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Brew Lab

Coffee for a Crowd Calculator

Grounds, water and urn batches for 20, 50 or 100 guests — built on an hour-by-hour demand model, with a decaf allowance so nobody goes without.

Guests 50people
Event length 2 hrs
Coffee-drinker share 60%
Serving size
Urn size 10L
Peak hour: 30 cups in the first hour

Urn batches — 1 of 10 L

Batch 1

7.98 L

499 g grounds

45 cups

cups needed

499 g

ground coffee

7.98 L

brew water

1 batch

of your 10 L urn

Decaf allowance

9 decaf  /  36 regular

Based on the ~20% decaf rule of thumb for a mixed crowd.

Stock up once, brew for everyone — DABOV whole bean coffee in bulk covers the whole event.

45 cups
Urn batches 1

How the math works

Four formulas run this whole instrument. No hidden fudge factors:

Cups needed

cups = guests × share × (1 + 0.5 × (hours − 1))

Brew water

water = cups × serving size

Ground coffee

coffee = water ÷ 16

Urn batches

batches = ceil(water ÷ urn size)

The demand model is a "first-hour peak": everyone who wants coffee tends to want it in the first hour of an event — arriving guests, the start of a meeting — while every hour after that only about half the coffee-drinking cohort refills. That’s why hour 1 of the pictogram above is always the tallest row, and why a 4-hour event doesn’t need 4× the coffee of a 1-hour one, just the peak plus three half-rate top-ups. On top of the total, about 20% of a mixed crowd wants decaf — a standard catering rule of thumb — so the calculator carves that share out into its own count rather than leaving you to guess at the door.

Worked examples

20 guests — 2 hrs, 6 oz cups

Cups
18
Water
3.19 L
Grounds
200 g
Urn batches
1
Decaf
4 cups

50 guests — 2 hrs, 6 oz cups

Cups
45
Water
7.98 L
Grounds
499 g
Urn batches
1
Decaf
9 cups

100 guests — 2 hrs, 6 oz cups

Cups
90
Water
15.97 L
Grounds
1.00 kg
Urn batches
2
Decaf
18 cups

How much coffee per person, really

The honest answer is "it depends on who's in the room and when," which is exactly why a flat per-person number gets events either badly short or wastefully over-brewed. A breakfast meeting sees 70–80% of attendees want coffee; an evening reception might see 30–40%. This calculator defaults to a middle-of-the-road 60% coffee-drinker share, which you can dial up or down for your actual crowd — a room full of software engineers at 9am skews high, a wedding cocktail hour skews low.

The other variable that flat "1 cup per person" rules miss entirely is event length. A one-hour coffee break and a six-hour conference don’t need the same total, but they also don’t scale linearly — most of the demand lands in the first hour as people arrive and want their first cup, and only about half that rate keeps coming as refills each hour after. That’s the "first-hour peak" model behind the pictogram above: hour 1 is always the tallest bar, and every additional hour adds a smaller, steady trickle rather than a second full peak.

Picking the right urn size

Commercial urns are conventionally labeled in "cups," but that number assumes a 5 oz serving from decades-old catering convention — nobody actually drinks from a 5 oz cup anymore. A "30-cup" urn holds about 4.5 L, a "55-cup" urn about 8.3 L, and a "100-cup" urn about 15 L. Translate those into real 6–8 oz servings and you get noticeably fewer actual cups than the label implies: the "30-cup" urn realistically serves 18–22 people their one real cup, not 30.

Urn labelReal litersReal 6 oz servings
30-cup~4.5 L~25
55-cup~8.3 L~47
100-cup~15 L~85

Because this calculator works in real liters and real serving sizes rather than the label's marketing number, plug in your urn's actual capacity above and the batch count (and the batch "tickets" in the instrument) already account for the gap — no separate mental conversion needed.

