Catering is almost always the largest single check you’ll write for your wedding. It’s also one of the most confusing to budget for, because the range is genuinely enormous — from $40 per person for a casual daytime setup to $300 per person at a luxury hotel dinner.
Understanding what drives that number — and how to negotiate it — is the most valuable thing you can do for your wedding budget. Here’s the honest breakdown.
Average Wedding Catering Cost Per Person in 2026
| Service Style | Food Cost Per Person | Total Per Person (with service + tax) | Best Guest Count |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cocktail / heavy appetizers | $40–$70 | $55–$100 | Under 75 guests |
| Buffet dinner | $65–$95 | $85–$130 | 50–200 guests |
| Family style | $75–$115 | $95–$145 | 30–120 guests |
| Plated sit-down | $90–$155 | $120–$200+ | Any — but priciest |
| Food truck (1–2 trucks) | $45–$85 | $55–$100 | Under 150 guests |
| Brunch or lunch reception | $35–$65 | $50–$90 | Any — great savings hack |
| Dessert and cake reception | $20–$40 | $30–$55 | Under 75 guests |
The most common mistake couples make is focusing on the food price per person without accounting for service charges, gratuity, and taxes — which typically add 25 to 35 percent on top of the quoted price.
What’s Usually NOT Included in the Per-Person Price
When a caterer quotes you $85 per person, that number often doesn’t include any of the following. Always ask for a fully loaded estimate before comparing quotes.
| Hidden Cost | Typical Amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Service charge / admin fee | 18–22% of food total | This is NOT the tip — it goes to the caterer |
| Gratuity for servers | 15–20% of food total | This does go to service staff |
| Sales tax | 5–10% depending on state | Varies widely by location |
| Cake cutting fee | $2–$5 per person | If venue cuts your outside cake |
| Corkage fee (outside alcohol) | $10–$25 per bottle | If you bring your own wine |
| Rentals (linens, chargers, etc.) | $15–$40 per person | Often separate from food |
| Setup and breakdown labor | $200–$800 flat fee | Sometimes included, often not |
Regional Price Differences
Where you get married affects catering costs dramatically. Here’s a realistic picture of per-person catering costs by region for 2026:
| Region | Buffet Per Person (All-In) | Plated Per Person (All-In) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| New York City / San Francisco | $140–$200+ | $180–$280+ | Highest labor costs in the country |
| Chicago / Boston / Seattle | $100–$155 | $130–$200 | Major metro premium |
| Dallas / Atlanta / Phoenix | $80–$130 | $110–$165 | More competitive vendor market |
| Denver / Nashville / Charlotte | $75–$120 | $100–$155 | Mid-tier, growing wedding markets |
| Midwest / Southeast (mid-size cities) | $65–$105 | $85–$130 | Often the best value |
| Rural areas (any region) | $50–$85 | $70–$110 | Fewer caterers = less competition |
Bar Cost: The Number Caterers Hope You Don’t Ask About Upfront
| Bar Option | Estimated Cost per Guest | Total for 75 Guests | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Full open bar (all spirits) | $45–$80 | $3,375–$6,000 | Most expensive, most expected at evening weddings |
| Beer and wine only | $25–$45 | $1,875–$3,375 | Still feels generous, saves $2,000+ |
| Signature cocktail + beer/wine | $30–$55 | $2,250–$4,125 | Feels premium, costs like beer/wine only |
| Cash bar | $5–$10 setup fee only | Guests pay for drinks | Saves money but can feel unwelcoming |
| Dry wedding (no alcohol) | $0 | $0 | Totally valid — do it confidently |
Buying your own alcohol and having the caterer serve it — where permitted — can cut your bar bill in half. Ask if your caterer allows this before assuming they supply everything.
How to Get Real Quotes and Compare Them Fairly
Getting accurate catering quotes requires asking the right questions. Ask every caterer these before signing anything:
- What is the base food cost per person for the menu style I want?
- What is your service charge, and does it include gratuity or is that separate?
- Are linens, chargers, and tableware included, or are those additional?
- What is your policy on outside alcohol — is there a corkage fee?
- If I bring my own cake, is there a cutting fee?
- What is your setup and breakdown labor cost?
- Can you give me a sample invoice from a similar wedding so I can see the fully loaded number?
How to Reduce Catering Costs Without Guests Noticing
- Choose brunch or lunch over a dinner reception — the same quality of food costs 30 to 40 percent less because of the time of day
- Opt for buffet or family style over plated service — labor savings are significant, and guests often prefer it
- Have your wedding on a Friday or Sunday — some caterers discount off-peak dates
- Cut the guest list rather than the menu quality — every 10 guests you remove saves $700 to $1,400 in catering alone
- Skip the elaborate dessert station — one cake and some passed bites at cocktail hour is sufficient
- Supply your own alcohol if your caterer and venue allow it — buy wholesale through Costco or a restaurant supply store
The Bottom Line
Budget $85 to $130 per person all-in for a mid-range buffet dinner at a typical wedding. If you’re in a major metro, start at $130 and go up from there. If you’re in a mid-size city or willing to host a Friday wedding, you have real room to bring that number down.
The most important thing: get fully loaded quotes from at least three caterers before committing. And always, always read the service charge line.
See how catering fits into your complete 50-guest wedding cost breakdown, or use the wedding budget calculator to see how this category affects your totals.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is $100 per person enough for wedding catering?
In most mid-size US cities, $100 per person all-in covers a solid buffet dinner with beer and wine. In major metros like NYC or San Francisco, $100 per person may only cover the food without bar, service charges, or tax. Always get a fully loaded quote.
What is a realistic catering budget for 100 guests?
For a mid-range buffet with beer and wine at a 100-guest wedding, budget $9,000 to $14,000 all-in outside major metros. In high-cost cities, plan for $14,000 to $22,000. These figures include food, service charges, bar, tax, and gratuity.