How to Reduce Event Queues | Crowd Flow & Throughput Strategies

Learn how to reduce queues at events by improving crowd flow, increasing throughput, and eliminating entry bottlenecks.

Queues are one of the most visible — and damaging — problems at events.

They impact:

  • visitor experience
  • operational performance
  • security and safety

But queues are not random.

They are a direct result of throughput failing to meet demand

To reduce queues, you don’t manage lines — you fix flow.


Explore Event Locker Solutions → /solutions/event-venue-lockers
See How Cloakrooms create inefficiency
Calculate Event ROI → /roi-calculator
Book a Demo → /book-a-demo

Double Entry Throughput by up to 100%.

Remove bag friction and increase security lane capacity from 250 → 500 people/hour

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  • Cut Storage Processing Time by 75%+
  • Reduce Queue Length by 50–80%
  • Cut Storage Processing Time by 75%+

Queues don’t need managing — they disappear when throughput exceeds demand.

Queues are not a crowd problem — they are a capacity problem.

When more people arrive than your entry system can process, queues will grow no matter how well they are managed. Barriers, staff, and signage may control the line, but they don’t fix the underlying issue.

The only way to eliminate queues is to increase throughput so that processing capacity meets or exceeds arrival demand.

When this happens, flow becomes continuous, bottlenecks disappear, and entry shifts from reactive crowd control to predictable, efficient movement.

Which aligns directly with:

  • Martyn’s Law
  • Crowd safety
  • Operational efficiency
Queues are a lagging indicator, not the root cause
Small delays compound exponentially at scale
Throughput creates control — queues remove it

On This Page

1. Why Queues form at peak times
2. What breaks at scale
3. How lockers solve it - Remove bags from screening
4. Real-world example
5. FAQs

Why Event Queues Happen

Queues form when:

arrival rate > processing capacity


Example:

If a venue can process:

  • 2,000 people per hour

But receives:

  • 3,000 people per hour

queues will grow continuously


Common Causes of Event Queues

  • bag checks slowing entry
  • cloakroom delays
  • limited security lanes
  • peak arrival windows
  • inefficient entry layout

event ingress bottlenecks explained → /blog/event-ingress-bottlenecks


Why Queues Are a Serious Problem

Queues are not just inconvenient — they create real risks.


Operational Impact

  • delayed event start
  • overwhelmed staff
  • reactive management

Experience Impact

  • frustrated visitors
  • poor first impression
  • negative reviews

Security Impact

  • perimeter congestion
  • increased risk exposure
  • reduced control

perimeter security risks explained → /pain-points/perimeter-security-crowd-risk

The Key Concept: Throughput

The only way to reduce queues is to increase throughput.


What Is Throughput?

The number of people who can enter per hour


Typical Entry Rates

Scenario Throughput per lane
With bags ~200–250 people/hour
Without bags ~450–500 people/hour

Doubling throughput can eliminate queues entirely.


event throughput explained → /blog/event-ingress-throughput

7 Proven Strategies to Reduce Event Queues

1. Remove Storage from Entry

Cloakrooms create queues before entry even begins.

Fix:

  • move storage outside entry flow
  • eliminate manual handling

cloakroom inefficiency explained → /pain-points/cloakroom-inefficiency-events


2. Reduce Bag Volume at Entry

Bags slow security and create bottlenecks.

Fix:

  • enforce bag policies
  • provide alternative storage options

bag check delays explained → /pain-points/bag-check-delays-security


3. Introduce Pre-Entry Storage (Smart Lockers)

The most effective way to reduce queues is to remove bags entirely.

Result:

  • faster security
  • no storage queues
  • improved flow

event locker systems → /solutions/event-venue-lockers


4. Increase Security Lane Efficiency

Don’t just add lanes — improve performance.

Fix:

  • reduce inspection time
  • remove unnecessary steps
  • optimise processes

5. Separate Entry Flows

Mixing processes creates congestion.

Fix:

  • separate storage, security, and ticketing
  • create clear flow paths

6. Design for Peak Demand

Most events experience demand spikes.

