ModPro Welding Booths
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ModPro 12'x12' Back-to-Back Welding Booths
Price range: $22,111.20 through $112,402.29
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ModPro 10'x12' Back-to-Back Welding Booths
Price range: $19,654.40 through $99,913.14
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ModPro 10'x10' Back-to-Back Welding Booths
Price range: $18,426.00 through $93,668.57
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Use the configurator to pick your booth type, size, and quantity in a few steps.
Open ConfiguratorWelding Booth vs Welding Curtains
Both contain sparks and UV, but the right choice depends on your shop layout, compliance requirements, and how often stations move.
ModPro Welding Booth
Best for permanent stations and OSHA compliance
- Full enclosure with walls, roof, and door
- Steel or Tuffak panel options
- Blocks UV, sparks, noise, and fumes at the source
- Modular: reconfigure or expand without new purchases
- Single, side-by-side, and back-to-back layouts
- Meets OSHA 1910.252 and AWS Z49.1 requirements
Welding Curtains
Best for temporary or shared-space setups
- Lower upfront cost per station
- Easy to move between jobs or areas
- No floor anchoring required
- Blocks UV flash for nearby workers
- Works for low-volume or intermittent welding
- Does not contain fumes, noise, or overhead sparks
ModPro Welding Booth Sizes and Pricing
All booths include walls, roof, door, and your choice of steel or Tuffak panels. Side-by-side and back-to-back configurations share walls to reduce cost.
| Size | Steel Price | Tuffak Price | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| 4' x 4' | $2,960 | $3,360 | Tight spaces, light duty |
| 5' x 5' | $3,330 | $3,730 | Small parts, bench welding |
| 5' x 6' | $3,700 | $4,100 | Standard bench station |
| 6' x 6' | $3,700 | $4,100 | General fabrication |
| 6' x 8' | $4,070 | $4,470 | Mid-size weldments |
| 8' x 8' | $4,440 | $4,840 | Full-size table + storage |
| 8' x 10' | $4,810 | $5,210 | Large table with room to move |
| 8' x 12' | $5,180 | $5,580 | Long weldments, pipe work |
| 10' x 10' | $5,550 | $6,150 | Heavy fabrication station |
| 10' x 12' | $5,920 | $6,520 | Production welding cell |
| 12' x 12' | $6,660 | $7,260 | Largest standard config |
Prices shown are for single booth configurations. Side-by-side and back-to-back layouts reduce per-station cost by sharing walls.
ModPro Welding Booths FAQ
We build 11 standard booth sizes. Here’s every one of them with the floor footprint and what each size is best for.
- 4′ x 4′ (48″ x 48″): Our smallest booth. Good for tight spaces, light bench welding, and training stations where floor space is limited.
- 5′ x 5′ (60″ x 60″): A step up for small parts welding. Fits a compact welding table comfortably.
- 5′ x 6′ (60″ x 72″): Gives you a little extra depth for longer workpieces or a larger table.
- 6′ x 6′ (72″ x 72″): Our most popular size for schools and CTE programs. Fits a standard welding table with room to move.
- 6′ x 8′ (72″ x 96″): Good for general fabrication where you need more table space or are working with larger assemblies.
- 8′ x 8′ (96″ x 96″): Our most popular size for production shops. Fits a full-size welding table plus storage, tool panels, and a fume extraction arm.
- 8′ x 10′ (96″ x 120″): For shops working with larger weldments or that want extra staging room inside the booth.
- 8′ x 12′ (96″ x 144″): Long format for pipe work, rail welding, or running two small tables inside one booth.
- 10′ x 10′ (120″ x 120″): Large production cell. Room for a big table, storage, and multi-operator setups.
- 10′ x 12′ (120″ x 144″): Heavy production. Fits our largest welding tables with room to spare.
- 12′ x 12′ (144″ x 144″): Our largest standard booth. Production cells, large assembly fixturing, or anywhere you need maximum enclosed workspace.
Every booth includes full-height walls, a roof, and a door, with your choice of 16-gauge steel or Tuffak polycarbonate panels. The frame uses 3″ square tubing uprights at every corner (with additional uprights in the center of any span over 8 feet for strength) and 2″ square tubing cross braces.
If you’re not sure what size you need, think about what’s going inside: your welding table, any storage or tool panels, a fume extraction arm, and enough room for the operator to move comfortably. For schools, 6×6 is the standard starting point. For production shops, 8×8 is where most customers land. Configure your booth here.
