The Private Event Pricing Guide
For coffee carts, trucks, trailers, and mobile espresso bars. A practical playbook for pricing your first — or fiftieth — private event.
Why pricing is harder than it looks
Pricing a private event is not the same as pricing a drink. At your cart on a Saturday morning, every latte you sell is additive revenue on top of a shift you were already going to work. At a private event, the client is buying your entire presence — your rig, your hands, your time, your insurance, your fuel, your Sunday morning — for a defined window, and they expect the experience to feel worth it from the moment you roll up.
That is why almost every experienced mobile operator settles on a package-based or tiered structure rather than charging strictly per drink. A two-hour event for fifty people can legitimately cost the client anywhere from $450 to $1,400 depending on what “two hours” actually involves — and understanding why that spread exists is the whole point of this guide.
This guide walks through the five pricing levers that matter, the three pricing models you can choose from, realistic per-event math, scenario walkthroughs, a reference grid you can keep taped to your wall, and blank templates for building quotes and contracts. It’s written for a vendor who has done a few farmers markets and pop-ups but is now getting asked, “Hey, could you do our wedding?” and has no idea what number to send back.
The real shape of an event day
Before you price anything, count the hours honestly. Clients ask for a “two-hour event” and in their head that means two hours. In your head — and on your invoice — it means something closer to six to eight:
- Prep and pull (1–2 hours): milk pickup, ice, topping off syrups, loading the rig, pulling it off the hitch or out of the garage, checking tires, fueling up.
- Drive and arrive buffer (30–90 minutes each way): you need to arrive an hour before service starts — not five minutes before — and you cannot bill travel time as service time.
- Setup on site (45–90 minutes): unloading, placement, leveling, running extension cord or generator, machine warmup, milk organization, menu board placement, tip jar decision, dialing in the grind on a different voltage or elevation.
- Service window (1–6 hours): what the client actually booked and remembers.
- Breakdown (30–60 minutes): purging lines, bagging trash, packing milk back in the cooler, wiping everything, reloading.
- Return and reset (1–2 hours): driving back, unloading, cleaning the machine properly, dumping grey water, washing pitchers, restocking for the next day.
A “2-hour event” is realistically a 7–9 hour workday. Your price must reflect that workday, not the two hours the client sees.
This is the single most common mistake new operators make: they look at their drink price from the farmers market, do quick math, and undercharge by 60 percent.
The five levers that set your price
1. Guest count
Drives expected drink volume, staffing, and supply costs. Industry standard is one barista per 50 guests per hour for made-to-order espresso drinks, with a hard ceiling around 60–70 drinks per hour from a single person on a one-group machine. Above 75–100 guests in a tight service window, add a second barista or a second station — lines are the number one complaint at events, and one unhappy planner tells five peers.
2. Service duration
The minimum billable event is almost always 2 hours of active service. Shorter events do not proportionally cost less — your prep, travel, setup, and breakdown are fixed. Most operators charge a higher first-hour rate that absorbs setup and breakdown, then a lower per-hour add-on for additional service hours. This is both fair and easy to explain.
3. Service model — who pays for the drinks
There are three fundamentally different jobs hiding under “coffee catering,” and clients confuse them constantly. You need to name them clearly in your quote:
- Host-paid (“open bar” style): the client pays a single all-inclusive fee and guests order whatever they want, unlimited, no cash changes hands. This is what most weddings and corporate events want.
- Guest-paid (vendor style): the client pays you a setup/appearance fee (or nothing) and guests pay for their own drinks at the cart. Common at conferences, trade shows, farmers markets, and apartment-complex pop-ups. Because you carry the risk of low turnout, always set a minimum guarantee.
- Hybrid: the client covers a base number of drinks (say, the first 75) and anything beyond that is either billed back to the client or paid by guests. Good for budget-conscious hosts who want a great experience but don’t want a blank check.
4. Travel and logistics
Most operators include travel free inside a set radius (typically 20–30 miles from base) and charge beyond that. Common structures: a flat travel fee by distance band, a per-mile rate (IRS rate or higher to cover wear), or a minimum event size that scales with distance. Also price in: generator rental if there’s no power ($100–$300/day), parking fees, venue fees if the venue takes a percentage, overnight lodging for events more than about 2 hours away, and any permit or temporary food license the jurisdiction requires.
