How to Batch-Download All Your Event Photos: A Host's Guide
The party's over. Somewhere across your guests' phones are the photos you actually want — the toast, the dance floor, the candid one nobody posed for. The question every host eventually asks is the practical one: how do I get all of them, in one go, before they scatter or disappear?
This is the difference between a photo-sharing tool and a photo keeping tool. Collecting images during the event is the easy part. Batch-downloading them — pulling the entire collection in original quality, in a single archive, so you own a permanent copy — is what turns a temporary live gallery into something you'll still have in ten years. And it's worth doing deliberately, because around 70% of camera-phone photos are never revisited (Popsa, The Memory Economy, 2025) — the ones that survive are usually the ones someone took the trouble to save somewhere safe.
Below is a clear, tool-agnostic guide to doing that well: what a "batch download" actually means, how to do it in Gathmo, what to watch for with any platform, and the one deadline most hosts forget about.
Why this matters now. Roughly 1.9 trillion photos were taken worldwide in 2024 (Photutorial, 2024–2025). At a single event, hundreds of those can come from guests you'll never get a second chance to ask. A clean batch export is your insurance policy.
Three things tend to get bundled under the same phrase, and they're not the same:
The goal is the first one: a complete, original-quality export that lives on your own storage, independent of the platform.
In Gathmo, batch ZIP download is included on every paid tier — Essential (€19), Celebrate (€39), and Grand (€79) — and it exports your media in original quality (no re-compression). Because Gathmo's storage is built so that exports don't incur egress fees, downloading the whole gallery doesn't cost you extra, however large it is. (source: research-foundation/07-gathmo-product-facts.md, GATHMO-039)
The flow is the same on any device:
A note on the Free tier (€0): it's designed for trying Gathmo out rather than archiving — it caps the gallery at 30 guests and 50 items and keeps the album for 14 days (plus a 14-day grace period). If your real goal is to keep everything, start on a paid tier so the full batch export is available and your gallery isn't on a short clock. (source: 07-gathmo-product-facts.md, B2C tier table)
An honest limitation: Gathmo does not offer face-recognition photo search or RSVP at launch — both are planned for a later phase, not available today. So you can batch-download everything, but you can't yet ask the system to "find all photos of Grandma." If selfie-based photo finding is a must-have right now, we say so plainly in our honest app comparison. (source: 07-gathmo-product-facts.md, GATHMO-043/044)
Mostly, yes — bulk download is one of the few features that's near-universal. From the platforms we track, GuestCam, Kululu, Fotify, EventPics, and LiveWall all offer batch ZIP download (verified from each provider's own pages, as of June 2026). A few are less clear: EventShare's bulk-export behaviour isn't documented on its site, so confirm before you rely on it. (source: competitor-data-digest.md, captured 2026-06-08)
Two differences are worth checking on any tool before the event, not after:
For event-type-specific walkthroughs — for example, collecting and downloading every shot from a wedding or a company conference — see the dedicated guides on our weddings, birthdays, parties, and corporate sites.
Here's the part that quietly costs people their photos. Event galleries don't last forever — and they shouldn't, for good legal reasons. Under GDPR, personal data must be kept no longer than is necessary for the purpose it was collected (the storage-limitation principle, Art. 5(1)(e)), and collected data should be limited to what's needed (data minimisation, Art. 5(1)(c)). A responsible event platform therefore deletes galleries on a schedule rather than hoarding guest photos indefinitely. (source: 05-gdpr-legal-register.md, CITE-20260608-1013)
That's a feature, not a bug — but it means the clock is the host's responsibility. Download the full archive before the retention window closes.
In Gathmo, the window scales with your tier, so pick one that matches how long you need before exporting:
(source: 07-gathmo-product-facts.md, B2C tier table + GATHMO-039)
Practical rule: download within the first week or two after the event, while it's fresh and uploads have finished. Don't wait until day 89 on a 90-day window.
When guests share photos at your event, you are typically the data controller and the platform is your processor. One reason hosts increasingly care where a platform stores data: if it's outside the EU, you inherit the complexity of international transfers (adequacy decisions and Standard Contractual Clauses under GDPR Chapter V), whereas keeping everything in the EU sidesteps that entirely. (source: 05-gdpr-legal-register.md, CITE-20260608-1011)
Gathmo hosts media and databases in the EU — object storage in an EU jurisdiction, the primary database in Frankfurt, with data-processing agreements in place with its processors. So your batch download isn't just convenient; the data was held in Europe the whole time it was waiting for you. (source: 07-gathmo-product-facts.md, GATHMO-042)
For a deeper look at this, see our explainer on EU data residency for event albums and our GDPR guide for hosts.
You can only batch-download what guests upload — and that starts with a scannable code. From the print best-practice we follow: size the code to the placement (roughly 3–5 cm on a table card, 10–25 cm on an A-frame or standing poster), keep a clear blank margin of at least 4 modules on all sides, use a dark code on a light background (avoid inverting it), and test-print and scan the proof from real distance before you print a stack. (source: 12-qr-print-best-practice.md, CITE-20260608-3012/3014/3003/3006/3019)
Frequently asked
Yes — with Gathmo, guests scan a QR code or open a short link, and upload straight from their phone's browser. No app install and no account. That's the whole point: friction kills participation, and you can't download photos guests never bothered to share.
The full batch-ZIP export in Gathmo is a paid-tier feature (from €19 per event). The Free tier is for trying the product on a small gallery, not for archiving — so if your goal is to keep everything, choose a paid tier before the event.
Not in the platform — the export is original quality, with no re-compression. With other tools, check first: some export downscaled copies. If you intend to print, insist on originals.
In the event album, the ZIP includes photos, videos, and audio guestbook recordings together. On some other platforms, video and audio aren't bundled into the same export — verify before the event.
It depends on the tier: 90 days (Essential), 183 days (Celebrate), or 365 days (Grand) in the album, with the Free album lasting 14 days plus a grace period. Galleries are deleted on a schedule by design, to respect GDPR's storage-limitation principle (Art. 5(1)(e)) — so download well before the window closes.
Yes. Under the GDPR right to erasure (Art. 17(1)), a guest can ask the controller to delete their personal data, and that request must generally be actioned within one month (Art. 12(3), extendable by two further months for complex cases). Bear this in mind when you re-share a downloaded archive.