If you’re planning a new welding area or upgrading an existing one, here are the most common configurations we see customers build.
Single-operator production booths. The simplest setup. One booth, one welder, one table. An 8×8 with steel panels is the go-to for fab shops. Mount a fume extraction arm to the booth frame, hang a ModPro tool panel on the back wall for clamps and consumables, and you’ve got a self-contained welding station. This is also the easiest way to add booths incrementally as your shop grows.
Side-by-side training labs. This is what most schools and CTE programs build. A row of 6×6 booths sharing walls between stations. Tuffak polycarbonate panels let instructors see into each booth without opening the door. A 10-station lab in this configuration costs significantly less per booth than buying ten singles because of the shared walls. We’ve outfitted schools across the country with this layout.
Back-to-back production rows. Two rows of booths facing opposite directions, sharing a rear wall. This is the most space-efficient layout for high-station-count shops. You get two rows of welding stations in the footprint that would normally hold one row plus a walkway. Per-station cost is the lowest of any configuration.
Mixed-size layouts. Not every station needs to be the same size. We’ve built facilities with 6×6 booths for bench welding, 8×10 booths for larger assemblies, and a single 12×12 for oversized projects, all in the same row sharing walls. Since every ModPro booth uses the same frame system, mixing sizes in a single run is straightforward.
Booth + workbench combos. Some shops put a welding booth next to an open workbench area. The booth handles all the actual welding (containing UV, sparks, and fumes), and the workbench next to it is for layout, grinding, and assembly. Since our workbenches and booths use compatible mounting holes, you can even bolt accessories between them.
Future-proofing. The single best piece of advice we give: plan for more stations than you think you need. Our booths are fully modular, and it’s cheaper to add stations to an existing row (just order additional panels and tie them in) than to start a second row later. If you’re buying 6 booths today and think you might need 10 in two years, lay out for 10 now.
Read our complete guide to choosing a welding booth. Or jump straight into the configurator and build your layout.
Our ModPro welding booths start at $2,960 for a single 4×4 steel-panel booth and go up to about $6,660 for a 12×12 single station. If you’re doing side-by-side or back-to-back configurations, the per-station cost drops because booths share walls. A 10-station side-by-side setup costs significantly less per booth than buying ten singles.
The final price depends on three things: your booth size, your panel material (steel or Tuffak polycarbonate), and how many stations you’re configuring together. We publish every price on our site, no “call for quote” games. If you need help figuring out the best layout for your budget, just reach out and we’ll put together a floor plan.
It depends on what you’re welding and how much room your operators need to move. For bench welding and small parts, a 4×4 or 5×5 gets the job done. General fabrication work fits well in a 6×6 or 6×8. If you’re running a full-size welding table with storage, you’ll want an 8×8 or bigger. For long weldments, pipe work, or heavy production cells, we build them up to 12×12.
We offer 11 standard sizes, and every one of them comes with full walls, roof, door, and your choice of panel material. The most popular sizes we ship are 6×6 for schools and 8×8 for production shops.
We offer two panel options: 16-gauge steel and Tuffak polycarbonate. Steel panels are our standard option. They’re 33 times stronger than the thin sheet metal most competitors use, they block all UV and spatter, and they’re the most durable choice for high-volume production environments.
Tuffak polycarbonate panels are translucent, so instructors and supervisors can see into the booth without entering. That’s why they’re the go-to for schools and training centers. Tuffak still blocks UV, contains sparks, and meets the same safety standards. It runs about $400 more per single booth than steel. Both panel types are interchangeable on the same frame, so you can mix and match or swap them later if your needs change.
Yes. Our ModPro booths are designed to meet OSHA 1910.252 and ANSI/AWS Z49.1 requirements for arc welding safety. That covers UV containment, spark and spatter shielding, and proper separation between welding stations. Every booth includes full enclosure walls, a roof, and a door.
On the ventilation side, our booths are designed to work with fume extraction systems (either overhead ducting or booth-mounted extractors). OSHA requires adequate ventilation in welding environments, and our booth layout accommodates that whether you’re using source capture, ambient filtration, or downdraft tables. If you need documentation for a compliance audit or bid package, we can provide spec sheets and safety data for any configuration.
Absolutely. Our booths are compatible with all major fume extraction setups. You can mount a source-capture arm directly to the booth frame, tie into overhead ductwork, or pair the booth with a portable fume extractor. The enclosed design actually makes fume extraction more efficient because you’re capturing fumes in a contained space instead of trying to pull them out of open air.
