Food Per Person Calculator
Tell us how many guests you're feeding and we'll do the party-planning math for you.
๐ How it works & FAQHow much food do you really need per person?
Nothing derails a party like running out of food halfway through โ or drowning in leftovers you paid a fortune for. This calculator turns a simple headcount into a clear shopping list across the six food groups that show up at almost every gathering: appetizers, a main protein, side dishes, salad, dessert, and bread. Enter your guest count and how many different sides you plan to serve, and every quantity updates live.
The per-person amounts we use
The math is based on standard catering rules of thumb for a full meal: 6 appetizer pieces, 0.5 lb of main protein, 4 oz of each side dish, 1 cup of salad, 1 dessert, and 1.5 bread rolls per guest. If your event is a cocktail party without a sit-down meal, lean toward more appetizers and less protein. For a hungry crowd or a long event, round every number up a little โ food is cheaper than an unhappy guest.
How to use it
- Enter the total number of guests you expect.
- Enter how many different side dishes you'll serve (each counts as 4 oz per person).
- Read the quantity cards โ pieces, pounds, and cups โ straight onto your shopping list.
- Adjust the numbers to compare a smaller vs. larger crowd before you buy.
These figures are planning estimates, not professional catering advice โ always adjust for your menu and appetite.
FAQ
- Does this count kids as full guests?
- Yes, each guest is treated equally. If you have several young children, count two kids as roughly one adult portion.
- What if I'm serving two proteins?
- Keep the total protein at 0.5 lb per person and split it between the two โ say 0.25 lb of each โ rather than doubling it.
- Should I add extra for leftovers?
- These amounts feed everyone comfortably with a little to spare. For guaranteed leftovers, bump your guest count up by 15–20%.
- How many side dishes should I plan?
- Two to three sides is typical for a full meal. More variety means guests take a bit of each, so the 4 oz-per-side figure still holds.