Capture Workflows

Real Estate Splat Capture Checklist

A real estate splat capture checklist for rooms, transitions, buyer orientation, exterior context, mobile testing, and client delivery.

By Real Horizons TeamPublished June 3, 2026Updated June 3, 2026
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A camera and spatial-tour planning board showing capture inputs, splat results, and guided tour output
Capture Workflows

A real estate splat capture checklist for rooms, transitions, buyer orientation, exterior context, mobile testing, and client delivery.

A real estate splat should be captured around buyer orientation, not just scene coverage.

Short answer

A property tour earns trust when buyers can understand entry, room order, views, finishes, and the next action.

A real estate splat should be captured around buyer orientation, not just scene coverage. A useful test is simple: can someone open the tour, understand the place, and know what to do next without a separate explanation?

Real Horizons supports the full Spatial Studio workflow: upload phone video, 360-camera footage, drone media, DSLR/photo sets, or mixed captures; generate a high-quality Gaussian splat in the cloud; then publish it as a guided browser tour with waypoints, labels, hotspots, embeds, CTAs, and analytics.

How to judge the workflow

AreaWhat to checkWhy it matters
Capture sourceVideo, 360 footage, phone clips, photos, or mixed media.Pick the source that explains the space clearly.
ProcessingFrames and camera positions are solved before the splat is trained.Weak overlap creates holes, blur, or failed alignment.
PublishingThe output becomes a link, embed, or guided tour.Visitors need labels, stops, and a next action.

Practical checklist

  • Start from the entry or strongest exterior context.
  • Capture kitchen, living, bedrooms, balcony, and amenities as named stops.
  • Give doorways extra coverage.
  • Add close passes for finishes that need hotspots.
  • Send agents a tour link with CTA tracking.

Where this fits in a Real Horizons workflow

Use the capture source that fits the job, then use Real Horizons to generate the splat, review the result, and turn it into a tour the audience can open without extra explanation.

For a property, that may mean named room stops, finish hotspots, an inquiry CTA, and a link the agent can send. For a hotel, venue, campus, museum, or construction site, it may mean guided zones, access notes, booking context, or stakeholder comments.

The capture is the input. The generated splat is the spatial asset. The published tour is the deliverable clients and visitors actually use.

Why Real Horizons is different

Real Horizons is built for generation plus delivery. Spatial Studio includes cloud Gaussian splat generation for captures from smartphones, 360 cameras, 360 drones, standard drones, DSLR/photo sets, and mixed media workflows. That matters when a team wants one path from raw footage to a usable spatial tour instead of stitching together separate tools for capture processing, viewer setup, publishing, and client delivery.

The value is the combined workflow: generate the splat, review the scene, set the opening view, add guided stops or hotspots, publish the browser link, and measure whether visitors actually use it. For teams comparing Scaniverse, Splatica, Polycam, Matterport-style scans, or standalone viewers, the practical comparison is generation quality, input flexibility, pricing clarity, and how much work remains before the result becomes a client-ready tour.

Common mistakes

  • Judging the result only inside a raw viewer.
  • Forgetting the first view, so visitors open into a confusing angle.
  • Adding too many labels instead of a clear route.
  • Sending a heavy scene without testing a normal phone.
  • Treating the same capture method as right for every project.

From capture to a published tour

A land-development tour combines aerial context, waypoints, and site detail in one published view.

A land-development tour combines aerial context, waypoints, and site detail in one published view.

The capture stage only earns value when it leads to a tour people can open and understand. Use the finished view as the test: the first angle should explain the space, the important areas should be reachable, and the viewer should know where to go next without a separate explanation. For real estate photographers, media agencies, and property teams, plan the path around the final walkthrough, not the source file alone.

Before sending the tour, check the capture notes against the published result. Look for warped edges, weak transitions, missing coverage, blown highlights, and places where the viewer starts in a confusing position. If the image looks strong but the navigation feels unclear, add waypoints or a tighter opening view before sharing it.

Waypoints turn a large scene into a guided path instead of leaving visitors to guess where to go next.

Waypoints turn a large scene into a guided path instead of leaving visitors to guess where to go next.

Different capture inputs create different review work. A 360 camera, phone video, drone pass, or photo set can all work in the right setting. Indoor spaces need steady exposure and clean turns. Outdoor spaces need scale, route clarity, and enough texture. Large sites need labels and stops so visitors do not lose orientation.

After Real Horizons generates the splat, move into the tour library and check the visitor path. Add a clear opening view, name the important areas, and include one CTA only when it helps the viewer take the next step. For more capture planning, read Video to Gaussian Splat and 360 Camera Gaussian Splatting for Real Estate.

Related reading

Frequently asked questions

Can this workflow support client work?

Yes, when the workflow is matched to a real visitor need. It should produce a tour, link, embed, or sales asset that someone outside the production team can use.

What should I check before using this on a paid project?

Check capture quality, mobile load behavior, first view, labels, hotspots, and the CTA path. A quick internal test prevents a weak client handoff.

Where does Spatial Studio fit?

Spatial Studio brings cloud splat generation and tour authoring into one workflow: upload source media, generate a Gaussian splat, review the scene, add guided context, publish a browser link, and track visitor actions.

Does every project need a Gaussian splat?

No. Photos, 360 panoramas, and video can still be the right answer. Use splats when spatial movement and depth help the visitor make a better decision.

How should I measure the result?

Track tour opens, source campaigns, waypoint use, hotspot clicks, CTA clicks, and follow-up quality. Those signals matter more than the file format alone.

Next step

Pick one real space, capture it carefully, generate the splat in Real Horizons, publish it as a guided tour, and judge the result by whether a visitor understands the place and takes the next step.

Next step

Open the related workflow.

Review live examples or move straight into the matching Spatial Studio flow.