Kululu vs Gathmo: A Straightforward Feature Comparison
Kululu is one of the better-known QR-code photo apps for events — clean, cheap to start, and easy for guests to use. If you've landed here, you're probably trying to decide whether it's the right fit or whether a Kululu alternative would suit your event better. Gathmo is built around three things Kululu doesn't do: voice messages, a real live stream, and EU data residency. Below is a straight, side-by-side comparison — with prices and features checked against each company's own pages in June 2026, not guessed.
How we compared. Every Kululu price and feature here was verified from kululu.com on 2026-06-08; Gathmo's figures come from our own product spec. Where something is unclear, we say so rather than fill in a blank. Note the currency: Kululu prices in USD, Gathmo prices in EUR — we've kept each in its native currency, because today's exchange rate isn't tomorrow's. Prices change; re-check before you buy.
(Sources: kululu.com; gathmo.com; verified 2026-06-08.)
Let's be fair — Kululu is popular for good reasons, and for plenty of events it's perfectly enough:
If your event is a casual get-together, your guests are US-based, and you only need photos and video on a screen, Kululu will do the job.
Three gaps are worth knowing about before you decide.
1. Voice messages — and transcripts. Kululu collects photos and video, but it has no audio guestbook. Gathmo lets guests record a voice message straight in the browser (no hardware, no phone to rent), and on the Grand tier those messages come with automatic transcripts — so the message is readable and searchable later, and accessible to guests who are deaf or hard of hearing. If you want your event to sound like itself and not just look like it, this is the single biggest difference.
2. A real live stream, not just a slideshow. Both tools can put a slideshow on the screen. Only Gathmo's top tier adds an actual live stream — useful for the people who couldn't be in the room.
3. EU data residency. This is the one that matters most for European hosts. Kululu's own policy states that primary content is stored on Google Cloud (Firebase) servers in the United States. Gathmo hosts everything in the EU (Frankfurt), with data-processing agreements in place with its processors. For a wedding, a kids' birthday, or any company event in Europe, keeping guest media inside the EU removes the international-transfer question entirely. (More on why that matters below.)
A fourth point, for professionals: Kululu's branding control is cosmetic — a "Remove Kululu Branding" toggle. Gathmo offers true white-label for agencies, planners, venues, and photographers, including a custom domain and your brand on the guest page, album, and emails. If you resell event media under your own name, that's a different league.
One honest caveat about Gathmo: face-recognition photo search and RSVP are not in the launch product — both are on the roadmap, not available today. Kululu doesn't clearly document face-search either, so neither tool is the pick if selfie-based photo finding is your must-have right now. We'd rather tell you that than imply otherwise.
"Where is my data stored?" sounds like a detail until you remember what's in an event gallery: photos of children, colleagues, and guests who never expected their face to land on a US server. Under the GDPR, transfers of personal data to a country outside the EU are only lawful on a specific legal footing — an adequacy decision or appropriate safeguards such as Standard Contractual Clauses, with enforceable rights and remedies for the people in the photos (GDPR Chapter V, Art. 45 and Art. 46). Keeping the data in the EU in the first place sidesteps that mechanism altogether.
Two more GDPR points are relevant to any host:
Just to be clear: a server location is not, by itself, "GDPR compliance" — that depends on how the whole event is run. But for an EU host, EU-resident storage is one fewer thing to worry about.
Kululu markets itself heavily by event type, and it shows up in searches for wedding, party, and birthday photo sharing. It can handle all three at a basic level. But each of those events has its own needs — a wedding wants voice messages from older relatives; a surprise birthday wants guests to contribute before the day without spoiling it; a big party wants a live moment on screen. Gathmo runs a dedicated experience for each, so the comparison is sharper there than on a generic hub page. If you're planning one specific event, go straight to the detailed write-up:
Before choosing either tool, map your event against three questions. First: will the album be used by family and friends only, or by employees, clients, and guests who may expect a more formal privacy setup? If it is the second, EU hosting, a DPA, retention windows, and deletion workflow should move up the list.
Second: will the album be watched during the event or mainly downloaded afterwards? If the screen is central to the room, Kululu's live slideshow is enough for many parties. If remote relatives, overflow rooms, or hybrid guests matter, Gathmo's live-stream tier becomes more relevant.
Third: will you remember the event by what people said? For many weddings, birthdays, and reunions, the answer is yes. That is where a browser-based voice booth changes the product category. A photo wall is fun during the night; a voice message from someone important is still valuable years later.
One last test: ask who will own the job after the party. If the host needs one ZIP, one album link, one deletion path, and one vendor answer for privacy questions, choose the product that makes those boring tasks obvious. That is usually where the cheaper-looking option and the better-operating option separate.
…you want the cheapest possible one-time price for a single small event, you only need photos and video (no voice messages), a slideshow is enough, and your guests and data being in the US isn't a concern.
…you're hosting in the EU and want guest data to stay there, you want voice messages with transcripts alongside photos and video, you'd like the option of a real live stream, or you're a professional who wants to offer all of this under your own brand. Pricing is Free / €19 / €39 / €79 per event, so you can start free and only pay for the tier you need.
For a casual, US-based, photos-only event on the tightest budget, Kululu is a reasonable pick. For an EU host — or anyone who wants voices as well as pictures, a live moment on screen, or a white-label product to resell — Gathmo is the stronger fit. Same zero-friction scan-and-upload for guests; more under the hood, and your data in Europe.
→ Start free with Gathmo — no account needed for your guests. Every guest. Every moment. One link.
Frequently asked
Both Kululu and Gathmo have a free tier with no app or signup for guests. Kululu's free plan is photos-and-video only; Gathmo's free tier covers 30 guests and 50 items, with EU data residency included. The "best" one depends on whether you need voice messages and where you want the data stored.
Yes — both work the same way for guests: scan a QR code or open a link, then upload straight from the phone's browser. No app install and no account are required on either platform.
No. Per Kululu's own policy (verified June 2026), primary content is stored on Google Cloud (Firebase) servers in the United States. Gathmo hosts in the EU (Frankfurt), which is the main reason EU hosts look for a Kululu alternative.
Not at launch. Face-recognition photo search and RSVP are on Gathmo's roadmap but are not available today. Kululu does not clearly document face-search support in the captured data either, so verify that feature directly before choosing either tool for selfie-based photo finding.



