What Are Ingress Delays?
Ingress delays occur when attendees cannot enter a venue quickly enough due to bottlenecks in the entry process.
This typically happens at:
- Security screening
- Ticket scanning
- Bag checks
- Cloakrooms / bag drop areas
The result:
- Long queues outside venues
- Delayed entry times
- Missed opening moments
- Crowd congestion at access points
Why Ingress Delays Get Worse at Scale
1. Demand Spikes, Not Flows
Event arrivals are not evenly distributed.
Instead:
- 60–80% of attendees arrive in a short window before start time
This creates a surge load that overwhelms entry systems.
2. Entry Systems Have Fixed Throughput
Each ingress component can only process a set number of people per hour:
|
Process |
Throughput Capacity |
|
Ticket scanning |
High |
|
Security checks |
Medium |
|
Bag searches |
Low |
|
Cloakroom storage |
Very low |
This creates a simple rule:
Your entire ingress speed is dictated by the slowest process.
3. Bottlenecks Cascade Across the System
When one stage slows down:
- Queues form
- Pressure builds upstream
- Staff are overwhelmed
- Delays compound
This is why ingress delays often appear suddenly — and then escalate rapidly.
4. Bags Are the Primary Constraint
Attendees with bags:
- Take longer at security
- Require manual inspection
- Often need secondary storage
This introduces multiple friction points in a single journey.
Bags multiply processing time across every stage of ingress.
5. Manual Operations Cannot Scale
Traditional ingress relies on:
- Staff-heavy cloakrooms
- Manual bag handling
- Temporary infrastructure
These systems:
- Have capacity limits
- Increase costs rapidly
- Introduce human error
Adding more staff does not solve exponential demand.
The Real Impact of Ingress Delays
Security Risk
Revenue Loss
Poor Visitor Experience
Event Disruption
The Real Impact of Ingress Delays
Increase Entry Lanes
- Space constraints
- Still bottlenecked by bag processing
Open Gates Earlier
- Does not change arrival behaviour
- Only slightly spreads demand
Restrict Bags
- Impacts visitor experience
- Not always enforceable
The Core Problem: Throughput Failure
Ingress delays are not a staffing problem.
They are a throughput problem.
And more specifically:
A system design problem where friction exceeds capacity.
The biggest source of that friction?
Bag handling.
The Scalable Solution: Remove Friction Before Entry
To fix ingress delays, you must:
- Reduce processing time per visitor
- Remove bottlenecks
- Increase parallel processing
Smart locker systems achieve this by:
Perimeter Smart Storage Lockers
Moving Storage Outside the Entry Flow
- Visitors store bags before security
- No need for cloakrooms
- No secondary queues
Increasing Security Throughput
- Fewer bags = faster checks
- More people processed per lane
Remove bag screening from security
Enabling Self-Service at Scale
- No staff dependency
- Multiple users served simultaneously
Smoothing Demand Peaks
- Storage happens continuously, not at a single point
- Reduces pressure on entry gates
Operational Impact
With optimised ingress systems:
- Queue times reduce significantly
- Throughput increases by up to 3–4x
- Staff requirements decrease
- Security improves
- Visitor experience improves
See: /solutions/event-smart-lockers/
Compare: /cloakrooms-vs-lockers-event-security/
Calculate ROI: /roi-calculator/
The Bottom Line
Ingress delays are not caused by poor planning.
They are caused by systems that cannot handle peak demand.
At scale:
- Demand spikes
- Bottlenecks form
- Delays compound
The solution is not to manage queues better.
It’s to design them out of the system entirely.
Perimeter Smart Bag Lockers
Perimeter Smart Bag Lockers
Remove friction before security
by moving bag storage outside the entry flow and eliminating cloakroom queues.
Increase throughput and efficiency
with faster security checks, parallel self-service storage, and reduced staffing pressure.
Design out congestion at scale
by smoothing peak demand and maintaining continuous visitor flow through the perimeter.
Perimeter Smart Bag Lockers V Manual Storage
Proven in High-Turnover Event Environments
AFAS
AFAS Live — Scalable Event Locker Deployment
AFAS Live deployed CrowdStor lockers to manage high visitor volumes efficiently during concerts and large-scale events. The system improved entry and exit flow, reduced staff intervention, and delivered a seamless, cashless storage experience for guests.
Related Solutions
Who This Is For
Venue & Stadium Operations Directors / Event Security & Crowd Management Teams
Operations Manager
Responsible for managing ingress flow, security efficiency, staffing costs, and visitor experience at large-scale venues, stadiums, arenas, and live events.
Primary Goals:
- Reduce queue times
- Improve crowd flow
- Increase security throughput
- Lower operational pressure during peak arrivals








