How Many Cheese Tray Servings for 8 People?

Quick answer: order 16 oz for 8 guests, with a realistic budget of $8 to $24. Use the scenario planner below if your crowd is lighter, hungrier, or eating other dishes too.

Cheese Tray Servings for a small group of 5โ€“20 are easy to nail. With 1 serving per oz, a modest purchase covers the crowd without the risk of significant over-ordering.

Useful planning links for this guest count

16 oz

for 8 people

Estimated cost: $8 - $24

Quick Answer

For 8 people, you need 16 oz. This provides about 16 servings, assuming roughly 2 servings per person.

Estimated cost: $8 - $24

How We Calculate

We use a simple catering-style formula for cheese tray calculations:

  • Each person eats approximately 2 oz
  • Formula: 8 people ร— 2 servings รท 1 = 16 oz

Planning Tips for 8 People

  • Include 3-5 cheese varieties (soft, hard, aged, blue)
  • Take cheese out of fridge 30-60 minutes before serving
  • Order slightly more than the calculation suggests โ€” small groups tend to graze and revisit favorites

Same-day ordering or pickup is typically fine for groups under 20 people.

Tips for Ordering Cheese Tray Servings

  • Include 3-5 cheese varieties (soft, hard, aged, blue)
  • Take cheese out of fridge 30-60 minutes before serving
  • Add crackers, fruit, nuts, and honey for accompaniments
  • Plan 1 oz per cheese variety per person
  • Pre-slice some cheese for easy serving

Scenario Planner for 8 Guests

Use these planning scenarios to choose an order size that matches your event style.

Light Appetite

Best when serving many other foods.

12 oz

$6 - $18

Normal Appetite

Standard planning baseline.

16 oz

$8 - $24

Hungry Guests

Use for high-energy or long events.

20 oz

$10 - $30

Serving Other Food

Balanced when this is one item among several.

12 oz

$6 - $18

Execution Plan for a small gathering

For 8 guests, start procurement same day before service and run 1 serving wave to keep quality consistent.

  • Baseline order: 16 oz
  • Recommended buffer (10%): 18 oz
  • Category guidance: Set appetizers out in smaller refills instead of one large tray to preserve texture and appearance.
  • Category guidance: Anchor appetizer timing to arrival windows; consumption spikes in the first 60-90 minutes.

Planning Guide: Cheese Tray Servings for Your Event

Cheese selection for party trays follows the principle of contrasting flavors and textures to provide variety without overwhelming guests. The classic formula is one cheese from each category: a soft cheese (brie, camembert, or goat cheese), a hard aged cheese (aged cheddar, manchego, or gouda), a blue or pungent cheese (gorgonzola, stilton, or roquefort), and a crowd-pleasing semi-soft option (havarti or young cheddar). This creates a progression from mild to bold that accommodates different palates. For events under 30 people, three cheeses suffice - drop the blue cheese as it's the most polarizing. Avoid pre-cut cheese cubes from grocery store trays - they dry out quickly and look cheap. Buy cheese in blocks and slice or cube them yourself within 3-4 hours of serving. The quantity rule of thumb is 1 ounce per cheese variety per person, so a 40-person party featuring 4 cheeses needs about 10 pounds of cheese total.

Temperature management for cheese trays is where amateur hosts fail most dramatically. Cold cheese from the refrigerator has muted flavors and firm texture that doesn't showcase the cheese properly. Cheese should be served at 65-70ยฐF, which means removing it from refrigeration 45-90 minutes before serving depending on cheese size and room temperature. Soft cheeses reach ideal temperature faster than hard cheeses. However, cheese left at room temperature for more than 4 hours enters food safety danger zones, particularly soft cheeses. The solution for long events is the rotating tray method: prepare two cheese trays, serve one while keeping the other refrigerated, then swap them after 2-3 hours. For outdoor summer events where temperatures exceed 80ยฐF, reduce the 4-hour window to 2 hours and keep backup cheese in coolers. Use slate or marble serving boards which stay cooler than wood and provide elegant presentation.

Accompaniments for cheese trays elevate the experience from simple to sophisticated without requiring expertise. The essential additions are crackers (provide 2-3 varieties including water crackers, whole grain, and something substantial), fresh fruit (grapes, apple slices, pears, or figs), dried fruit (apricots or cranberries add color and concentrated sweetness), nuts (candied walnuts or marcona almonds), and something savory like olives or cornichons. Honey or jam in small ramekins adds sweetness that pairs beautifully with aged cheeses and blue cheese. Arrange accompaniments around the cheese, not mixed together, so guests can customize their combinations. Provide small cheese knives for each cheese to prevent flavor cross-contamination - soft cheese knives have holes to prevent sticking, while hard cheese knives are sharp and sturdy. Label cheeses with small cards showing the name and type - this serves as conversation starter and helps guests identify favorites for future purchase.

Frequently Asked Questions About Cheese Tray

How much cheese per person for a party?

Plan for 2 oz per person if serving before dinner, or 4-6 oz if the cheese board is the main appetizer. For a wine and cheese party, plan for 6-8 oz per person.

How many types of cheese should I include?

Include 3-5 varieties for a good spread: one soft (brie, camembert), one hard (cheddar, gouda), one aged (parmesan, manchego), and optionally one blue and one flavored cheese.

How far ahead can I prepare a cheese tray?

Assemble 2-4 hours ahead and cover with plastic wrap. Remove from refrigerator 30-60 minutes before servingโ€”cheese tastes best at room temperature.

Other Party Sizes

Other Foods for 8 People

More Appetizers

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Editorial Process and Sources

Rachel Holloway

Written by Rachel Holloway ยท Last reviewed: February 25, 2026

Contact: contact@feedmyguests.com

Serving estimates on this page are based on USDA dietary guidelines and catering industry standards, reviewed for formula accuracy, link integrity, and planning clarity.

Reference Sources