BBQ Catering Calculator
Enter your guest count, pick your meats, and get exact raw weight to purchase for every cut — including racks, pieces, and optional cost estimates for events up to 500 people.
Event Details
Meat Selection
Summary
How Much BBQ Do You Need Per Person?
The most fundamental question in BBQ catering is deceptively simple: how much raw meat do I need to buy? The answer is never the same as the cooked serving size you intend to put on a plate. Every cut of meat loses a significant percentage of its weight during a long smoke — moisture evaporates, fat renders out, and collagen converts to gelatin. A 10 lb brisket flat becomes roughly 6 lbs of cooked meat. A 12 lb bone-in pork shoulder yields about 7 to 8 lbs of pulled pork. If you are planning a single-protein cook instead of a full event, the Meat Per Person Calculator is the simpler version of this same problem.
The general formula used by professional BBQ caterers is: divide your target cooked serving weight by (1 minus the shrinkage percentage) to find the raw weight to purchase. For brisket with 40% shrinkage and a 6 oz serving, that math is: 6 oz ÷ 0.60 = 10 oz raw per person, or roughly 0.63 lbs. For 100 people, you need 63 lbs of raw brisket — about 4 to 5 whole briskets.
This calculator runs that math for every meat you select, adjusts for appetite level and whether you are serving sides, and gives you whole-cut counts (racks, pieces, links) alongside raw weight so you can walk into a restaurant supply store or butcher with a precise shopping list.
Understanding Shrinkage by Cut
Not all meats shrink equally. Brisket and pork shoulder are long-cook cuts that lose 35 to 40% of their weight over many hours on the smoker. Chicken thighs and turkey breast lose only 20 to 25% because they cook faster and retain more moisture. Ribs are a special case — you are buying significant bone weight that will never be eaten, so per-person raw weight is calculated in racks and pieces rather than ounces.
Sausage loses the least weight of any BBQ protein — about 10% — because the casing limits moisture escape. Two links per person is the standard catering rate for sausage as a secondary meat; if sausage is your primary protein, increase to three links per person.
Buffet vs. Plated Service
How you serve the food dramatically affects how much meat you need to buy. In plated service, each guest receives a pre-portioned plate with a fixed amount of meat — portion control is exact and waste is minimal. In buffet service, guests self-select and the math changes because guests tend to take larger portions of their favorites, especially when multiple meats are present.
The upside of a multi-meat buffet is that per-meat portions decrease as the number of options increases. When guests face a buffet with brisket, pulled pork, and chicken quarters, no single meat needs to account for a full serving. Most professional caterers reduce each meat's serving size by 20 to 30% when offering three or more meats on a buffet. This calculator applies that adjustment automatically based on how many meats you select and whether you choose buffet or plated service.
For formal events — weddings, corporate dinners, charity galas — plated service gives you tighter cost control and a more refined presentation. For backyard cookouts, tailgates, family reunions, and church events, buffet service is both more practical and more fun. Guests love the freedom to pile their plates. If you also need all of those meats to finish at the same hour, use the Cook Time Coordinator alongside this page.
How the 20% Sides Reduction Works
When you check "serving with sides," this calculator reduces each meat's cooked serving target by 20%. The reasoning is straightforward: a guest who has filled part of their plate with baked beans, coleslaw, cornbread, and potato salad will eat less meat than a guest at a meat-only spread. This 20% reduction is a conservative estimate — some caterers reduce by as much as 30% when sides are abundant. The advantage of the conservative approach is that you will have modest leftovers rather than running short.
The 20% Buffer Rule
Every experienced BBQ caterer will tell you the same thing: always buy 20% more than your calculation says you need. This is not padding — it is reality. Here is why:
- Shrinkage varies. A USDA Choice brisket may lose 35%; a heavily marbled Prime brisket may lose 42%. The grade of meat, fat cap thickness, and your smoker's humidity all affect actual yield.
- Guests surprise you. People at BBQ events consistently eat more than a catering calculator predicts, especially when the food is exceptional. Good BBQ disappears faster than mediocre food does.
- Accidents happen. A dropped tray, a smoker temperature spike, a piece that does not hold together at slicing time — having buffer meat means your event does not end badly.
- Leftover smoked meat is an asset. Pulled pork burritos, brisket breakfast hash, smoked chicken salad — the leftovers from a great BBQ are desirable, not a problem.
