like IAAPA, PGA Show, AAOS, and Surf Expo, a 10x10 booth at 100 square feet is a workable footprint. Pricing in Orlando typically runs $12,100–$18,500 per show on a fully turnkey basis — higher than Las Vegas because of labor jurisdictions, freight distance from our warehouse, and venue-specific drayage tiers. In practice this means OCCC's two-campus layout (North and West halls connected by a tunnel) shapes your booth-traffic estimate and the drayage timing for your category. Some shows split across both halls; others stay in one.
Exhibit Rentals operates from a warehouse in Las Vegas. Transit from our Las Vegas warehouse to OCCC runs 6–8 days. Every booth in our 10x10 inventory is fully pre-assembled and inspected at our facility before it ships to Orlando — so the install at the Orange County Convention Center (OCCC) is replication of an approved build, not first-time assembly on the show floor. For markets like Orlando where freight distance and labor rules add risk, the warehouse pre-build is what protects your show date.
Is a 10x10 the Right Size for Your Show?
The 10x10 booth works best for a few specific kinds of exhibitor:
- First-time exhibitors who want a professional presence without committing to a custom purchase
- Regional and mid-market brands at niche shows where focused engagement beats square footage
- Enterprise companies running a secondary activation alongside a larger island booth
- SaaS and product-led teams with a single flagship demo — the constrained footprint forces visitor focus
If your show plan involves more than three booth staff at once, multiple private conversations in parallel, or a walk-around product display, the 10x10 will feel cramped. Step up to 10x20 before booking — it costs less to design once than to retrofit after the fact.
Working With 100 Square Feet
One hundred square feet is more flexible than it sounds when you use vertical space. A 10x10 typically fits a full backlit 10-foot back wall, one counter, a 32"–43" monitor, one or two stools, and a slim literature holder. What doesn't fit: multiple meeting zones, walk-around product displays, or four staff at once.
What doesn't fit comfortably in a 10x10: multiple private conversation zones, walk-around product displays, four or more staff at once, or any meaningful seating. If those are critical, the next step up makes more sense than fighting the geometry.
Floor-Plan Choices at 10x10
The 10x10 inline booth has one open side facing the aisle. Your design choice is essentially a layout question: open-front (counter and graphics pushed to back, aisle wide open — best for high-traffic shows), welcome-desk (counter front-center, angled toward the aisle, good for software demos), or L-shape (back wall plus one side wall — feels less confrontational and pulls visitors in).
One traffic rule applies to all three layouts: don't block the front three feet of the booth with furniture, freestanding signage, or stacked literature. The sightline from the aisle to your back wall is your three-second billboard. At the Orange County Convention Center (OCCC), aisle traffic patterns vary by hall, but the three-second decision window is universal.
OCCC traffic varies by show character. IAAPA attendees stop to look at full attraction prototypes; PGA Show attendees move quickly through gear stations. A 10x10 for IAAPA can lean immersive; for PGA Show it should lead with one product up front and let everything else load secondary.
Everything Your Quote Covers
Every quote from Exhibit Rentals is turnkey. One number on the proposal covers every line item below — there's no separate drayage invoice, no surprise electrical bill, no post-show reconciliation:
- Photorealistic 3D rendering before approval
- Full pre-build and inspection at our Las Vegas warehouse before shipping to Orlando
- Full graphics production — backlit fabric, direct-print, or tension fabric depending on design
- Round-trip freight from our Las Vegas warehouse to the Orange County Convention Center (OCCC) (or other Orlando venue)
- Certified installation and dismantling, fully labor-compliant for your venue
- Show services paperwork — EAC filings, Certificate of Insurance, electrical orders, drayage coordination
- One dedicated project manager from kickoff to load-out
What a 10x10 Costs in Orlando
A turnkey 10x10 trade show booth rental in Orlando typically falls between $12,100 and $18,500 per show. Where you land in that range comes down to materials, monitor and AV count, and how much custom architecture you add.
- $12,100–$15,300: Clean professional build with backlit fabric, standard counters, LED lighting. Right for first-time exhibitors at small or mid-tier shows.
- $15,300–$16,900: Adds monitor walls, upgraded lighting, additional counters, larger graphics, additional brand zones. The mid-market sweet spot.
- $16,900–$18,500: Premium materials, architectural ceiling features, integrated tech and premium furnishings.
That works out to roughly $121–$185 per square foot in Orlando. Orlando pricing is moderate — right-to-work labor in the Southeast keeps install costs reasonable, but freight distance from our Las Vegas warehouse adds to the all-in number relative to West Coast markets. OCCC drayage tiers vary by exhibit category, your project manager will confirm tier and total before crating to avoid post-show invoice surprises.
Getting Into Orlando Venues
Florida is a right-to-work state, which gives more flexibility on labor — but OCCC still requires certified I&D supervision and a current Certificate of Insurance on file.
Orange County Convention Center labor is comparatively flexible (Florida right-to-work), but OCCC drayage and electrical paperwork still requires advance submission. Hanging sign rigging requires venue approval. Our project managers handle every submission so the booth arrives ready to install.
Where 10x10 Booths Go Wrong
At 10x10, the usual design errors cost you more. What we see at the Orange County Convention Center (OCCC) shows:
- Overcrowding the floor with a reception desk plus tower display plus lounge seating
- Weak back wall graphics — clipart, low-resolution images, text walls
- Ignoring the vertical envelope; designing only to eye level
- Understaffing (one person can't cover the booth during peak hours) or overstaffing (four people make the booth feel crowded)
- Relying on walk-up traffic instead of pre-show appointment booking
- Skipping structured lead capture in favor of a stack of business cards
- Not confirming your OCCC hall assignment before finalizing graphics — North and West halls have different ceiling-height envelopes, and a hanging sign sized for one hall may not clear in the other.
Rent or Buy a 10x10?
For exhibitors attending one to three Orlando shows per year, renting almost always beats buying on total cost. A purchased 10x10 runs $19,000–$30,000 upfront, then $1,000–$3,500 per show in storage, refurbishment, and shipping. A rental at $12,100–$18,500 per show eliminates storage, depreciation, and the risk of your exhibit looking dated as your brand evolves. For four or more shows a year with stable branding, the buying math starts to favor purchase — but the one-vendor turnkey model still saves substantial coordination time even then. For Florida-based exhibitors, the rent-vs-buy math is closer than at coastal cities because freight from any East Coast storage to OCCC is reasonable. Still, three-or-fewer shows a year favors rental.
Next Step
Browse our 10x10 design gallery below, or fill out the quote form for a custom 3D rendering and full price within 24 hours. Every booth includes our warehouse pre-build guarantee and a dedicated project manager who handles every step from kickoff to load-out.


