Why "per plate" is only half the price
Caterers quote a per-plate or per-head number, but the final bill is almost always 25-60% higher. The headline price covers food only. Service staff, rentals (chafing dishes, tables, linens), service charge, taxes, gratuity, drinks, and dessert station are usually separate line items — or worse, "we'll figure it out at the end."
There are roughly four catering tiers: basic buffet (3-5 dishes, self-serve, paper plates), standard buffet or family-style (6-8 dishes, china, basic staff), premium plated (multi-course, dedicated waiters, full rentals), and luxury / chef-led (live stations, custom menu, named chef). Switching tiers can 4x the per-plate price for the same headcount.
Typical 2026 caterer prices per plate
| Event / tier | Typical price (USD/plate) | Includes |
|---|---|---|
| Office lunch box (10-50 pax) | $6 – $18 | Food + disposable |
| Birthday / house party — basic buffet (30-80 pax) | $10 – $25 | Food + 1 server |
| Engagement / mehndi — standard buffet (100-200 pax) | $15 – $40 | Food + staff + basic rentals |
| Wedding dinner — standard buffet (200-500 pax) | $20 – $55 | 6-8 dishes, staff, china |
| Wedding dinner — premium plated (200-500 pax) | $45 – $120 | Multi-course, full service |
| Corporate gala — premium (100-300 pax) | $60 – $180 | Plated, named venue, bar |
| Luxury / chef-led / live stations | $120 – $400+ | Custom menu, brand chef |
| Bar service — open bar (per person, 4 hrs) | $25 – $90 | Beer, wine, basic spirits |
| Cake (per kg, premium) | $25 – $80/kg | — |
| Service charge / gratuity (% of food bill) | 10% – 22% | — |
India / South Asia: divide Western prices by 4-5 for the same tier. UAE / Singapore: roughly Western prices. UK / Australia / Canada: at the upper end. Tier-2 Indian cities cost 25-35% less than Mumbai / Delhi / Bangalore for the same scope.
The 5 most common catering scams (and grey-area moves)
- Headcount inflation. You confirm 200 guests. Caterer arrives prepped for 240 ("buffer for last-minute") and bills you for 240. Or worse: bills you "actual consumption" of 220 because some guests took two plates. Fix: contract must say guaranteed minimum + capped overage (e.g. 200 minimum, billing capped at 210 even if more show, with seperate per-plate price for confirmed extras only).
- Hidden service charge + gratuity stack. Quote: "$30/plate, all inclusive." Final bill: $30 + 18% service charge + 10% gratuity + tax = effectively $42/plate. Fix: get the line-item breakdown in writing BEFORE booking. Demand "all-in price including service, gratuity and tax" be the headline number.
- Swap-on-the-day. You signed for premium chicken biryani with cashew. Day of: regular biryani, no cashew, "the supplier didn't have it." No refund. Fix: contract must list specific dishes + ingredient quality + portion size in grams; include a per-dish refund clause for substitutions without 24-hour notice.
- Drink markup nobody talks about. Open bar quoted at $35/person. Guest count: 250. Bill: $8,750 for 4 hours. Actual liquor consumed (verifiable from bottle count): $3,200. Caterers mark drinks up 200-400%. Fix: either bring your own alcohol (pay corkage), pay by consumption with bottle-count audit, or pre-negotiate a low per-person rate with capped categories (no premium spirits).
- Leftover theft / no leftover delivery. "We'll send you the leftovers." Day after: nothing arrived, or 30% of what was actually left. Caterers resell or staff-eat leftover food. Fix: contract must say all leftovers packed and handed to client representative on-site at end of event; identify the representative by name.
How to get a fair quote
Get 3 itemized quotes with the same scope: (1) menu (every dish + portion + ingredient grade), (2) headcount (with capped overage policy), (3) staff count + hours (1 server per 25 guests for buffet, 1 per 12 for plated), (4) rentals (chafing, china, glassware, linens, tables), (5) bar / drinks (per consumption or capped per person), (6) service charge + gratuity + tax as a single all-in line, (7) leftovers policy, (8) deposit + payment schedule.
Always ask for a tasting before booking for 100+ guests. Reputable caterers offer free or discounted tastings. Refusal to do a tasting for a large event is a red flag.
If you don't have 3 caterers in mind, post the event on PostTender — verified caterers in your area send free itemized quotes (usually within a day) so you can compare menu, staff and all-in pricing side by side.
Red flags that should make you walk away
- "All inclusive" without a written line-item breakdown
- Demands more than 30-40% advance, or 100% before the event
- Refuses to do a tasting for 100+ guest events
- Won't put leftovers policy in writing
- No FSSAI / health-license / food-handling certification
- Quote 25%+ below the next-cheapest competitor (almost always means swap-on-the-day)
- "We don't do contracts, just trust" — never. Walk away.
Where to spend, where to save
Spend on: the main course (this is what guests remember), the staff-to-guest ratio (slow service ruins a great menu), and the welcome drink + appetizer (sets the tone for the evening).
Save on: open bar (switch to beer + wine + 2 cocktails only, drop premium spirits — saves 40-60%), elaborate dessert station (one good cake + one ice cream station beats five mediocre desserts), and printed menu cards (use a chalkboard or single signage). Skip the chocolate fountain. Always.