White-Label Event Photo Sharing: What Agencies Should Look for in 2026
If you run events for clients — as a planner, venue, production agency, or photographer — you've probably noticed the gap. Your clients want every guest photo, video, and voice note in one place, without an app and without the morning-after group-chat scramble. Plenty of tools do that. Almost none let you put your brand on it.
That's the difference between a consumer photo app and a genuine white-label platform. One asks your client to scan a code that says someone else's name. The other lets you sell the whole experience as your own — your domain, your logo, your client relationship — with the technology quietly invisible underneath.
This is a buyer's guide to that second category: what "white-label" actually means (it's an abused word), the checklist that separates a real reseller platform from a cosmetic logo swap, and an honest look at where the market stands in 2026 — including what Gathmo does and doesn't do yet. Every competitor price and feature below was verified from the provider's own pages on 2026-06-08; where pricing is quote-only, we say "pricing on request" rather than guess.
The phrase gets stretched. In event photo-sharing tools, you'll see it cover everything from "upload your logo" to a full reseller programme with your own domain and API. Those are not the same product, and the gap matters when a client is looking at the screen.
It helps to think in three tiers:
A quick test of any vendor's claim: ask what URL your client's guests will scan. If the answer contains the vendor's domain, it isn't true white-label, whatever the pricing page says.
Here's what to actually evaluate, roughly in order of how often it trips agencies up.
The single most important line item. Can guests land on photos.youragency.com (or your client's domain), or are you stuck on the vendor's subdomain? A custom domain is what makes the experience feel like yours — and it's the thing cosmetic-branding tools quietly don't offer. Gathmo provides custom domains from its entry Studio tier (one domain) and unlimited custom domains on Agency and Enterprise (custom domains run on Cloudflare for SaaS).
A logo on the gallery is the easy part. The deeper checks are the email guests receive, the SMS sender ID, the QR landing page, and the album export. Gathmo's depth scales with tier: Studio is logo + accent colour; Agency is end-to-end branding; Enterprise is full branding plus a branded SMS sender. Branded email runs on Resend and the SMS sender on Bird — so the touchpoints your client's guests actually see can all carry your brand, not just the front page.
Consumer tools sell one-time per-event licences — fine for a host throwing one party, awkward for an agency running fifty events a year. A reseller subscription changes the maths: you pay a flat monthly fee and run many events under it, keeping the margin between your client price and your platform cost. Gathmo's B2B tiers are subscriptions billed monthly or annually (annual = pay ten months, two free):
(Gathmo's own B2C per-event tiers — Free / €19 / €39 / €79 — are what your clients would pay if they bought direct; as a reseller you buy the subscription and set your own client price.)
If more than one person sets up events, count the seats: Studio is one, Agency includes five, Enterprise is unlimited. Match this to how your team works before the events-per-year cap or seat count bites mid-season.
If you want event creation wired into your own booking or CRM flow, you need API access — Gathmo includes the API on Agency and Enterprise (not Studio), where most consumer-tier tools have none. And if you sell into large organisations, confirm single sign-on: Gathmo offers SSO/SAML on Enterprise only.
For any EU client — and especially corporate ones — where the data physically sits is a procurement question, not a nice-to-have. Gathmo hosts in the EU (object storage in an EU jurisdiction on Cloudflare R2; the database in Frankfurt on Neon; compute in Frankfurt/Amsterdam on Fly.io) and signs Data Processing Agreements with its processors. We'll come back to the legal side below, because as the agency you sit in the middle of that chain.
White-label is only worth selling if the underlying product is good, because your brand is on it. The non-negotiables in 2026: no app and no signup for guests (they scan a QR code and upload from any phone's browser), batch ZIP download of originals so your client gets everything, and content moderation so nothing embarrassing lands on a screen at a corporate event. Gathmo covers all three, plus an in-browser audio guestbook with transcripts on its top tiers and AI moderation with a human review queue.
The honest picture from the verified data: most event photo tools offer cosmetic branding, not true white-label, and the few that go deeper are either quote-only or not EU-hosted.
So the shortlist for "true white-label and EU data residency and a published reseller price" is short. That combination — custom domain, end-to-end branding, EU hosting, and a transparent monthly tier from €99 — is the niche Gathmo is built for.
One honesty note, because your clients will ask: Gathmo does not offer face-recognition photo search or RSVP at launch — both are on the roadmap (Phase 2), not in the product today. The competitor register records GuestCam and Eventiere with face-find capability as of 2026-06-08, so verify those tools directly if selfie-based photo finding is a hard requirement.
When you resell an event photo platform you're usually in the data chain, and that has GDPR consequences. This is general information, not legal advice; check your own setup with a qualified advisor.
A QR code that won't scan quietly breaks an event. If you produce branded signage for clients, two specs to lock in: size for distance (a rule of thumb is minimum code size = maximum scan distance ÷ 10, so a table card read from ~30–50 cm wants a 3–5 cm code and an A-frame read from 1–2.5 m wants 10–25 cm), and — if you drop a logo into the centre — use error-correction Level H (~30% recovery) so the overlay doesn't kill scannability. Always test-print at the real size and scan it under the actual venue lighting first.
Frequently asked
At minimum, your client's guests should land on your (or your client's) own domain, with your brand on the gallery, the album, the QR code, and the emails — not the vendor's. Anything less is cosmetic branding. With Gathmo, end-to-end branding starts on the Agency tier (€99/mo), and a custom domain is available from Studio (€39/mo).
Yes — that's the point of a reseller subscription. You pay a flat monthly fee, run multiple events under it, and set your own client price. Gathmo's B2B tiers are built for this (Studio / Agency / Enterprise), with the API on Agency and above for wiring event creation into your own systems.
No. With Gathmo, guests scan a QR code and upload from their phone's browser — no app, no signup. That matters more than it sounds: smartphone penetration in Germany was forecast at around 97% in 2024 (Statista), and roughly 68% of consumers had used a QR code in the past year (TEAM LEWIS), so the scan-to-upload flow works for almost everyone without friction.
With Gathmo, yes — object storage in an EU jurisdiction, the database in Frankfurt, and compute in Frankfurt/Amsterdam, with DPAs in place. Note that "EU-hosted" is widely claimed; the useful question to ask any vendor is which data centre and whether they'll name it and sign a DPA.
Not at launch — face search and RSVP are on the roadmap (Phase 2), not in the current product. If selfie-based photo finding is a hard requirement, verify a face-find tool directly before promising it to a client.



