Updated July 6, 2026
The Best Wedding Photo Sharing Apps, Honestly Compared
Almost every wedding "photo sharing app" promises the same thing: guests take the photos, you keep them all. The differences that actually matter are the boring ones — whether guests need an app or an account, whether you get full-resolution originals or compressed copies, how long the photos stay online, and what it costs once the wedding is over.
Sixteen services sit in the comparison table below; we review the seven couples most often weigh against each other in depth. Prices were checked against each provider on 6 July 2026. Some rivals win on price or on being free; we say so where they do.
Verdict
Quick verdict
If you want one line: pick a browser-based QR gallery when you care about getting every guest photo with the least friction and keeping the originals; pick a free option if budget beats convenience and you can live with account sign-ins or lower resolution.
Buying guide
5 things to look for in a wedding photo sharing app
No app or account for guests
The best tools work entirely in the phone browser — guests scan a QR code and upload. Every app install or sign-in is a step where guests drop off, so favour QR-to-browser sharing.
Fast setup
You should be able to create an album and get a QR code in a few minutes. If setup is fiddly, the tool is overcomplicating a simple job.
Full-resolution originals
Some services compress uploads. If you want to print guest photos or make an album, choose one that preserves the untouched originals — not just "high-res" copies.
Privacy and moderation
Your wedding photos should stay private. Look for an album you control, the ability to hide or remove uploads, and no public-posting requirement.
Transparent pricing
Avoid per-photo fees and surprise charges. The clearest options are a genuine free tier or a one-time payment with no subscription.
How long it stays online
Storage windows range from a few weeks to "forever". If you might come back years later, favour a service that keeps photos permanently or lets you pull the originals into your own storage — on this, WedUploader and Google Photos beat most paid galleries, ours included. Either way, download everything soon after the day.
Reliable on the day
The wedding is the one thing you cannot redo, so uploads have to just work — from any phone, over a busy venue connection — and the live album should load quickly without stalling. A tool that glitches during the reception loses photos you will never get back, so reliability matters more than a slightly lower price.
At a glance
The full field at a glance
| Service | Guests need an app/account? | Full-res originals | Video | Live slideshow | Free option | Paid price |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wedding Arrivals | No — browser only | Yes, uncompressed | Yes | Yes (Standard+) | 20-upload trial | From $49 one-time |
| Google Photos | Yes — Google account | Original mode only | Yes | No | Free (15 GB shared) | Free |
| Guestpix | No — browser only | Not stated | Yes | Yes | Demo (50 photos) | $49 / $89 one-time |
| GuestCam | No — browser only | Yes, original quality | Yes (to 9.8 GB/file) | Yes | None | $49 / $97 one-time |
| WedUploader | No — browser only | Yes (into your Drive) | Yes | Yes | None | $39 one-time |
| Kululu | No — browser only | Not guaranteed | Yes | Yes | Free (limited) | $39 / $99 one-time |
| LiveWall | No — browser only | Yes, full resolution | Yes (higher tiers) | Yes | Free (limited) | From $14.95 one-time |
| Knipsmig | No — browser only | Yes, full resolution | Yes (to 1 GB/file) | Yes | Free (1 month) | $29 / $89 one-time |
| Rompolo | No — browser only | Photos → 2K unless opt-in | Yes | Yes | 5-day trial | $19.99–$59.99 one-time |
| Warpbin | No — browser only | Yes, no compression | Yes | Yes | Demo (3 days) | $7–$49, or $9.95/mo |
| Chivent | No — browser only | Yes, original quality | Yes | Yes | 7-day trial | Build-your-plan (~$17+) |
| Catchmemo | No — browser only | Not stated | Yes | Yes | Free (50 items) | $39 / $99 |
| GuestReel | No — browser only | Yes, original quality | Yes | Not stated | 7-day trial | $39 / $69 one-time |
| WeddingBox | No — browser only | Not stated (ZIP) | Yes | Yes | None | €29 / €59 |
| POV | No — App Clip / web | Not published | Photo-focused | Yes | Free ≤10 guests | Scales to ~$90 |
| WedShoots | Yes — app install | Not stated | Yes | Not stated | Free | Free |
Two patterns jump out. First, no app is now table stakes — of the sixteen services above, all but two let guests upload straight from the browser, so on its own it barely separates anyone. What still divides the field is whether guests need an account (Google Photos does; almost nobody else does) and whether you actually get the original files.
