Planning drinks for 150 guests isn’t guesswork—it’s controlled estimation. The goal isn’t to have exactly the right amount, but to be confidently close without running out or overstocking too much.
1. Start with the Core Formula
A reliable baseline is:
2 drinks per guest for the first hour + 1 drink per guest for each additional hour
For a typical 4-hour event:
- First hour: 150 × 2 = 300 drinks
- Next 3 hours: 150 × 3 = 450 drinks
Total ≈ 750 drinks
This is your starting point—not your final number.
2. Adjust for Your Crowd
Not every group drinks the same. Consider:
- Younger crowd → slightly higher consumption
- Corporate or formal event → slightly lower
- Daytime event → lower than evening
- Heavy cocktail crowd → higher alcohol usage
A safe adjustment range is ±10–15%.
3. Break It Down by Drink Type
A common split for a full bar:
- 40% beer
- 30% wine
- 30% spirits/cocktails
For 750 drinks, that becomes:
- Beer: ~300 servings
- Wine: ~225 servings
- Spirits: ~225 servings
You can tweak this depending on your audience.
4. Convert Servings into Bottles
Beer
- 1 bottle/can = 1 serving
→ 300 beers
Wine
- 1 bottle = ~5 glasses
→ 225 ÷ 5 = 45 bottles of wine
Split roughly:
- 60% red
- 40% white (adjust for weather)
Spirits
- 1 standard 750ml bottle = ~16 drinks
→ 225 ÷ 16 ≈ 14–15 bottles total spirits
Distribute across:
- Vodka
- Whiskey
- Gin
- Rum
- Tequila
(Prioritize the most popular: vodka & whiskey)
5. Don’t Forget Mixers & Extras
For cocktails, you’ll need:
- Soda, tonic, juice (estimate ~1–1.5 mixers per cocktail)
- Ice (about 1–1.5 kg per guest for a 4-hour event)
- Garnishes (citrus, herbs)
- Water (still & sparkling)
6. Add a Safety Buffer
Always add 10–15% extra to avoid shortages.
Running out costs more (in experience) than having a little left over.
7. Simplify When Possible
If you offer:
- 2–3 signature cocktails
- Limited spirit selection
You’ll reduce waste and make quantities easier to control.
The Real Secret
Estimating bar quantities isn’t about perfection—it’s about balance.
Too little, and the experience suffers.
Too much, and the budget takes a hit.
A well-planned bar feels effortless to guests—drinks are always available, service flows smoothly, and no one is thinking about logistics. That’s when you know you got it right.