5. Customization and add-ons
This is where margins get made. Custom branded cups, cart wraps, signature drinks named after the couple or company, latte-art foam printing of logos or photos, premium alt-milk selections, pastry add-ons, themed signage, extended non-coffee menu (chai, matcha, hot cocoa, tea), cold brew on tap, mobile ordering signage — each of these is an upsell that costs you relatively little incrementally but raises the client’s perceived value (and your margin) significantly.
The three pricing models, and when to use each
Model A: Tiered package pricingRecommended
You publish 3–5 packages by guest count and service length. Each package is all-inclusive: barista(s), machine, beans, milk, standard alt-milk, cups, syrups, setup, breakdown, and travel within X miles. Add-ons are line-itemed separately.
Why it works: clients can compare you apples-to-apples, you control the math, you protect yourself against surprise guest counts by pricing each tier conservatively, and it forces you to think clearly about what a “small event” and a “big event” actually cost you to run.
When not to use it: brand activations, trade show booths, and custom corporate work where the deliverable is really a marketing experience, not just coffee. For those, build a custom proposal.
Model B: Hourly + per-person
A flat hourly rate (typically $150–$275/hour after a 2-hour minimum) plus a per-person ingredient charge ($3–$7 depending on menu). Or a setup fee plus per-drink à la carte if guests are paying.
Why it works: flexibility when the client genuinely doesn’t know how long the event will run or how many people will show (e.g., open houses, grand openings, ticketed events with uncertain attendance).
When not to use it: weddings. Couples hate variable totals. They want a number and they want that number locked.
Model C: Vendor model (per drink, guest-paid)
You charge the host a setup fee or a minimum guarantee, then sell drinks directly to guests at your menu price. Common at conferences, apartment activations, corporate morning commutes in a lobby, weekly office pop-ups.
Why it works: zero risk for the host, straightforward for recurring gigs, and lets you keep tips. You run it like you’d run your farmers market, just with a guaranteed floor.
When not to use it: private celebrations where asking guests to pay is awkward — weddings, milestone birthdays, baby showers.
What the market actually charges in 2026
Across regions, event types, and vendor tiers, current market rates cluster in well-defined bands. Urban markets (NYC, SF, LA, Boston, DC, Seattle) run 20–40 percent higher than secondary metros (Cleveland, Columbus, Nashville, Raleigh). Rural and destination events almost always carry a travel premium.
The ranges below are all-inclusive host-paid packages unless noted. Use them as a sanity check on your quote — if you’re well under the low end, you’re almost certainly undercharging; if you’re well over the high end, make sure your proposal explains why.
By event type (2-hour standard service)
| Event type | Guest count | Typical all-in range |
|---|---|---|
| Small meeting / baby shower / bridal shower | 25–50 | $400 – $800 |
| Small business meeting / board breakfast | 25–50 | $450 – $900 |
| Mid-size corporate / department event | 75–150 | $600 – $1,500 |
| Intimate wedding (cocktail hour or late-night) | 50–100 | $750 – $1,400 |
| Mid-size wedding | 100–175 | $1,000 – $2,200 |
| Large wedding / corporate conference | 175–300 | $1,500 – $3,500 |
| Luxury wedding / brand activation | 200+ | $2,500 – $5,000+ |
| Multi-day conference / trade show | varies | $2,500 – $6,000+/day |
At a 100-guest event, a typical all-inclusive package works out to roughly $5–$11 per guest. If you’ve quoted $800 for 100 people at a 2-hour event, you’re at $8/guest — reasonable. If you’ve quoted $400, you’re at $4/guest — you will lose money once milk, cups, fuel, and labor are accounted for.
Knowing your own numbers: cost of goods and cost to show up
You cannot price confidently if you don’t know what it costs you to walk out the door. Here is how to build that number.