- 16
- services compared, prices verified
- 14 of 16
- let guests upload with no app
- From $14.95
- cheapest one-time paid plan (LiveWall)
Source: Wedding Arrivals — comparison of 16 services (July 2026)
Methodology
How we evaluated
We compared sixteen wedding and event photo-sharing services and focus here on the seven couples most often weigh against each other for collecting guest photos (not the photographer's own gallery). For each one we checked the provider's own pricing and help pages on 6 July 2026 and recorded the things that change the outcome on the day: whether guests need an app or account, whether the couple gets full-resolution originals or compressed copies, video support, how long photos stay online, and the real one-time or ongoing cost.
One difference the table surfaces — and it only matters if you plan to print — is resolution. Seven of these services either compress guest photos or won't confirm the downloads are the untouched originals — one optimises photos to 2K unless you opt out, and several only promise vague "high quality". If prints or an album are on your list, check that detail before you pay; if not, ignore it.
Where a provider does not publish a figure, we write "not stated" rather than guessing. Every feature claim here — including our own — comes from each provider's own pricing and help pages, so read a "yes" as a promise the vendor makes, not a result we tested. We also deliberately avoid the "80–95% of guests participate" style statistics that circulate on vendor blogs and the self-declared "4.9-star" ratings some competitors show: none of them trace to a real published study or an independent review base, so they have no place in an honest comparison.
Detailed reviews
The seven worth a closer look
The rest of the field is in the table above for completeness; these are the seven we would actually shortlist, and why.
Wedding Arrivals
- Price:
- From $49 one-time
- Guests:
- No app
Pros
- No app or account for guests — scan and upload in the browser
- Unlimited guests and uploads on paid plans
- Full-resolution originals, kept byte-exact
- Photos and video, plus an audio guestbook
- Live venue slideshow (Standard plan and up)
- Uploads go straight from the phone to storage on Cloudflare's global network, with a live album that updates in real time
- One-time price, no subscription
Cons
- Live slideshow and audio guestbook are on higher tiers
- Storage window is time-limited (6–24 months by plan)
- Free option is only a 20-upload trial, not a full free event
Google Photos
- Price:
- Free
- Storage:
- 15 GB shared
Pros
- Free, and "Original quality" preserves the originals
- Familiar to almost everyone
- No auto-delete
Cons
- Every guest needs a Google account just to upload
- Uploads use each guest's own 15 GB — a guest whose storage is full is blocked
- No moderation, no QR upload page, no event slideshow
Guestpix
- Price:
- $49 / $89 one-time
- Free:
- Demo only
Pros
- No app or account for guests
- Unlimited photos and videos on paid plans
- Live slideshow included
Cons
- Free tier is a 50-photo demo, not a full event
- Does not state whether downloads are exact originals
- Upload window as short as 3 months on the entry plan
GuestCam
- Price:
- From $49 one-time
- Free:
- None
Pros
- No app or account for guests
- Original-quality downloads
- Video up to 9.8 GB per file, plus an audio guestbook
- Unlimited guests and photos, live slideshow
Cons
- No free tier — cheapest is $49
- Some features are paid add-ons (AI face search, phone guestbook)
- Storage expires after 12–14 months
WedUploader
- Price:
- $39 one-time
- Guests:
- No app
Pros
- No app for guests, full-resolution originals
- Uploads land in your own Google Drive and never expire
- Live slideshow and guestbook included
Cons
- Storage is capped by your Google Drive (15 GB free)
- No free tier for the couple
- Seating chart is a paid add-on
Kululu
- Price:
- Free / $39 / $99
- Free:
- Yes (limited)
Pros
- Has a genuine free tier, no app for guests
- Live photo wall on every plan
- Unlimited uploads on the top plan
Cons
- Does not guarantee full-resolution originals (quality is tiered)
- Free tier keeps photos only 7 days
- "Unlimited" carries a fair-use cap
LiveWall
- Price:
- From $14.95
- Free:
- Yes (limited)
Pros
- Cheapest paid entry in the field
- No app for guests, full-resolution originals
- Strong video specs (up to 4K, 30 min on the top tier)
Cons
- Video only from the mid tier up
- Entry plan is photos only
- Full year-long upload window only on the top tier
Costs
What each approach really costs
For context, the average US wedding photographer costs about $3,000 (The Knot Real Weddings Study, 2025), and a professional typically delivers 400–800 edited images from the day — the formal record, but only the angles one person could capture. Guest photo sharing is the cheap layer that fills in everything else.
