EventPics Alternative: What EU-Based Companies Should Consider Instead
EventPics is a reasonable starting point for EU event photos. It is one of the few tools in this market that hosts data in the EU by default, it is run by a European company, guests upload without an app, and the entry tier is free. For a single internal meeting or a small team event, it does the core job — collect photos via a QR code, keep them in one place, download them later.
But "starting point" is the operative phrase. The moment an EU company moves past one casual event — toward a branded conference, a recurring programme of company events, an agency reselling photo collection to clients, or anything that has to clear procurement — the requirements change. You start needing things EventPics was never built to do: your brand instead of theirs, a signed Data Processing Agreement rather than a privacy page, moderation before guest content goes live, and a pricing model that fits a business rather than a hobby.
This guide is for the people making that call: event managers, HR and internal-comms teams, and B2B resellers in the EU who like the idea of EventPics but suspect they have outgrown it. It compares EventPics against requirements that often matter in business buying — branding, compliance paperwork, moderation, and commercial fit — and then shows the corresponding Gathmo product facts. Prices and features below are taken from each provider's own live pages, captured 2026-06-08; re-verify before you buy, because pricing changes.
A note on fairness. This is a comparison written by a competitor, so we have kept it to verifiable facts: EventPics' own published pricing and feature set, and Gathmo's own product specification. Where EventPics genuinely does something well — EU hosting, a free tier, a clean no-app upload flow — we say so. The goal is to help you match a tool to a requirement, not to talk you out of a perfectly good product for a job it actually fits.
EventPics (operated by Aigner Software e. U., an Austrian company) is a QR-code event photo tool with a genuinely useful core. Guests scan a code and upload photos and video from the browser — no app install and no guest signup, which is the single most important feature for getting non-technical attendees to actually participate. EventPics runs a live slideshow, supports a multilingual guest interface, lets you batch-download everything as a ZIP, and hosts data in the EU, which matters the moment the people in your photos are identifiable employees or clients.
Its pricing is subscription-based and billed in euros: a Free tier at €0, then storage-tiered Premium plans at €4.99/mo (10 GB), €9.99/mo (25 GB), €14.99/mo (50 GB), and €19.99/mo (100 GB), with a 200 GB plan at $24.99/mo available through the App Store only (all as of June 2026). For an individual or a very small team that runs the occasional event and wants EU hosting without paying much, that is a fair offer.
EventPics can be a useful fit for a personal or light-touch use case. A company buyer usually has a different list of requirements, so the rest of this comparison stays with those business requirements.
Four reasons come up repeatedly, and they map almost exactly onto the difference between a consumer tool and a business tool.
For a company, the gallery your guests see is a brand surface. At a client-facing conference or a customer event, an album that carries someone else's product name — rather than your logo, your colours, and ideally your own domain — undercuts the impression you spent the event budget creating. For an agency, it is worse than cosmetic: if you are reselling photo collection to your own clients, the tool has to disappear behind your brand, or you are advertising your supplier on every screen.
EventPics, per its own published feature set, offers no white-label and no branding-removal — its branding depth is recorded as none, and there is no custom-domain option. That is a defensible choice for a consumer product. It is a hard blocker for any company or agency that needs the experience to look like theirs.
EU hosting is the start of a compliance story, not the whole of it. When an external tool processes photos of your employees and guests on your behalf and on your documented instructions, the relationship is controller-to-processor, and Article 28(3) of the GDPR requires it to be governed by a binding written contract — a Data Processing Agreement (DPA) that sets out the subject-matter, duration, nature and purpose of the processing, the data types and categories of data subjects, and a defined set of processor duties (processing only on your instructions, confidentiality, Article 32 security, sub-processor conditions, assistance with data-subject rights, deletion or return of data at the end of service, and submission to audits).
A privacy policy is not that contract. For an enterprise procurement or legal reviewer, "we host in the EU" without an offered DPA leaves the most important document unsigned — and EventPics does not advertise a DPA as part of its product. EU residency is real and valuable here; it simply is not the same thing as the Article 28 paperwork a business buyer has to put in a file.
At a public-facing or large corporate event, anything a guest uploads can land on a shared screen or in a gallery that represents your brand. Most companies want a gate: the ability to review and approve content before it goes live, ideally with automated pre-screening to catch the obvious problems. The competitor register captured on 2026-06-08 records EventPics with no AI moderation. For an internal team event that may be an acceptable risk; for a trade-show photo wall on the keynote stage in front of customers, an unmoderated feed is a real operational risk.
EventPics' storage-tiered monthly subscription is designed around how much one person stores, not around how a company or agency runs a programme of events. There is no reseller or agency tier, no multi-client workspace, no per-client custom domain — the building blocks a business needs to run many branded events for different audiences. If you are past your first event, the commercial shape of the product starts to fight you.