Per-drink cost of goods (COGS)
For a typical espresso drink with milk, your direct cost lands between $0.75 and $1.50 depending on bean price, milk choice, and cup quality. Alt-milks (oat in particular) run 2–3x the cost of dairy. Break it down:
- Beans: ~$0.25–$0.45 per double shot at wholesale specialty bean pricing ($12–$20/lb)
- Milk: ~$0.20–$0.40 dairy for a 12oz drink; $0.60–$1.10 for oat or almond
- Cup + lid + sleeve: ~$0.20–$0.45 (compostable runs higher)
- Syrup / flavoring: ~$0.05–$0.15 per pump
- Waste, spill, and drink-remakes buffer: add 10–15% on top
Most well-run carts target a COGS of 20–30 percent of drink revenue — meaning if your average drink cost is $1.00 all-in, your blended price needs to be $4–$5 for the numbers to work. At private events where you’re selling the package, not the drink, this math flips: you divide expected drinks into the package price and make sure that per-drink COGS still lands in your margin window.
Per-event cost to show up (fixed)
This is the number most new operators miss. Independent of how many drinks you make, every event costs you:
- Fuel (cart+tow or truck): $20–$80
- Labor — you and any help, INCLUDING the full 7–9 hour day, not just the service window, at $20–$35/hour blended: $150–$350
- Insurance allocation: $5–$25 per event if you amortize annual over your expected event count
- Equipment depreciation and maintenance: $15–$40 per event
- Permits, commissary, overhead allocation: $10–$30
A realistic floor for “just showed up and pulled one latte” is $250–$500 out of pocket before you’ve made a dollar. This is why 2-hour minimums and 25-guest minimums exist. They’re not greed. They’re survival.
A working pricing formula
Here is a formula that will get you in the right ballpark for a host-paid, all-inclusive event. It’s designed to be honest with yourself, not clever.
- Base$200–$400
- + Labor (hours × rate × staff)$175–$280 solo
- + COGS (drinks × per-drink cost)varies
- + Travel (beyond free radius)$1–$2/mi or banded
- + Add-ons (cups, signage, etc.)varies
- × Margin factor1.25 – 1.40
- = Quote→ this is the number
Base covers the fact that you showed up. Absorbs prep, setup, breakdown, insurance, and a portion of overhead.
Labor is your total hours × your blended hourly rate × number of staff. For a solo 2-hour service with full prep/travel/breakdown, that’s typically 7–8 hours × $25–$35/hr = $175–$280. Double it if you bring a second barista.
COGS is expected drinks × per-drink all-in cost. Use the consumption rules below to estimate drinks.
Margin is the 1.25–1.40 multiplier on your subtotal. If the result feels high, it probably isn’t — new operators systematically undershoot, then burn out inside 18 months.
Estimating how many drinks you’ll actually serve
This matters for both package sizing and COGS math. Use these as your starting numbers, then adjust based on the specifics.
| Service length | Drinks per guest (baseline) |
|---|---|
| Up to 2 hours | 1.0 |
| 2–4 hours | 1.3 – 1.5 |
| 4–6 hours | 1.5 – 1.8 |
| All-day (6+ hours) | 2.0 – 2.5 |
Adjust up or down based on these factors:
- Morning events (before 11am): +20–30% — coffee is the main event
- Afternoon and evening: baseline
- Late-night wedding reception: −10% (some guests drinking alcohol only)
- Cold weather / outdoor: +15%
- Hot weather outdoor: +10% but shift 50%+ to iced drinks — adjust your ice and milk prep
- Corporate events: ~60–70% espresso drinks, 15–25% tea/chai/matcha, 10–20% hot chocolate or non-coffee
- Weddings: slightly lower total consumption per guest but more variety requested
Try it: pricing calculator
You just learned the formula and the drink-volume rules. Plug in your event here and see a suggested range — built on exactly the framework above. All numbers are editable in the “Your costs” panel.
Event Pricing Estimator
Your costs (advanced)
- Base fee—
- + Labor—
- + COGS—
- + Travel—
- + Generator—
- + Add-ons—
- × Margin × Market × Day—
- = Target quote—
This is a ballpark based on the formula in this guide. GrindKit tunes pricing to your actual costs and market history — and generates a client-ready quote email in one tap.