The traditional alternative, disposable cameras, is not as cheap as it looks: at roughly $15 a camera plus about $12 each to develop, the total depends on how many you buy — 10–15 cameras for a 120-guest wedding runs about $250–$400 once developed, and you wait days for the scans. A browser-based QR gallery is free for guests and a one-time fee for the couple, and the photos arrive at full resolution the same night.
Why it matters
Why guest photo sharing is worth setting up
More than 9 in 10 US adults own a smartphone (Pew Research Center, 2025), so nearly every guest is already carrying a good camera. The question is never whether guests take photos — it is whether those photos ever reach you.
At the same time, the wedding hashtag is fading: couples increasingly prefer phone-aware, private sharing over public social posts, and unplugged ceremonies are now mainstream — favored by 62% of Gen Z and 54% of millennial couples (The Knot 2025 Real Weddings Study). A private QR gallery fits that shift: phones stay away during the vows, then collect every candid at the reception into an album only you control.
Frequently asked questions
For most couples, a browser-based QR gallery such as Wedding Arrivals, Guestpix or GuestCam is the best fit: guests scan a code and upload from the phone browser with no app or account, and you keep full-resolution originals for a one-time price from about $49. If a free option matters more than convenience, a Google Photos shared album or the free tier on a tool like Kululu or LiveWall is the way to go.
A Google Photos shared album is the best-known free option and keeps your originals, but every guest needs a Google account and there is no QR scan-and-upload flow or moderation. If you want a proper QR gallery at no cost, several paid tools have a real (if limited) free tier — Kululu, LiveWall and Knipsmig among them — though most cap photos or keep them only for a short window. Most other paid galleries offer just a small trial rather than a full free event.
Not with browser-based services. Wedding Arrivals, Guestpix, GuestCam and WedUploader all let guests scan a QR code and upload straight from the phone browser — no app, no account. Google Photos needs a Google account, and some apps like WedShoots ask guests to install an app, which is the step where most people drop off.
Yes on most services. Wedding Arrivals, Guestpix, GuestCam and WedUploader all accept guest video alongside photos, and Google Photos supports video in shared albums. Some tools cap video by file size (GuestCam allows up to 9.8 GB per file) or restrict it to higher tiers (LiveWall). Check the provider if guest video is essential for you.
It varies a lot. QR galleries usually give a storage window: Guestpix keeps photos for 12 months on its main plans, and one-time gallery plans generally range from several months up to two years. WedUploader (files sit in your own Google Drive) and Google Photos never auto-delete. Always download your originals soon after the wedding regardless of the window.
Only some services promise byte-exact originals. Wedding Arrivals, GuestCam, WedUploader and LiveWall keep uploads uncompressed, and Google Photos preserves originals in "Original quality" mode. Others compress or stay vague — Rompolo optimises photos to 2K unless you opt out, and several simply do not state their policy. If you want the untouched files for prints or an album, confirm the provider preserves originals before you buy.
Usually not. At about $15 per camera plus roughly $12 each to develop, even 10–15 cameras for a 120-guest wedding costs $250–$400 and takes days to see. A browser-based QR gallery is free for guests and starts around $49 one-time for the couple, collects far more photos, and delivers them at full resolution the same night.
A hashtag relies on guests posting publicly to a social network, so you only ever see what people choose to post, and the images are compressed by the platform. A QR gallery sends full-resolution photos and video straight into one private album you own, with no public posting required — which fits the shift toward phone-aware, unplugged weddings.