You're planning a cookout. Burgers are on the menu.
Now comes the math: how many patties? How many pounds of beef? And does it change if you're also grilling hot dogs?
This guide has every answer. Exact patty counts by crowd size, a pounds-of-beef shopping guide, what changes the number, and a calculator that figures it all out for you.

Jump to:
- Quick Answer: How Many Burgers Per Person?
- Burger Calculator (Exact Amounts for Any Crowd Size)
- How Many Pounds of Beef to Buy
- Patty Sizes and What They Mean for Shopping
- The Beef Math: What You're Actually Buying
- What Changes the Number
- Which Ground Beef to Buy
- How to Form the Perfect Party Patty
- Grilling Burgers for a Crowd: What Actually Works
- The Burger Bar Setup
- Real-Life Example: Neighborhood BBQ for 30 Adults
- FAQ
- Final Thoughts
- Related
- Pin to Pinterest
Quick Answer: How Many Burgers Per Person?
2 patties per adult when burgers are the main event.
1.5 patties per adult when you're also grilling hot dogs.
1 patty per adult when there are several other proteins on the grill.
1 patty per child — always, every scenario.
| Situation | Adults | Kids (under 12) |
|---|---|---|
| Burgers as the main dish | 2 each | 1 each |
| Burgers + hot dogs | 1.5 each | 1 each |
| Many other proteins available | 1 each | 1 each |
| Teens and big eaters | 2–3 each | — |
That's the rule. Everything else is math.
For the full picture of feeding any crowd, the how much food for 25–100 guests guide covers everything on the table.
Burger Calculator (Exact Amounts for Any Crowd Size)
Use this easy burger calculator to figure out exactly how many burgers, buns, and toppings you need—whether you're feeding 10 guests or 100—so you don’t run out or overspend.
BURGER CALCULATOR
Get exact patty counts and pounds of ground beef for any crowd — every event type, every patty size.
| Who | Patties | Notes |
|---|
| Guests | Burgers only (2 pp) | Lbs beef | Burgers + dogs (1.5 pp) | Lbs beef |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10 | 20 patties | 5 lbs | 15 patties | 3.75 lbs |
| 20 | 40 patties | 10 lbs | 30 patties | 7.5 lbs |
| 25 | 50 patties | 12.5 lbs | 38 patties | 9.5 lbs |
| 30 | 60 patties | 15 lbs | 45 patties | 11.25 lbs |
| 50 | 100 patties | 25 lbs | 75 patties | 18.75 lbs |
| 75 | 150 patties | 37.5 lbs | 113 patties | 28.25 lbs |
| 100 | 200 patties | 50 lbs | 150 patties | 37.5 lbs |
How Many Pounds of Beef to Buy
This is where most hosts get confused. You planned in patties — now you have to shop in pounds.
Here's the formula: Patties × patty size in ounces ÷ 16 = pounds of raw ground beef to buy.
For the most common setup — quarter-pound (4 oz) patties, 80/20 beef, burgers as the main:
| Guests | Patties | Lbs of Ground Beef |
|---|---|---|
| 10 | 20 | 5 lbs |
| 20 | 40 | 10 lbs |
| 25 | 50 | 12.5 lbs |
| 30 | 60 | 15 lbs |
| 50 | 100 | 25 lbs |
| 75 | 150 | 37.5 lbs |
| 100 | 200 | 50 lbs |
Always round up to the nearest pound. Leftover raw beef freezes perfectly. Running short mid-party does not.
Patty Sizes and What They Mean for Shopping
Not all burgers are quarter-pounders. Here's how patty size changes how much beef you need.
| Patty Size | Ounces | Patties Per Pound |
|---|---|---|
| Slider | 2 oz | 8 per lb |
| Small / kids | 3 oz | 5 per lb |
| Quarter-pound (standard) | 4 oz | 4 per lb |
| Third-pound | 5.3 oz | 3 per lb |
| Large / pub-style | 6 oz | ~2.7 per lb |
| Half-pound | 8 oz | 2 per lb |
The standard quarter-pound is the sweet spot for most cookouts.
