Best Settings for Basketball Photography (Indoor Guide)

Indoor basketball is one of the most challenging environments for sports photography. Poor lighting, fast action, and unpredictable movement demand the right camera settings. Here's exactly what you need to nail those game-winning shots.

The Challenge: Gym Lighting

Let's be honest: most indoor gyms have terrible lighting for photography. Whether it's a high school gymnasium or a college arena, you're dealing with artificial lights that are far dimmer than outdoor daylight.

A typical gym has an exposure value (EV) of around 7-9, compared to bright daylight at EV 15. That's 6-8 stops less light — which means you need to work much harder to get enough light on your sensor while maintaining fast shutter speeds.

🏀 Recommended Basketball Settings

Shutter Speed
1/800
Aperture
f/2.8
ISO
3200-6400

Shutter Speed: The Critical Setting

For basketball, your shutter speed is everything. Players move fast — a driving guard can cross the lane in under a second. Here's what different shutter speeds will get you:

⚡ Shutter Speed Quick Reference

  • Stationary players (free throws) 1/250
  • Walking/jogging movement 1/400
  • Running/game action 1/640
  • Drives, fast breaks 1/800
  • Dunks, blocks, peak action 1/1000+

My recommendation: Start at 1/800 and adjust from there. This gives you a good balance between freezing action and keeping ISO manageable. If you're getting motion blur on fast plays, bump it up to 1/1000.

💡 Pro Tip

Check your first few shots at 100% zoom on your camera's LCD. Look at the players' hands and feet — these are the fastest-moving parts and will show blur first. If they're sharp, you're good.

Aperture: Go Wide Open

In low light, you need all the help you can get. Shoot at your lens's widest aperture (lowest f-number) to let in maximum light.

Lens Type Max Aperture Indoor Basketball
Pro zoom (70-200mm f/2.8) f/2.8 ✅ Excellent - ideal choice
Quality zoom (70-200mm f/4) f/4 ⚠️ Workable - need higher ISO
Kit telephoto (70-300mm f/4.5-5.6) f/5.6 at 200mm ❌ Challenging - very high ISO needed
Fast prime (85mm f/1.8) f/1.8 ✅ Great light, limited reach

If you're serious about indoor sports, a 70-200mm f/2.8 is the gold standard. Yes, it's expensive. But that extra stop of light compared to f/4 makes a huge difference when you're already pushing ISO limits.

ISO: Embrace the Noise

Here's a hard truth: indoor basketball requires high ISO. There's no way around it unless you have incredibly good arena lighting.

Typical ISO ranges by venue:

⚠️ Reality Check

Modern cameras (made after 2018) handle high ISO remarkably well. A slightly noisy sharp image is ALWAYS better than a clean blurry one. Don't sacrifice shutter speed to keep ISO low.

Camera Settings Beyond the Exposure Triangle

Autofocus Mode

Use continuous autofocus (AI Servo on Canon, AF-C on Nikon/Sony). Players are constantly moving, and you need your camera to track them.

For AF area, try zone AF or expanded point. Single point can work but requires very precise tracking. Wide/auto area tends to grab the wrong subject.

Drive Mode

Use high-speed continuous (burst mode). Basketball has split-second moments — a dunk, a block, the exact moment of a layup. Shooting 8-12 frames per second gives you the best chance of nailing the peak action.

Metering Mode

Evaluative/Matrix metering works for most situations. The court is relatively evenly lit, so your camera's default metering usually does fine.

Watch out for bright white jerseys — they can fool your meter. If your players are consistently underexposed, add +1/3 to +2/3 exposure compensation.

Positioning: Where to Shoot From

Your position matters almost as much as your settings. Here are the best spots for basketball:

💡 Pro Tip

If you can only pick one spot, choose the baseline corner on the side of the court where the home team attacks in the second half. Most decisive moments happen in crunch time.

The Peak Moments to Capture

Knowing what to shoot is as important as knowing your settings. Look for these moments:

Sample Settings by Scenario

Scenario Shutter Aperture ISO
NBA arena (great lighting) 1/1000 f/2.8 1600-2500
College arena 1/800 f/2.8 3200-5000
High school gym 1/640-800 f/2.8 6400-10000
Recreation center 1/500-640 f/2.8 10000-16000

⚡ Get Instant Settings

Use our calculator to get recommended settings for basketball and 11 other sports.

Open Settings Calculator

Gear Recommendations

Ideal Setup

Budget Setup

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  1. Shutter speed too slow — Motion blur ruins more basketball shots than anything else. When in doubt, go faster.
  2. Wrong focus mode — Single-shot AF will fail on moving players. Always use continuous.
  3. Only shooting action — The emotion after a big play is often more powerful than the play itself.
  4. Bad positioning — Shooting from the stands gives you a tourist snapshot. Get courtside if possible.
  5. Chimping too much — Reviewing every shot means missing the next play. Trust your settings and keep shooting.

Final Checklist

Before the game starts, make sure you've:

Now go capture some incredible basketball moments! 🏀