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Buffet vs À la Carte Comparison

For a given event enquiry, buffet and à la carte are different profit machines: buffet trades a lower per-head margin for predictable costs and less service labor, à la carte earns more per cover but staffs and wastes differently. Enter both scenarios for the same guest count and this calculator shows which format wins, and by how much.

Revenue & Front Office — Buffet vs À la Carte Comparison
In short

Compare formats on total profit for the same guest count: buffet profit = guests × (buffet price − buffet cost per head), à la carte profit = guests × (expected average check − cost per cover). The bigger number wins the enquiry.

Each format's profit = guests × (revenue per head − cost per head), with format-specific service cost added per side. Buffet food cost per head should include the over-production buffer buffets require.
Buffet revenue
₹89,900.00
Buffet profit
₹39,900.00
À la carte revenue
₹1,10,000.00
À la carte profit
₹50,000.00
Better format for this enquiry
À la carte
Profit difference
₹10,100.00

How to use the Buffet vs À la Carte Comparison

  1. Enter guest count.
  2. Enter buffet price per head.
  3. Enter buffet cost per head (incl. over-production).
  4. Enter buffet service & setup cost (total).
  5. Enter à la carte expected average check.
  6. Enter à la carte cost per cover.
  7. Enter à la carte service cost (total).
  8. Read your results instantly, updated live as you type.

Worked example

Guest count100
Buffet price per head899
Buffet cost per head (incl. over-production)380
Buffet service & setup cost (total)12000
À la carte expected average check1100
À la carte cost per cover400
À la carte service cost (total)20000
Buffet revenue
₹89,900.00
Buffet profit
₹39,900.00
À la carte revenue
₹1,10,000.00
À la carte profit
₹50,000.00
Better format for this enquiry
À la carte
Profit difference
₹10,100.00

Frequently asked questions

Why is buffet food cost per head higher than the sum of what guests eat?

Because a buffet must look full until the last guest is served, which forces 10-20% over-production, and consumption is uncapped: a wedding crowd eats differently from a corporate lunch. Cost your buffet per head from actual production quantities, not from a plated-portion equivalent.

When does à la carte beat buffet for events?

Smaller groups (under roughly 40-50 covers) where buffet over-production overwhelms the margin, high-check menus where the average order comfortably exceeds a viable buffet price, and events where service pacing matters more than speed. Above 100 covers, buffet economics usually take over.

What about a fixed plated menu instead of either?

A plated set menu is often the best of both: buffet-like cost predictability with à la carte perceived value. Model it here as the à la carte side with the set-menu price as the average check and a tighter cost per cover, since portioning is controlled.

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