Inflatables hire in Faringdon
Planning ratios, honest guide prices and local site knowledge for inflatables around Faringdon and the SN7 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 Faringdon
Faringdon sits in Oxfordshire (SN7), inside EventSpeed's launch corridor. Small market town between river and downs, with the Folly on its hill and farmland venues in every direction.
Entertainment kit around Faringdon carries one extra question: curfews and neighbours. A classic marquee-in-a-field patch: most sites are working farmland, so trackway and generators appear on most lists. 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 Faringdon: quick answers
Do inflatables suppliers deliver to Faringdon?
Yes. Faringdon (SN7) 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 Faringdon?
For May to September weekends around Faringdon, 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 Faringdon supplier ask me before quoting?
Four things, every time: the date, the guest count, the exact site (a SN7 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.