It fits a standard bun. It cooks in a predictable time. And most adults are satisfied with 2 of them as a meal — which keeps your math clean and your shopping list manageable.

The Beef Math: What You're Actually Buying
Here's the thing about ground beef that trips people up: the weight on the package is raw weight. By the time the burger hits the bun, it's lighter.
80/20 ground beef loses about 20–25% of its weight during grilling as fat renders out and moisture escapes. A 4 oz raw patty becomes about 3–3.2 oz cooked.
This is already accounted for in the math above. When you plan 2 patties per adult at 4 oz each, you're buying 8 oz of raw beef per person — and they're eating about 6–6.5 oz of cooked burger. That's a satisfying portion.
One more thing: 4 quarter-pound patties per pound of 80/20 beef. Clean, simple, easy to calculate at the store.
What Changes the Number
How many other foods are on the table
Heavy spread of sides — potato salad, coleslaw, chips, corn — and people eat fewer burgers.
Light sides only — and burgers disappear faster.
When you have 4+ substantial sides, you can confidently drop to 1.5 patties per adult even if burgers are the star. When it's just chips and a veggie tray, stick with 2.
The how much salad per person guide and the how many appetizers per person guide both have the crowd math for sides and starters.
Whether hot dogs are also on the grill
When both are available, most guests choose one. The typical split is about 70% burgers, 30% hot dogs.
Plan 1.5 burgers per adult and adjust your hot dog count accordingly. The how many hot dogs per person guide covers that side of the equation.
Who's in the crowd
Teenage boys: Plan 3 patties per teen, no exceptions. This is not an exaggeration.
Mixed family crowd with young kids: Kids under 6 often eat half a burger. Plan 1 and cut it in half at the table.
Health-conscious crowd / lunch event: Drop to 1.5 per adult without hesitation.
Evening BBQ vs. afternoon cookout: People eat more at evening events. If it's a 6 PM dinner cookout, lean toward the higher end of your range.
Burnt patties and surprise guests
Always add 10% to your total for reality. Burgers get burnt. Someone brings an uninvited plus-one. A couple of patties get dropped. Ten percent extra costs almost nothing and buys a lot of peace of mind.

Which Ground Beef to Buy
80/20 is the answer. Every time.
80/20 means 80% lean meat, 20% fat. That fat is exactly what makes a burger juicy on a hot grill. Pull it off and use a leaner blend and the burger dries out. Every burger expert, chef, and catering guide says the same thing.
The one exception: if you're doing a smash burger style where you press the patty hard on a flat surface, 80/20 works brilliantly. The fat renders into the crust and creates something remarkable.
What to buy at the store:
- Under 20 guests: buy fresh ground beef from the meat case
- 20–50 guests: look for 5 lb chubs or family packs — cheaper per pound
- 50+ guests: warehouse stores like Costco and Sam's Club sell 10 lb packages — this is the move
How far ahead can you buy it?
Fresh ground beef: 1–2 days ahead, kept cold.
Pre-formed raw patties: can be shaped 24 hours ahead and refrigerated between sheets of parchment paper. This is the best approach for large parties — you're not forming 60 patties while guests arrive.
How to Form the Perfect Party Patty
Three things that actually matter when making patties for a crowd.
Keep the beef cold. Warm beef gets sticky and tough. Shape patties while the meat is still fridge-cold.
Press a dimple in the center. Use your thumb to make a small indentation in the middle of each patty. As the burger cooks and contracts, it puffs up in the center. The dimple counteracts this and keeps the patty flat.
Don't overwork the meat. Handle each patty as little as possible. A gentle shape is all you need. Overworked beef becomes dense and tough.
Season right before grilling, not before. Salt pulls moisture out of the beef. Season the outside of each patty right as it hits the grill — not while forming them.
Grilling Burgers for a Crowd: What Actually Works
The pre-grill method is the only way for groups of 20+.
Grill all your burgers ahead of time. Transfer them to a covered aluminum pan with a splash of beef broth or water in the bottom. Hold in a 200°F oven or on the cooler side of the grill.
When it's time to eat, do a quick flash grill (1–2 minutes per side) to bring up the temperature and the char smell — guests still experience the grill but you're not cooking to order for 50 people.