Get GrindKit →Five worked scenarios
These are real pricing walkthroughs. Each shows the quote, the math behind it, and the reasoning. Numbers reflect 2026 market conditions in a secondary metro. Adjust up 25–35% for major urban markets.
Scenario 1 — Intimate backyard wedding, 75 guests, 2hr late-night$950
Couple wants a cocktail-through-cake coffee moment during a summer reception. Outdoor setup with access to a regular outlet. Guest count: 75. Service 9pm–11pm.
- Base$300
- Labor (solo barista, 8 hrs × $30)$240
- COGS (75 × 1.1 drinks × $1.05)~$87
- Travel (18 miles, included)$0
- Subtotal × 1.30 margin$815
- Quote (weekend + late-hour premium)$950
What’s included: 2 hours made-to-order espresso service, full menu, whole milk + oat milk, 3 syrups, compostable cups, setup and breakdown, 18-mile travel. Tip jar with couple’s permission.
Scenario 2 — Corporate lobby morning activation, 200 employees, 3hr$1,850
Employee appreciation event at a downtown office tower. Client covers all drinks. Guests trickle in from 7am–10am; no queue ever larger than 10 but steady.
- Base (urban, longer setup)$400
- Labor (2 baristas, 9 hrs each × $30)$540
- COGS (200 × 1.4 × $1.15)~$322
- Branded cups add-on$150
- Subtotal × 1.30 margin$1,836
- Quote$1,850
Note: this is a strong event to offer as a recurring monthly program. Pitch a 10% discount for booking three dates at once.
Scenario 3 — Small baby shower, 30 guests, 2hr$625
Sunday afternoon shower at a private home, 12 miles away. Host wants a fun, photo-friendly moment — signature latte named after the baby’s name.
- Base$275
- Labor (solo, 7 hrs × $28)$196
- COGS (30 × 1.2 × $1.10)$40
- Subtotal × 1.25 margin$639
- Package$575
- + Signature drink development$50
- Quote$625
Important: don’t let the small guest count make you undercut your minimum. 30 guests doesn’t cost meaningfully less to serve than 60 — your fixed costs are the same. Hold your 2-hour minimum firmly.
Scenario 4 — Trade show booth, 2 days, guest-paid vendor model$2,400/day
A coffee roaster wants you parked next to their booth at a regional food show. They want free coffee to drive booth traffic. 9am–5pm each day.
Two-option quote: $2,400/day vendor fee with unlimited drink service cap at 350/day, OR $1,500/day setup + $5/drink beyond 250.
This scenario shows the hybrid option in action: the client wants predictable cost, but you need to protect against a blockbuster day where you make 600 drinks. Offer both structures and let them pick.
- COGS (350 × $1.15)$400
- Labor (2 baristas × 11 hrs × $30)$660
- Base$400
- Subtotal × 1.35 × 1.2 multi-day$2,365
- Day rate$2,400
Multi-day discount of 10% offered if booking both days.
Scenario 5 — 200-guest wedding, 4hr, full reception coffee service$2,950
Outdoor wedding at a farm 45 miles from your base. Full bar-style coffee service running through cocktail hour and reception. No power access at the coffee cart location.
- Base$400
- Labor (2 baristas, 10 hrs × $32)$640
- COGS (200 × 1.6 × $1.15)$368
- Travel (45 mi, outside free radius)$150
- Generator rental pass-through$200
- Subtotal × 1.35 margin$2,373
- Quote (weekend + distance + outdoor)$2,950
Quick-reference pricing grid
Tape this to your wall. These are your gut-check numbers for a 2-hour, all-inclusive, host-paid, standard menu, within your free travel radius, weekday, secondary-metro market. Everything is a starting point for negotiation up, never down.