Fix:

  • plan for 60–90 minute arrival windows
  • scale systems for peak load

7. Use Data to Optimise Flow

You can’t fix what you can’t measure.

Fix:

  • track entry times
  • analyse bottlenecks
  • adjust operations

Before vs After — Queue Reduction

Traditional Entry

  • bag checks at entry
  • cloakroom queues
  • slow throughput
  • long external queues

Optimised Entry

  • pre-entry storage
  • clear security lanes
  • faster throughput
  • minimal queue formation

cloakroom vs lockers comparison → /comparisons/event-lockers-vs-cloakrooms

Real-World Scenario

10,000 Visitor Event

  • 35% bring bags → 3,500 bags

Traditional System

  • ~35 sec per bag
  • ~20+ staff
  • queues of 400–800 people

Optimised System

  • ~8 sec storage
  • minimal staff
  • no queue buildup

calculate event ROI → /roi-calculator

Queue growth is never steady its exponential
Crowd Flow Is the Real Solution

Queue management is not about controlling lines. It’s about improving movement

Good Crowd Flow Means:

  • continuous movement
  • minimal stopping points
  • no bottlenecks
  • predictable throughpu

Martyn’s Law & Queue Reduction

Martyn’s Law increases focus on:

  • crowd safety
  • perimeter risk
  • controlled entry

________________________________________
Queues directly impact compliance.

Reducing queues = reducing risk
________________________________________
Martyn’s Law guide → /martyns-law-event-security

Installing automated Lockers has three huge impacts

  1. You Increase throughput by 100% minimum
  • Depending on the number of lockers and the bag / person ratios
  • We advocate testing and flexing your locker volumes to remove queues at peak ingress periods

 

2. You cut Bag Screening Staff by 90%

  • If you had 20 people in the manual clock room, you may need two supervising Self Service lockers

 

3. You Increase event revenue

  • We have a simple event revenue sensitivity calculator
  • We can take you through in a discovery call.

How Self-Service Lockers Dramatically Increase Event Ingress Speed

  • Remove bags from the entry process → fewer items to screen
  • Increase throughput per lane → more guests processed per minute
  • Reduce variability → faster, more consistent screening times
  • Eliminate cloakroom queues → no secondary bottlenecks before entry
  • Lower staff dependency → smoother, more predictable flow
  • Shorten overall entry time → guests move quickly from arrival to access
Fix Venue Ingress - Martyn's Law

Design out queues with faster throughput

The result: faster ingress, shorter queues, and higher-capacity entry systems without adding more staff or lanes.

Traditional Cloak Room vs Pre Entry Smart Lockers

Bag Checks (Manual Security Screening)
Reactive (inspect bags at entry)
Bags brought into security zone
Manual bag checks
20–40 sec per bag
~200–250 people/hour per lane
Slows screening significantly
Smart Lockers
Preventative (remove bags before entry)
Bags stored before security
No bag inspection required (reduced volume)
5–10 sec per transaction
~450–500 people/hour per lane
Speeds up screening

Operational Impact

Bags Stored pre entry - Self Service
Reduced Queues , Faster Ingress speeds
No Bag Inspection workload / staffing / Liability
75% reduction in entry transaction speed

Case Study

Paradiso

Challenge

Reduce queues

Increase Revenue

Reduce Ingress Friction – case study video

Cut staff Costs – case study pdf

 

Related Solutions

Operations Directors  improve flow and performance
Security Managers reduce risk and congestion
Venue Operators deliver better events

Related Personas

Operations Directors
Facilities Managers
Security Managers

Frequently Asked Questions

How do you reduce queues at events?

By increasing throughput, removing bottlenecks, and improving crowd flow.

What causes long queues at venues?

Bag checks, manual storage, peak arrivals, and limited processing capacity.
How do lockers reduce queues?

Can queues be eliminated completely?

Yes — if throughput matches or exceeds arrival rate.

Watch the economics of smart Locker equipped venues video

Reduce Risk, Cut staffing , increase revenue