Cook time for quarter-pound patties:
- Medium: 3–4 minutes per side, 140–145°F internal
- Well done: 4–5 minutes per side, 160°F internal (USDA requirement for ground beef — this is the safe temperature)
Don't press down on patties while cooking. Pressing squeezes the fat and juice out of the burger. That juice dripping onto the coals is what you wanted in the burger.
Cheeseburger timing: Add cheese after the first flip. Let it melt for the last 1–2 minutes of cooking. Cover the grill briefly to speed up the melt.
The Burger Bar Setup
A topping bar is what makes a backyard cookout feel intentional instead of just functional.
The essentials:
- Ketchup and yellow mustard (1 oz ketchup per person, 0.5 oz mustard)
- Mayo or special sauce
- Sliced cheese (1 slice per patty if you're doing a cheeseburger bar)
- Lettuce, tomato, sliced onion
- Pickles
The upgrades:
- Crispy bacon (pre-cooked ahead of time, held warm in foil)
- Sautéed mushrooms
- Avocado or guacamole
- Caramelized onions
- My Homemade Ranch Dressing as a burger sauce — it sounds simple but guests go back for it every time
Condiments for a crowd:
For 25 guests: 1–2 bottles ketchup, 1 bottle mustard, 1 jar mayo, 25 cheese slices.
For 50 guests: 3 bottles ketchup, 2 bottles mustard, 1–2 jars mayo, 50 cheese slices.
For 100 guests: 5 bottles ketchup, 4 bottles mustard, 2–3 jars mayo, 100 cheese slices.

Real-Life Example: Neighborhood BBQ for 30 Adults
Burgers and hot dogs both on the grill. Average appetites. Quarter-pound patties.
Burgers (1.5 per adult on a split menu):
- 30 adults × 1.5 = 45 patties
- 45 × 4 oz ÷ 16 = 11.25 lbs of 80/20 ground beef → buy 12 lbs
- 45 buns
Hot dogs (1 per adult on split menu):
- 30 hot dogs → 3 packs of 10
- 30 buns → 4 packs of 8
Condiments for 30 guests:
- 2 bottles ketchup, 1 bottle mustard, 1 bottle mayo, 30 cheese slices, 2 large tomatoes, 1 head iceberg lettuce
For the salad side, the how much salad per person guide tells you exactly what to buy. For drinks, the how many drinks per person guide handles the rest of your shopping list.
FAQ
How many burgers for 20 people?
Burgers as the main: 40 patties, 10 lbs of ground beef.
Burgers + hot dogs: 30 patties, 7.5 lbs of ground beef.
How many burgers for 50 people?
Burgers as the main: 100 patties, 25 lbs of ground beef.
Burgers + hot dogs: 75 patties, 18.75 lbs of ground beef.
How many pounds of ground beef for 10 people?
With quarter-pound patties at 2 per adult: 5 lbs. Buy 6 lbs to have a buffer.
How many patties does 1 pound of ground beef make?
Quarter-pound (4 oz) patties: 4 per pound.
Third-pound (5.3 oz) patties: 3 per pound.
Half-pound (8 oz) patties: 2 per pound.
Sliders (2 oz): 8 per pound.
What's the best ground beef for burgers?
80/20 ground beef — the 20% fat content keeps patties juicy on a hot grill. Leaner blends dry out. This is the standard for a reason.
How far ahead can I make burger patties?
Shape them up to 24 hours ahead. Layer between sheets of parchment paper and refrigerate. This is the right move for any party with 20+ guests.
What internal temperature for burgers?
160°F, per USDA guidelines for ground beef. This is the safe temperature that eliminates harmful bacteria. Use a meat thermometer — color alone is not reliable.
Final Thoughts
Two numbers. That's really all you need.
2 patties per adult when burgers are the main.
1.5 patties per adult when you're also grilling hot dogs.
Get those numbers right, use 80/20 beef, press a dimple in each patty, and cook to 160°F. Everything else is just toppings.
For the rest of the cookout, the how many hot dogs per person guide, the how many chicken wings per person guide, the how much meat per person guide, and the full party food planning guide have every other number you need.
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