A lot of our customers pair our booths with booth-mounted extractors for the simplest installation since there’s no ductwork to run. If you’re planning a new facility or upgrading an existing shop, we can help you figure out the best extraction approach for your booth layout.
Curtains are a sheet of vinyl hanging from a frame. They block UV flash for people walking by, and that’s about it. They don’t contain sparks overhead, they don’t stop fumes, they don’t reduce noise, and they wear out.
Our ModPro booths are full steel-frame enclosures with walls, a roof, and a door. They contain everything: UV, spatter, sparks, noise, and fumes at the source. They’re also modular, so you can reconfigure or expand them without buying new equipment. If you just need flash protection in a shared space, a curtain might be fine. But if you’re setting up permanent welding stations, need OSHA compliance documentation, or want real containment, you need a booth.
That’s one of the biggest things we do. We’ve outfitted schools and training centers across the country with ModPro booths. For CTE programs and community colleges, we typically recommend Tuffak polycarbonate panels so instructors can monitor students from outside the booth.
Side-by-side configurations are the most popular for school labs because they share walls and keep per-station costs down. A typical high school welding lab runs 4 to 10 booths, and community colleges usually go 8 to 20. We handle PO terms, bid packages, and we’ll work with your architect or facilities team on lab layout design. If you need welding tables too, we’re the largest US-based welding table manufacturer, so we can spec the whole lab as one order.
Modular means every panel, post, and component is interchangeable and bolt-together. Nothing is welded in place. If your shop changes, your booths change with it. You can go from single booths to a side-by-side row, or from side-by-side to back-to-back, by rearranging the same parts.
Need to add two more stations next year? You just order the additional panels and tie them into your existing setup. Moving facilities? The whole thing breaks down and ships flat. That’s a big deal compared to stick-built or permanently welded enclosures that are scrap the moment your layout changes.
Everything ships flat-packed on pallets via freight. The panels, posts, hardware, and assembly instructions are all included. Most crews can assemble a single booth in under an hour with basic hand tools. Side-by-side and back-to-back configurations go even faster per station because shared walls cut the part count.
You don’t need specialized contractors or heavy equipment. No welding required (a little ironic, we know). We ship to all 50 states, and freight costs depend on how many booths you’re ordering and where you are. We’ll quote shipping as part of your order so there aren’t any surprises.
A single booth is a freestanding, fully enclosed station. It’s the right call when you need booths in different areas of the shop or only have one or two stations. Side-by-side booths share a wall between adjacent stations, which cuts material cost and saves floor space. This is what most schools and production lines use.
Back-to-back booths share a rear wall with the station behind them, so you get two rows of booths facing opposite directions. This is the most efficient layout for high-station-count shops. You can also combine them: a row of side-by-side booths that are back-to-back with another row. The per-station cost goes down with every shared wall, so larger configurations are more cost-effective.
We build booths for anyone running permanent welding stations. That includes fabrication shops, manufacturing plants, high school and college CTE programs, trade schools, shipyards, fleet maintenance facilities, makerspaces, and government/military installations.
If you’ve got welders working in fixed positions and you need to contain UV, sparks, fumes, and noise, our booths are built for that. We’re not making lightweight portable screens for hobbyists. These are heavy-duty, 16-gauge steel-frame enclosures built in our ISO 9001 certified facility in Texas. Every booth is made to order and ships direct.
Lincoln and FumeDog both make welding booths, but the construction is different. Our ModPro panels are 16-gauge steel, which is 33 times stronger than the thin sheet metal you’ll find on most competitors’ booths. That matters in a production environment where things get bumped, hit, and abused daily.
Our booths are also fully modular: bolt-together assembly, interchangeable panels, and reconfigurable layouts. If you outgrow your setup or rearrange your shop, you reconfigure instead of replacing. We also offer both steel and Tuffak polycarbonate panels in the same frame system, which most competitors don’t. And we publish all our pricing online. You won’t find yourself waiting three days for a quote just to compare options.
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Setting Up a Welding Program?
Our ModPro booths are in over 100 schools and training centers across the country. 33x stronger than standard booths, modular enough to reconfigure when enrollment changes, and no ductwork required. Built in our ISO 9001 certified facility in Texas.
We handle PO terms, bid packages, and lab layout design. Need tables too? We're the largest US-based welding table manufacturer.
33x
Stronger than standard
100+
Schools equipped
ISO
9001 Certified
$0
Ductwork required