How Much Water Per Person for a Party? Calculator + Complete Guide
The short answer: plan for 8 oz of water per person per hour for an indoor party β that’s about 1.5 standard water bottles (16.9 oz) per person for a 3-hour event. For outdoor parties in summer heat, double that amount. Use the calculator below to get total gallons, bottles to buy, cases needed, ice, and cost for your specific event.
π§ Party Water Calculator
Party Water Calculator
Gallons • Bottles • Cases • Ice • Cost Estimate
| Guests | Total water | Bottles (16.9 oz) | Cases (24-pack) |
|---|
How Much Water Per Person for a Party?
Water needs at a party depend on three things: how long the event runs, how hot it is, and how active guests will be. The base rule of 8 oz per hour comes from standard catering guidelines β but that assumes a comfortable indoor temperature and guests who are mostly sitting. Here’s how it scales:
| Setting | Per person per hour | Per person (3 hrs) | Per person (5 hrs) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Indoor / air conditioned | 8 oz | 1.5 bottles | 2.5 bottles |
| Mild outdoors | 10 oz | 2 bottles | 3 bottles |
| Hot day (80F+) | 12 oz | 2.5 bottles | 4 bottles |
| Very hot (90F+) | 16 oz | 3 bottles | 5 bottles |
| Active event (sports, kids) | 16-20 oz | 3-4 bottles | 5-6 bottles |
Per CDC heat stress guidelines, people in hot conditions should drink about 8 oz of water every 15-20 minutes β which works out to roughly 24-32 oz per hour. For outdoor summer parties this is a safety guideline, not just a hospitality one.

How Many Cases of Water for a Party?
One standard 24-pack case of 16.9 oz water bottles contains about 3 gallons of water total. Here’s how many cases you need based on party size for a standard 3-hour event:
| Guests | Indoor (3 hrs) | Hot outdoor (3 hrs) | Cases (24-pack) | Est. cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 20 people | 30 bottles | 60 bottles | 2-3 cases | $8-18 |
| 30 people | 45 bottles | 90 bottles | 2-4 cases | $12-24 |
| 50 people | 75 bottles | 150 bottles | 4-7 cases | $20-42 |
| 75 people | 112 bottles | 225 bottles | 5-10 cases | $30-60 |
| 100 people | 150 bottles | 300 bottles | 7-13 cases | $42-78 |
Costco and Sam’s Club sell 40-pack cases of 16.9 oz water bottles which are significantly cheaper per bottle than standard 24-packs. For parties of 30 or more, warehouse stores are the obvious choice β always buy at least one case more than you calculate. Running out of water at a summer party is a serious problem.
How Much Ice Do You Need for a Party?
Plan for 1.5 lbs of ice per person for a standard 3-hour indoor party. For outdoor events in summer heat, plan 2-3 lbs per person. Ice serves two purposes β keeping drinks cold in coolers and keeping food safe. Here’s the quick guide:
| Guests | Indoor party | Outdoor (warm) | Outdoor (hot 90F+) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 20 people | 25-30 lbs | 40-50 lbs | 60-80 lbs |
| 30 people | 40-45 lbs | 60-75 lbs | 90-120 lbs |
| 50 people | 60-75 lbs | 100-125 lbs | 150-200 lbs |
Freeze half your water bottles the night before β they stay cold for 4-6 hours and act as free ice blocks in coolers. A 10 lb bag of ice from a gas station or grocery store costs $2-4. For large outdoor events, order ice delivery through a restaurant supply or party supply store for better pricing on large quantities.

Water Safety at Hot Weather Outdoor Parties
The Mayo Clinic recommends that adults drink about 15.5 cups (124 oz) of water daily from all sources. At an outdoor summer party, guests can easily need 32-48 oz of water in just a few hours of activity.
- Set up shaded water stations: Water in direct sun warms quickly and guests avoid it β shade the cooler and set it up near where people congregate
- Watch children and elderly guests: Both groups dehydrate faster than healthy adults and may not recognize thirst signals β offer water proactively
- Consider sports drinks for active events: For kids parties with running games or adult sports events lasting over 2 hours, electrolyte drinks help replace what sweat removes
- Never let the cooler run dry: Assign one person specifically to monitor and refill the water supply throughout the event
More party planning calculators:
Trusted external resources:
Frequently Asked Questions
The standard catering rule is 8 oz of water per person per hour for an indoor, light-activity event. Outdoor events in warm weather need significantly more. Here’s the breakdown:
| Setting | Per person per hour | For 3 hours |
|---|---|---|
| Indoor / cool | 8 oz | 24 oz (1.5 bottles) |
| Mild outdoors | 10 oz | 30 oz (2 bottles) |
| Hot day (80F+) | 12 oz | 36 oz (2.5 bottles) |
| Very hot (90F+) | 16 oz | 48 oz (3 bottles) |
Per CDC heat stress guidelines, workers and people in hot conditions should drink about 8 oz of water every 15-20 minutes of activity β roughly 24 oz per hour in extreme heat.
For 20 people at a 3-hour indoor party, plan for about 30 bottles (16.9 oz) β that’s 1-2 cases of 24-packs. For an outdoor summer party, increase to 45-60 bottles. Always have at least one extra case as backup β running out of water at a party is the one mistake guests notice immediately.
For 50 people at a 3-hour indoor party, plan for about 75 bottles (16.9 oz) β roughly 3-4 cases of 24-packs. For an outdoor summer event in hot weather, increase to 110-150 bottles (5-7 cases). Costco sells 40-pack cases which are more economical for this quantity than standard 24-packs.
| Guests | Indoor (3 hrs) | Outdoor hot (3 hrs) | Cases (24-pack) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 20 people | 30 bottles | 60 bottles | 2-3 cases |
| 30 people | 45 bottles | 90 bottles | 2-4 cases |
| 50 people | 75 bottles | 150 bottles | 4-7 cases |
| 100 people | 150 bottles | 300 bottles | 7-13 cases |
One standard 24-pack case of 16.9 oz water bottles costs $3-6 at warehouse stores (Costco, Sam’s Club) and $5-8 at grocery stores. Always buy at warehouse stores for large parties β the savings are significant.
Plan for 1-1.5 lbs of ice per person for a standard 3-hour party β this covers keeping drinks cold in a cooler. For outdoor hot weather events, increase to 2-3 lbs per person. Ice melts faster in heat and you need more to keep drinks cold throughout the event.
| Guests | Indoor (3 hrs) | Hot outdoor (3 hrs) |
|---|---|---|
| 20 people | 25-30 lbs | 40-60 lbs |
| 30 people | 35-45 lbs | 60-90 lbs |
| 50 people | 60-75 lbs | 100-150 lbs |
According to the Mayo Clinic, the average adult needs about 15.5 cups (124 oz) of water per day total β but that includes water from all foods and beverages. At a party specifically:
- Resting indoors: 4-6 oz per hour
- Light activity (talking, eating): 6-8 oz per hour
- Moderate activity (dancing, walking): 10-12 oz per hour
- Hot weather (80F+): Increase all amounts by 50%
- Very hot (90F+): Double the base amount minimum
- Freeze bottles the night before: Frozen bottles stay cold for 4-6 hours and double as ice packs in coolers
- Use a ratio of 2:1 ice to drinks: Two pounds of ice per pound of drinks keeps everything cold
- Shade the cooler: A cooler in direct sun loses cold 3-4x faster than a shaded one
- Don’t drain the cooler: The cold water from melted ice actually keeps drinks colder than ice alone β don’t drain it
- Set up multiple stations: One large cooler at a distance from the action, one smaller accessible one for grabbing β this reduces how often the main cooler gets opened