None of these is a flaw for the audience EventPics targets. They are simply the four things that separate a personal tool from a corporate one — and the four reasons EU companies start shopping for an alternative.
Here is the comparison on the dimensions a business buyer actually weighs. Both tools host in the EU and both let guests upload with no app and no signup — so the table focuses on where they diverge.
EventPics figures from eventpics.net; Gathmo figures from its product specification. Both captured 2026-06-08.
Two honesty notes on Gathmo, because a buyer should hear them up front. Gathmo does not offer facial recognition / face-search or RSVP at launch — both are Phase 2 roadmap items. On face-search specifically, the absence is arguably a feature for a corporate buyer: ordinary photo galleries that do not build face templates avoid the heightened, separate explicit-consent obligation that face-matching triggers, because a photo becomes biometric data under Article 9 only when processed "through a specific technical means allowing the unique identification" of a person. If selfie-based photo-finding is a hard requirement for you today, neither EventPics nor Gathmo is your tool — and we would rather you knew that now.
If you are replacing or upgrading from EventPics, evaluate candidates against the requirements that drove you to look — not against feature lists in the abstract. A practical checklist:
Run any candidate — Gathmo included — through these six, and the right answer for your situation falls out quickly.
Gathmo keeps the two things EventPics gets right — EU data residency and a no-app, no-signup upload flow — and is built around the four gaps that send companies looking for an alternative.
Brand control, including true white-label. On the per-event tiers your album is clean and branded; on the B2B subscriptions (Studio, Agency, Enterprise) the white-label goes end-to-end — custom domain per client, your logo and accent, your brand on everything the guest sees. For an agency, that is the difference between reselling a product and reselling your product.
The compliance paperwork a procurement team needs. Gathmo's residency is the EU with object storage in the EU jurisdiction and the primary database in Frankfurt, plus Data Processing Agreements with its processors. A DPA is available on request across the per-event tiers and is included on the B2B Studio, Agency, and Enterprise plans. (Under Article 17 a controller must action an erasure request without undue delay, and Article 12(3) sets a one-month response clock, extendable by two months for genuinely complex cases.) Retention is defined and finite — the per-event tiers run from a 14-day window up to 365 days by tier — which is the storage-limitation posture Article 5(1)(e) looks for.
A moderation gate. Gathmo runs AI pre-screening (Hive) plus a human approval queue, so you decide what appears before it goes live — the control an un-moderated feed cannot give you when the screen is facing customers.
A model that fits a business. Buy per event when that is the shape of the work: Free / €19 / €39 / €79. For recurring programmes, the B2B tiers are Studio €39/mo, Agency €99/mo, Enterprise from €399/mo. The B2B annual plan is billed as ten paid months, with two months free. The B2B tiers add the multi-client workspaces, per-client domains, and — at Enterprise — SSO/SAML and API access that a consumer subscription does not.
And it goes a step further than EventPics on guest experience: voice messages are available on every tier (with automatic transcripts on Grand and the B2B plans), and the top per-event tier can run a real live stream on screen, not only a slideshow. For one free album, EventPics' free tier may be enough; for a recurring company event programme, brand, compliance, and scale become the deciding requirements.
Frequently asked
EventPics hosts data in the EU and is run by an Austrian company, which is a strong starting point and avoids the cross-border-transfer question that US-hosted tools create. But GDPR compliance is broader than where the data sits. For a business buyer, the Article 28 Data Processing Agreement is the binding written contract that must govern an external processor handling your employees' and guests' photos. The competitor register does not record an advertised EventPics DPA, so procurement should verify that document directly. (This is general guidance, not legal advice — confirm specifics with your own data protection officer.)
Per its own published feature set, no. Its branding depth is recorded as none, with no branding-removal and no custom-domain option. If you need the gallery to carry your brand (or your client's), you will need a different tool — white-label is one of the most common reasons companies and agencies move off it.
A Free tier at €0, then storage-tiered Premium plans at €4.99/mo (10 GB), €9.99/mo (25 GB), €14.99/mo (50 GB), and €19.99/mo (100 GB), with a 200 GB plan at $24.99/mo via the App Store only — all as of June 2026. It is a monthly subscription priced by storage, which suits an individual more than a business running many events. Re-check current pricing on eventpics.net before deciding.
Yes — that combination is precisely the gap Gathmo is built for. It hosts in the EU (database in Frankfurt) with processor DPAs, offers a DPA on request on per-event plans and included on its B2B tiers, and provides end-to-end white-label with per-client custom domains on the Agency and Enterprise subscriptions — while keeping the no-app, no-signup upload flow.
Yes. Both EventPics and Gathmo let guests scan a QR code and upload from the browser with no app install and no account. If you switch, preserve this — it is the feature that protects your participation rate.