| Guests | Baristas | Floor | Target | Ceiling |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 25 | 1 | $450 | $550 | $700 |
| 50 | 1 | $550 | $700 | $900 |
| 75 | 1 | $650 | $825 | $1,050 |
| 100 | 1–2 | $800 | $950 | $1,250 |
| 150 | 2 | $1,100 | $1,350 | $1,700 |
| 200 | 2 | $1,500 | $1,800 | $2,400 |
| 300 | 2–3 | $2,100 | $2,600 | $3,500 |
Modifier grid — adjust target price by these
| Factor | Multiplier or add |
|---|---|
| Saturday / peak wedding season (May–Oct) | × 1.15 to × 1.25 |
| Sunday | × 1.10 |
| Evening (after 7pm) | × 1.10 |
| Major urban market (NYC, SF, LA, Boston, Seattle) | × 1.25 to × 1.40 |
| Outside free travel radius | + $2/mi round-trip, or banded flat fee |
| No on-site power | + $150 to $300 generator pass-through |
| 3-hour service instead of 2 | + $175 to $275 |
| Add second barista | + $250 to $400 |
| Custom branded cups | + $100 to $300 |
| Cart wrap / full branding | + $400 to $1,200 |
| Custom signature drink development | + $50 to $150 |
| Premium alt-milk beyond standard oat | + $25 to $75 |
| Pastry add-on (per dozen) | + $45 to $90 |
Blank templates
Template 1 — Intake form for inbound requests
Send this to every lead before quoting. It saves you six emails and prevents you from quoting blind. You can build it as a web form or just paste into an email reply.
- Event date and requested service window (start and end times):
- Event type (wedding / corporate / birthday / shower / conference / activation / other):
- Expected guest count:
- Venue name and full address:
- Indoor or outdoor? Covered if outdoor?
- Is there access to a standard 110V outlet within 25 ft of the cart location?
- Is there parking / loading access for a cart or trailer?
- Are you looking for host-paid (unlimited for guests), guest-paid, or a hybrid?
- What drinks do you want on the menu? Any special requests?
- Any alt-milk or allergen requirements you’re aware of?
- Any branding, signage, or customization you want included?
- What’s your budget range — even a ballpark helps us build the right package:
- How did you hear about us?
Template 2 — Quote email (fill-in-the-blanks)
Hi [NAME],
Thanks so much for reaching out about [EVENT TYPE] on [DATE] — it sounds like a wonderful day and we’d love to be part of it.
Based on what you shared — [GUEST COUNT] guests, [SERVICE WINDOW] of service, at [VENUE] — here is a custom package built for your event:
[PACKAGE NAME]: $[TOTAL]
Includes:
- [DURATION] of made-to-order espresso service
- [NUMBER] professional barista(s)
- Full menu: espresso, americano, cappuccino, latte, mocha, chai, hot chocolate, matcha, tea (decaf available)
- Specialty-grade beans, freshly roasted
- Whole milk + oat milk included; additional alt-milk available on request
- House syrups: vanilla, caramel, hazelnut (additional flavors available)
- All cups, lids, napkins, and serving supplies
- Complete setup and breakdown
- Travel within [X] miles of [CITY]
- $2M general liability insurance — COI provided to your venue on request
Optional add-ons:
- Branded cups with your [LOGO/MONOGRAM]: + $[AMOUNT]
- Signature drink development with custom menu card: + $[AMOUNT]
- Extra hour of service: + $[AMOUNT]
- Pastry add-on: + $[AMOUNT]
To reserve your date, we ask for a 30% non-refundable retainer with the signed agreement. The balance is due 14 days before the event. We hold dates on a first-come basis — once another couple/client confirms your date, it’s gone, so reply back if you’d like us to hold yours for 48 hours while you decide.
Happy to jump on a 15-minute call if it’s easier to talk through. Looking forward to hearing from you.
[YOUR NAME] — [BUSINESS]
Template 3 — Contract essentials checklist
Not legal advice; have a local attorney review. Every event contract should clearly state each of the following. This is what, not legal language — your attorney will draft the actual terms.
- Parties: legal name of you/your business and legal name of the client.
- Event details: date, service window, venue name and address.
- Services included: exact package contents, menu, number of staff.
- Total price, itemized: package, add-ons, taxes if applicable.
- Retainer/deposit: amount, due date, refundability (standard: 25–50% non-refundable).
- Balance due date: typically 14 days before event.
- Cancellation policy: what happens if client cancels 60/30/14/7 days out. Retainer is always non-refundable; tiered penalties up to 100% inside 14 days.