Planning for decaf drinkers

Skipping decaf entirely disappoints a real, predictable slice of any crowd — pregnant guests, anyone caffeine-sensitive, and simply people who want a warm cup without the jolt at an evening event. The catering rule of thumb this calculator uses is that roughly 20% of a mixed crowd wants decaf, which is enough to justify its own small urn or carafe without over-brewing a second full batch nobody finishes. Keep decaf and regular in separate vessels rather than trying to split one urn after the fact — once mixed, there's no way to un-caffeinate a cup, and guests relying on the decaf label are trusting it completely.

Timing: brew close to serving, not hours ahead

Coffee sitting on a warmer or inside an urn doesn't just cool — it keeps cooking. Slow evaporation concentrates what's left in the pot, and prolonged heat breaks down the same aromatic compounds that make a fresh cup taste bright, which is the entire reason "urn coffee" earned its reputation for tasting flat and bitter even when the beans and ratio going in were fine. The fix isn't a better urn — it's timing: brew within 30–45 minutes of when guests will actually drink it, and for anything longer than a 2-hour event, plan a fresh batch partway through instead of trying to stretch one urn's worth across the whole afternoon. The hour-by-hour breakdown in the instrument above is built for exactly this planning: it tells you how many fresh cups each hour of your event actually needs, so you can time a second brew instead of guessing.

Frequently asked questions

How much coffee do I need for 50 people?
For a typical 2-hour event with the standard 60% coffee-drinker share and 6 oz servings, 50 guests need about 45 cups — roughly 8.0 liters of brew water and 499 g of ground coffee at a 1:16 ratio, which comes to 1 batch of a standard 10 L urn. Longer events or an all-day meeting push the number up, since every extra hour adds a half-rate refill cohort on top of the first-hour peak.
How much coffee do I need for 100 people?
At the same defaults, 100 guests need about 90 cups — around 16.0 liters of water and 1.00 kg of ground coffee, split across 2 batches of a 10 L urn. Doubling the guest list roughly doubles every number in this calculator, since the demand model scales linearly with headcount — use the slider above to plug in your own guest count, event length and urn size.
How much coffee do I need for 20 people?
A small gathering of 20 people needs about 18 cups at the standard defaults — only 3.19 liters of water and 200 g of grounds, comfortably inside a single small urn or even a large drip brewer. For groups this size, a 3–5 L urn or two full pots of drip coffee usually covers it without needing a second batch.
How many cups does a coffee urn make?
Coffee urns are conventionally sized in "cups" that assume a 5 oz serving, not the 6–8 oz cups most people actually drink from — so a "30-cup" urn (about 4.5 L) really serves closer to 18–22 real servings, a "55-cup" urn (about 8.3 L) serves 35–40, and a "100-cup" urn (about 15 L) serves 65–75. This calculator works entirely in real liters and real serving sizes, so plug in your urn’s actual liter capacity above and the batch count already accounts for the gap between the marketing number on the box and what people actually drink.
How much decaf coffee should I make for a crowd?
A common catering rule of thumb is that about 20% of a mixed crowd wants decaf — enough that skipping it disappoints a real slice of guests, but not so much that you're brewing two full-size urns. For the default 50-guest example that's 9 decaf cups against 36 regular. Brew decaf in its own smaller urn or carafe rather than diluting a shared batch — once caffeinated and decaf coffee mix, there's no way to separate them back out, and guests who specifically need decaf (pregnancy, caffeine sensitivity, an evening event) are trusting the label completely.
How far in advance should I brew coffee for a party or event?
Brew as close to serving as your setup allows — ideally within 30–45 minutes. Coffee held on a warmer or in an urn keeps cooking: it slowly evaporates, concentrates and turns bitter, which is why "urn coffee" has a reputation for tasting burnt even when the beans and ratio were fine going in. For an event longer than about 2 hours, plan a fresh batch partway through rather than trying to stretch one urn’s worth of coffee — the per-hour breakdown above is built for exactly this: it tells you how many fresh cups each hour of your event actually needs.