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14.04.2026
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7
Minuten Lesedauer
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von
Johannes Manske, CEO

Catering Minimum Orders: What Every Company Should Know

A catering minimum order covers the caterer's fixed costs — transport, prep, staff, equipment. Typical thresholds range from €150 (lunchbox delivery) to €1,500+ (plated dinner with service) and hit teams under 30 people hardest. The real minimum is often noticeably higher than the listed one, because delivery fees, equipment hire, and service surcharges stack on top. You can bring it down by bundling orders, choosing drop-off over full service, committing to a regular schedule, or comparing multiple caterers on a marketplace.

If you've ever ordered catering for a small team, you've run into the minimum order. For groups of 10 to 25 people, that threshold can turn a reasonable per-head price into a serious budget problem. This guide breaks down where minimums come from, what they typically look like, and how to calculate — and lower — the real number.

What you'll learn:

  • Typical order minimums by catering format
  • How to calculate the real minimum including delivery and equipment
  • 7 proven ways to bring the minimum down
  • A checklist for comparing quotes

1. What is a catering minimum order?

A minimum order is the lowest amount a caterer will accept for a booking. It protects the caterer from taking on jobs that would lose money once all fixed costs are accounted for.

You'll also see this called a minimum order value, minimum spend, or small-order threshold — they all mean the same thing.

2. Why caterers have order minimums

Every job has fixed costs, regardless of headcount. A caterer delivering lunchboxes for 8 people has roughly the same transport and prep costs as one delivering for 40.

Typical fixed-cost blocks (ballpark figures)

  • Ingredients and base supplies: approx. €80 to €150
  • Kitchen prep (staff time): approx. €120 to €250
  • Transport (vehicle, driver, fuel): approx. €60 to €180
  • On-site service (min. 1 person): approx. €150 to €300
  • Equipment and return logistics: approx. €40 to €100

Varies by city, travel distance, and staffing requirements.

Depending on the setup, these fixed costs can easily run into several hundred euros. The minimum order is there to cover them.

3. Typical order minimums by format

Minimums vary a lot depending on the catering format:

  • Finger food: €250 to €500, approx. 10–15 people, €15–€35 per person
  • Lunchboxes / individual portions: €150 to €400, approx. 8–15 people, €12–€28 per person
  • Buffet (hot/cold): €500 to €1,200, approx. 20–30 people, €25–€45 per person
  • Plated menu (with service): €800 to €1,500, approx. 20–40 people, €45–€90 per person
  • BBQ / grill catering: €600 to €1,000, approx. 25–40 people, €30–€50 per person
  • Drinks package: €200 to €600, approx. 15–30 people, €12–€25 per person

In major cities like Berlin and Munich, expect figures closer to the upper end — depending on the caterer and travel distance.

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    4. What drives the minimum order up?

    Five factors determine where a caterer's threshold lands:

    • Distance: The farther the venue from the caterer's kitchen, the higher the logistics cost — and the higher the minimum.
    • Drop-off vs. full service: Drop-off is usually much cheaper because you're not paying for wait staff.
    • Equipment needs: Chafing dishes, crockery, and refrigeration units all push the threshold up.
    • Seasonality: During the holiday season and summer, minimums tend to rise because capacity is tight.
    • Pricing structure: Fixed-price packages bake the minimum in. Modular quotes look more flexible, but often hide the minimum in the terms and conditions.

    5. Seven ways to bring the minimum down

    Compare quotes

    If you only ask one caterer, you're stuck with their terms. On a catering marketplace, you can instantly see which caterers fit your team size and budget.

    Choose drop-off over full service

    If you can skip the wait staff, go with delivery-only catering. Your team handles setup and serving — the minimum drops significantly.

    Combine orders across teams

    If three departments order separately, you're paying three minimums. One combined order for 45 people instead of 3 × 15 solves the problem immediately.

    Negotiate on recurring orders

    If you order weekly or multiple times a week, many caterers will reduce or waive the minimum entirely. If you're building a regular workplace catering programme, this is your strongest lever.

    Switch to a lighter format

    If your budget doesn't stretch to a buffet, consider finger food or lunchboxes. Simpler formats mean lower thresholds.

    Look for local caterers

    Once you know the venue, check for caterers nearby. Shorter delivery distance means a lower minimum.

    Use a marketplace instead of one-off enquiries

    More caterers in one view means: more matching minimums, drop-off options visible at a glance, and transparent budget matching.

    6. The maths: when does the minimum get unfair?

    The minimum hits small teams hardest. Two scenarios:

    Scenario A: 12 people, finger food, €400 minimum

    Regular price per person: €22. Total: €264. The minimum kicks in. Instead of €22 per head, you're effectively paying €33.33 — because the minimum order dominates the bill. For small teams, it's not the portion price that's the problem. It's how the fixed costs get spread.

    Scenario B: 40 people, buffet, €800 minimum

    Regular price per person: €32. Total: €1,280. The minimum is irrelevant. Per-head cost stays at €32.

    The tipping point is usually around 25 to 35 people. Below that, it pays to actively look for caterers with a lower threshold or drop-off options.

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    7. Hidden costs that push the real minimum higher

    The listed minimum order is often not the real one. These charges frequently get added on top:

    • Delivery fee: €60 to €180, often invoiced separately.
    • Equipment hire: €50 to €250 for crockery, standing tables, warming trays.
    • Service surcharge: €25 to €45 per hour per staff member.
    • Off-hours surcharge: 15–30% extra for weekends or evening events.
    • Cancellation fee: Often the full minimum (or a percentage of it) is charged if you cancel.

    To find the real minimum, add these up. More on this: hidden catering costs.

    8. Checklist: reviewing order minimums in a quote

    ☑ Is the minimum before or after tax?

    ☑ Are delivery, equipment, and service included?

    ☑ Does the minimum apply per order or per month (for ongoing contracts)?

    ☑ Is there a reduced minimum for drop-off?

    ☑ What's the small-order surcharge if you fall below the minimum?

    ☑ Are there discounts for weekly orders?

    ☑ What happens if you cancel?

    9. FAQ

    What's a typical catering minimum order?

    For corporate catering, it usually falls between €250 and €1,500. The exact number depends on the format, location, and level of service. Finger food and lunchboxes start lower; plated dinners are significantly higher.

    Can you get catering with no minimum order?

    Some caterers skip the minimum, especially for drop-off delivery or long-term contracts with regular bookings. On a catering marketplace, you can easily find and compare them.

    How do you get around a catering minimum order?

    Combine orders across departments, choose drop-off instead of full service, negotiate on recurring bookings, or use a marketplace to find caterers with a lower threshold.

    What happens if my order is below the minimum?

    Either the caterer declines, or they add a small-order surcharge — typically €30 to €80 — to make up the difference.

    What's the minimum order for finger food catering?

    Usually between €250 and €500, which covers around 10 to 15 people. For delivery-only without service staff, it can be lower.

    Do minimums drop for recurring orders?

    Often, yes. Many caterers reduce or waive the minimum for weekly bookings, because the predictable volume offsets the lower per-order revenue.

    What does this mean for your next order?

    • 10–15 people: Go with lunchboxes or drop-off finger food. Combine orders across departments. Use a marketplace to find caterers with a low threshold.
    • 20–40 people: A buffet makes sense, and the minimum is usually not an issue. Focus on hidden add-on costs instead.
    • 40+ people: The minimum order barely matters. At this size, service quality, logistics, and hidden cost line items are what determine the final price.

    Not sure if your budget is realistic? A quick comparison across multiple caterers helps. Find the right caterer for any team size on the eGora marketplace.

    Get an individual menu suggestion today.

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