How Much Wine for 50 People?
Quick Answer
For 50 people at a large party, you need approximately 20 bottles of wine.
Estimated cost: $200 - $400
How We Calculate
Start with guest count
50 people
Multiply by drinks per person
50 ร 2 = 100 total bottles
Convert to purchasing units
100 รท 5 servings per bottle = 20 bottles
Tips for Serving Wine to 50 Guests
- โ Offer both red and white options
- โ Chill white wine to 45-50ยฐF, serve red at 60-65ยฐF
- โ Plan 60% white, 40% red for most events
- โ Open red wine 30 minutes before serving
- โ Have a corkscrew backup - always
Service Plan for 50 Guests
For a large party, plan on approximately 100 total servings over a 3-hour event. Keep a 10-15% buffer so you can handle late arrivals and heavier-than-average consumption.
Because wine is typically served alongside other drinks, set a second non-alcoholic option to avoid over-concentration on a single beverage and reduce stockout risk.
- Prep checklist: 120+ cups, 75+ lbs of ice, and backup storage nearby.
- Chill strategy: pre-chill at least 70% before service to reduce ice melt and dilution.
- Replenishment cadence: refresh serving stations every 30-45 minutes instead of all at once.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much wine do I need for 50 people?
For 50 people at a standard 3-hour party, you need 20 bottles. This is based on 2 bottles per person.
What's the cost of wine for 50 guests?
Expect to spend $200 - $400 on wine for 50 people, based on typical prices of $10-$20 per bottle.
Should I buy extra wine?
Yes! We recommend adding 10-15% extra for unexpected guests or heavy drinkers. That's about 3 more bottles.
Editorial Process and Sources
Last reviewed: February 19, 2026
Publisher: FeedMyGuests Editorial Team ยท Contact: contact@feedmyguests.com
This page is generated from structured wine consumption baselines and conversion rules, then reviewed for calculation consistency and internal-link quality checks.
Reference Sources
- USDA FoodData Central Retrieved: February 19, 2026
- NIH Rethinking Drinking (standard drink references) Retrieved: February 19, 2026
- FDA Food Safety Guidance Retrieved: February 19, 2026