No Helium? Backup Options for Balloons & Events
Sometimes helium is out of stock, too expensive, or just not practical in your area. That doesn’t mean your event has to look flat. This page walks through no-helium backup options you can use if the tank you wanted doesn’t work out.
Start with the Helium Locator directory and Helium 101. If you still can’t get a tank that makes sense, use these alternatives to keep your event looking good anyway.
Quick jumps: Helium directory Helium 101 Tank size guide DIY vs decor
Still deciding whether helium is worth it for your event? Disposable vs refillable tanks lays out the tradeoffs fast.
Your “no helium” backup map
This guide is for when the directory, phone calls, and budget all say “helium isn’t happening.” Use it to pivot quickly into air-only decor, mixed setups, or non-balloon options without the event looking like Plan B.
When to use backup options
- You’ve called a few suppliers and no one has helium in stock.
- Prices or minimums are way beyond your budget for this event.
- Your venue has restrictions on gas cylinders or transport is a problem.
- You realized the event is soon and you don’t have time to learn tanks safely.
If any of that is true, it’s smarter to shift the plan than to gamble on last-minute helium chaos.
Option 1: Air-only balloon decor (no helium at all)
You can do a ton with air-filled balloons and the right stands or frames. They don’t float, but they still fill space and look impressive:
- Balloon garlands & organic walls along a backdrop or photo area.
- Arches and columns using frames or stands (metal or plastic).
- Table runners made from clusters of air-filled balloons.
- Floor clusters weighted at the base instead of floating.
For this route, your key gear is a balloon pump (electric or manual), plus frames, stands, or tape/strips to build shapes. No gas cylinders needed.
Option 2: Mixed strategy – save helium for focal pieces
If helium is available but tight or expensive, you don’t have to choose all-or-nothing. Use helium only where it makes the biggest impact:
- Helium for key focal points (entry, one photo spot, a main cluster).
- Air-filled decor everywhere else (garlands, walls, columns).
- Use smaller balloon counts but higher-quality balloons for the helium parts.
You’ll still get the “floating” look in the places that matter, without needing a massive tank. Use the tank size guide to estimate how much helium you really need.
Option 3: Skip helium, hire a decor company
For high-stakes events, it can be easier to skip helium decisions completely and let a balloon decor company handle everything. They can:
- Design and build arches, walls, and centerpieces with or without helium.
- Handle float time, weather, and layout for you.
- Tell you honestly if helium is worth it for your space and budget.
Use DIY vs decor to figure out if hiring a pro makes sense and what to ask them before you book.
Option 4: Change the plan (minimal or no balloons)
If helium is unavailable and you’re not feeling air-only decor, it’s completely valid to pivot away from balloons. You can still make the space look good with:
- Fabric backdrops, curtains, or banners behind main areas.
- Lights and lanterns (string lights, paper lanterns, LED candles).
- Centerpieces using flowers, plants, or non-balloon decor.
- Signs and photo props instead of big balloon installs.
The goal is a great event, not “X number of balloons.” If helium doesn’t work out, your event can still look intentional.
Quick decision guide
If you’re short on time, use this shortcut:
- Small home party, low budget: air-only decor or one small kit if you can find it.
- Medium event, some budget: small/medium tank if available, mixed with air-only decor.
- Big or formal event: check helium; if it’s a hassle, strongly consider a decor company.
If you’re stuck choosing between multiple imperfect options, start at Helium 101 and then use this page as your “plan B” map.
Safety still applies (even if you find a tank)
If you do end up with a helium cylinder after all, remember the basics:
- Keep cylinders upright and secured, not rolling in vehicles.
- Keep tanks out of heat and direct sun.
- Do not refill disposable kits – they are designed for one use.
- Do not inhale helium from tanks or balloons.
For gear that makes this easier, check Helium accessories & safety gear.
Next steps
- Try the Helium Locator directory to see what’s actually available near you.
- Use Tank sizes & balloon counts to see if a smaller helium plan works.
- Read DIY vs decor if this event is big enough to justify hiring help.
- If helium is a hard no, lean into air-only decor or non-balloon decorations and commit.