Quick Answer
For 50 people, you need 25 cups. This provides about 25 servings, assuming 0.5 servings per person.
Estimated cost: $19 - $50
How We Calculate
We use the industry-standard formula for potato salad calculations:
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Each person eats approximately 0.5 cups
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Formula: 50 people ร 0.5 servings รท 1 = 25 cups
Adjusting for Your Event
Use our interactive calculator above to fine-tune your order:
- Light appetite: Reduce by 25% if guests had a recent meal or there are
many other food options
- Normal appetite: Standard calculation for typical party situations
- Hungry guests: Increase by 25% for active groups, late-night events,
or when potato salad servings are the main attraction
Tips for Ordering Potato Salad Servings
- Make the day before for best flavor
- Keep refrigerated - don't leave out over 2 hours
- Offer mustard-based for mayo-free option
- Use waxy potatoes (red or Yukon gold) for best texture
- Add fresh herbs just before serving
Planning Guide: Potato Salad Servings for Your Event
Potato variety selection fundamentally determines potato salad texture and success. Waxy potatoes like red potatoes, Yukon golds, or fingerlings hold their shape beautifully when boiled and tossed, creating a potato salad with distinct chunks. Russet potatoes, being starchy, tend to fall apart and create a mushy, paste-like texture that's unappealing in potato salad (though perfect for mashed potatoes). The science is simple: waxy potatoes have less starch and more moisture, which means their cells stay intact during cooking. For parties, Yukon golds are the gold standard - they have a naturally buttery flavor, pleasant yellow color, and hold up well to mayo-based and vinegar-based dressings alike. Cut potatoes into uniform 3/4-inch cubes so they cook evenly. Starting potatoes in cold salted water and bringing to a boil prevents the exterior from overcooking before the interior is done. Perfectly cooked potatoes for salad should be fork-tender but not falling apart.
The food safety timeline for potato salad at outdoor events is stricter than most party foods because potatoes are surprisingly good at harboring bacteria. Potato salad must be kept below 40ยฐF or above 140ยฐF - the danger zone between these temperatures is where bacteria multiply rapidly. At outdoor summer BBQs, potato salad should not sit out for more than 2 hours maximum, and that time drops to 1 hour if the temperature exceeds 90ยฐF. Use the ice bowl method: place your serving bowl inside a larger bowl filled with ice, and replenish ice as it melts. For long events, keep the bulk of potato salad refrigerated and refill the serving bowl every hour with a fresh portion. Never combine a fresh batch with a sitting batch. Mustard-based potato salads are slightly more forgiving than mayo-based because mustard's acidity provides some bacterial protection, but they still require refrigeration. Make potato salad the day before for best flavor development, but this also means planning adequate refrigerator space for large batches.
Adding mix-ins and seasonings to potato salad requires restraint and timing. The classic mistake is over-mixing, which breaks down potatoes and creates that aforementioned mushy texture. Fold ingredients gently with a rubber spatula rather than stirring vigorously. Add fresh herbs like dill or parsley just before serving rather than hours ahead - they darken and wilt in acidic dressing. For crunch, add celery and onions within 3-4 hours of serving; any earlier and they become limp. Hard-boiled eggs can be added when assembling, but some hosts prefer to save a few and slice them for garnish on top to signal 'this contains eggs' for allergy awareness. Pickles or pickle relish are traditional but divisive - make a plain batch and let guests add their own pickles. The dressing ratio is crucial: start with less dressing than you think you need, as potatoes absorb dressing over time. You can always add more, but you can't remove excess mayo from an overdressed salad.