- Rescheduling policy: one reschedule allowed at no charge if requested 30+ days out and subject to availability.
- Force majeure: weather, natural disaster, health emergency — what happens.
- Final guest count deadline: typically 10 days before event; additional guests above that count billed at a stated per-guest rate.
- Overage rules: what happens if service runs long ($X per additional hour, minimum 1-hour increments).
- Venue requirements: power access, setup space (5ft × 5ft minimum per cart), parking, water if applicable.
- Insurance and liability: you carry $1M/$2M general liability; the client is responsible for damage caused by guests to your equipment; you’re not liable for allergic reactions where allergen was disclosed on menu.
- Gratuity: your policy on tip jars and whether gratuity is added to invoice.
- Payment methods accepted and any processing fees.
- Signatures, date.
Insurance, deposits, and policies
Insurance
Most venues require you carry a minimum of $1M per occurrence / $2M aggregate general liability. Many high-end venues also require them to be named as an additional insured on your policy. You should also carry commercial auto coverage on your tow vehicle and inland marine coverage on your equipment if your business-owner policy doesn’t already include it. Annual cost for a single-vendor mobile coffee operation in most states lands in the $600–$1,800/year range for GL alone. Amortized over 30–60 events per year, that’s $10–$60 per event — always build this into your base.
Deposits and cancellations
Industry norm is a 30–50% non-refundable retainer to hold the date, with balance due 1–2 weeks before the event. Whatever you choose, write it down in your contract and enforce it the first time you’re tested — operators who waive terms to be nice end up eating cancellation losses that their business can’t absorb.
Typical cancellation tiers:
- More than 60 days before event: lose retainer only
- 30–60 days: 50% of total due
- 14–30 days: 75% of total due
- Less than 14 days: 100% of total due
Tipping policy
Decide and communicate this upfront. Options: (a) tip jar on the cart, kept by the barista; (b) no tip jar, optional gratuity added to invoice and distributed among team; (c) no tipping, built into package price with baristas paid above industry standard. All three are legitimate. What you must not do is have ambiguity — weddings and corporate events in particular want clarity on whether tipping is expected of guests.
Weather and outdoor events
Decide your weather policy in advance and put it in the contract. Most operators require a covered setup (tent, overhang, or backup indoor space) and reserve the right to reschedule or move indoors in case of thunderstorms, sustained wind, or temperatures below about 40°F. The client arranges the covered space; you arrange the rain plan.
Ten mistakes new operators make
- Quoting based on how much drinks cost you. Wrong anchor. Quote based on the total cost of your day — prep through breakdown — plus margin.
- Forgetting the 2-hour minimum. A 45-minute event for 25 people still requires 7 hours of your day.
- Including travel for free to “win” the gig. Fine inside your defined radius, a mistake outside it. A 90-minute each-way drive eats a full day.
- Not using a contract. “They seemed nice” is how you end up with a no-show client and a freezer full of milk.
- Skipping the deposit. No deposit, no date hold. Full stop.
- Agreeing to guest-count guesses without a minimum. Lock in a minimum billable guest count 10 days out and charge overage.
- Not checking power before arrival. “There are outlets” often means a 15-amp circuit 80 feet from your cart. Confirm circuit amperage and distance in writing.
- Forgetting to estimate drinks honestly. Morning corporate = lots of drinks. Underestimating means running out of milk by the second hour.
- Leaving money on the table with add-ons. Branded cups, signature drinks, pastries — pure margin enhancers. Offer them in every quote.
- Undercharging the first year and then resenting the work. If your math says $850 and it’s a Saturday wedding an hour away, quote $850 — even if it feels high. It isn’t.
The one-sentence version
Price your full day — not your drinks — plus a margin you can live on, with packages that make “yes” easy and add-ons that make “yes, and” easy too.
Good luck out there. The mobile coffee world needs more operators who know their numbers, and every event you quote confidently is practice for the next, bigger one.
Price faster. Quote smarter.
GrindKit’s AI pricing engine uses these exact frameworks to generate quotes in seconds — tuned to your market, your costs, and your event type. Built by a mobile coffee operator.
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