Alcohol Calculator
Tell us how many guests are coming and how long the party runs, and we'll estimate exactly how much beer, wine, and liquor to buy.
๐ How it works & FAQHow much alcohol do you really need?
The classic hosting rule of thumb is one drink per guest per hour. A 20-person party running 4 hours works out to about 80 drinks total. From there it's just a matter of splitting that number across beer, wine, and liquor the way your crowd likes to drink, then turning servings into cans and bottles you can actually add to a shopping cart.
How the servings convert
This calculator uses standard bar-planning conversions so the numbers line up with what you buy at the store: one can of beer is one serving, a 750ml bottle of wine pours about 5 servings, and a 750ml bottle of liquor makes about 16 cocktail-sized servings. Your beer, wine, and liquor percentages decide how the total gets divided. If the three shares don't add up to 100%, we scale them so the split still makes sense.
How to use it
- Enter your number of guests and how many hours the party will last.
- Set the beer, wine, and liquor percentages to match your crowd (aim for a total of 100%).
- Read the result cards for total drinks plus the exact cans and bottles to buy.
- Round up and grab a little extra for heavy pours, spills, and late arrivals.
FAQ
- How many drinks per person should I plan?
- The standard estimate is one drink per guest per hour. Guests usually drink a bit more in the first hour and taper off, so the average evens out.
- How many servings are in a bottle?
- A 750ml wine bottle pours about 5 glasses, and a 750ml liquor bottle makes about 16 standard cocktails. Beer is counted one serving per can.
- What if I only serve one type of drink?
- Set that type to 100% and the others to 0%. All your drinks will convert into just cans or just bottles.
- Should I buy extra?
- Yes. We round bottles and cans up, but grabbing 10-20% more is smart, and most stores let you return unopened alcohol.
These figures are planning estimates, not professional advice. Always host responsibly, offer water and non-alcoholic options, and never serve minors or anyone who is impaired.