The raw weights shown in this calculator already include a 20% safety buffer on top of the minimum calculated quantity. The "raw weight to buy" figures are your shopping target, not a bare minimum.
Planning by Meat Type
Brisket per Person
At moderate appetite with sides, plan 0.63 lbs of raw brisket per person as the sole meat, or about 0.40 lbs raw when brisket is one of two or three buffet options. A whole packer brisket runs 12 to 18 lbs and serves 12 to 20 people depending on appetite. For groups of 50 or more, order multiple briskets and stage your cook — not every smoker can hold six full packers simultaneously. Sliced brisket is easier to serve at scale than pulled; pulled brisket can be held in a chafing dish without quality loss for up to two hours.
Pulled Pork per Person
Pulled pork is the most economical and scalable BBQ protein for large events. At moderate appetite with sides, plan 0.55 lbs of raw pork shoulder per person. A 10 lb bone-in pork butt yields about 6.5 lbs of pulled pork after a 35% shrink, feeding roughly 17 people at a moderate serving. Pulled pork holds beautifully in a chafing dish for 3 to 4 hours and reheats exceptionally well, making it ideal for events where staggered serving times are likely.
Ribs per Person (Racks)
Ribs require thinking in racks and pieces rather than pounds. One rack of baby back ribs serves 2 people at a moderate appetite with sides. One rack of spare ribs serves 3. For 50 guests with baby backs as the sole meat, you need 25 racks — that is a substantial cook requiring a large offset smoker, a trailer pit, or multiple cooker runs. For mixed events, ribs work best as a secondary meat with pulled pork or brisket as the primary; reduce rack counts by 40% in a two-meat spread.
Chicken Quarters and Thighs
Chicken is the most cost-effective BBQ protein and the fastest to cook. Plan 1 quarter per person at moderate appetite or 2 thighs per person. Chicken can be cooked in batches efficiently since it takes only 2 to 3 hours at 275°F. For large events, chicken is an excellent secondary meat to stretch your budget while brisket or pulled pork anchors the spread.
Sausage
At most Texas-style BBQ catering events, sausage is served as an add-on rather than a primary protein. Two links per person is the standard catering rate for sausage as a secondary option. Each link runs about 6 oz raw and loses roughly 10% during smoking. Sausage is fast to cook (45 to 75 minutes), easy to hold, and universally popular. It is the ideal meat to add to a brisket and pulled pork spread when your guest count increases at the last minute.
Catering Timeline — When to Start Cooking
Large-scale BBQ catering requires backward planning from your serve time. The critical constraint is that brisket and pork shoulder both need 12 to 18 hours of cook time plus 1 to 2 hours of rest before service. Here is a general guide:
- Events of 25 to 50 guests: A single offset smoker with a 500 lb capacity can handle this. Light at midnight or 1 AM for a 12 PM serve. One pitmaster can manage solo with a remote thermometer and a rested meat hold in a cambro or cooler.
- Events of 50 to 100 guests: Plan for two smokers or a trailer pit. You will need one person managing the fire and one handling slicing/service. Order your meat in advance — butcher shops at this volume need 2 to 3 business days of lead time.
- Events of 100 to 200 guests: A full trailer pit or multiple cabinet smokers. Two to three pitmaster-level staff. Meat should go on smokers 16 to 18 hours before service. Have a plan for holding — a commercial oven at 160°F holds brisket and pulled pork for up to 4 hours without quality loss.
- Events of 200 to 500 guests: This is professional catering territory. Hire a licensed BBQ catering company. The logistics of food safety, transport, holding, and service at this scale require permits, licensed equipment, and a dedicated team. This calculator can help you understand quantities and build a bid — but execute it with professionals.
Quick Reference: Common Event Sizes
Moderate appetite, with sides. Figures include 20% buffer. Brisket and pulled pork in raw lbs; ribs in full racks.
| Guests | Brisket (raw lbs) | Pulled Pork (raw lbs) | Baby Back Racks |
|---|---|---|---|
| 25 | 19 lbs | 14 lbs | 13 racks |
| 50 | 38 lbs | 28 lbs | 25 racks |
| 100 | 75 lbs | 55 lbs | 50 racks |
| 200 | 150 lbs | 110 lbs | 100 racks |