Exact pounds and cups for any crowd — holiday dinner, Sunday roast, or a full mashed potato bar.
Mashed potatoes are the one dish at a holiday table where nobody ever says "oh, that's plenty for me." They go on the plate first. They catch the gravy. They get a second scoop when everyone thinks nobody's looking. And they are, without question, the side dish people are most disappointed to see run out.
I've underestimated mashed potatoes exactly once. It was Thanksgiving, twelve people, and I made what I thought was a generous batch. The bowl was empty before half the table had been through the line. I watched my father-in-law look at the empty bowl with a very specific expression that I have thought about every November since.
Here's the thing: mashed potato math is actually simple. One rule, applied consistently, and you never run short. The trouble is most people guess instead of calculating, and guessing with mashed potatoes almost always goes the wrong direction.

Jump to:
- Quick Answer: How Much Mashed Potatoes Per Person
- Jump to the Calculator
- Tell me about your crowd
- How are you serving them?
- Any adjustments?
- The Two Numbers You Need to Know
- It Depends What Else Is on the Table
- The Full Chart: 10 to 100 Guests
- How Many Actual Potatoes Is That?
- How Much Butter and Cream for a Crowd
- Make Them the Day Before
- Planning Leftovers Intentionally
- Mashed Potato Bar: The Math Is Different
- Common Mistakes
- FAQ
- Plan the Rest of Your Meal
- Final Thoughts
- Related
- Pin to Pinterest
Quick Answer: How Much Mashed Potatoes Per Person
The baseline rule: ½ pound of raw potatoes per person as a side dish.
One pound of raw potatoes yields about 2 cups of finished mashed potatoes. So ½ pound per person = 1 cup per person. That's your number for a dinner with multiple sides on the table.
| Guests | Raw Potatoes | Finished Mashed | As Main Side (+50%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 6 | 3 lbs | 6 cups | 4.5 lbs / 9 cups |
| 8 | 4 lbs | 8 cups | 6 lbs / 12 cups |
| 10 | 5 lbs | 10 cups | 7.5 lbs / 15 cups |
| 12 | 6 lbs | 12 cups | 9 lbs / 18 cups |
| 15 | 7.5 lbs | 15 cups | 11.25 lbs / 22 cups |
| 20 | 10 lbs | 20 cups | 15 lbs / 30 cups |
| 25 | 12.5 lbs | 25 cups | 19 lbs / 38 cups |
| 30 | 15 lbs | 30 cups | 22.5 lbs / 45 cups |
All pound amounts rounded up. Always round up.

Jump to the Calculator
Your exact number — based on guest count, how mashed potatoes fit into the meal, and appetite level — is in the calculator below.
Summer & Cinnamon · Party Food Guide
Mashed Potatoes Calculator
Exact pounds, cups, and potato counts for any crowd — holiday dinner, Sunday roast, or a full potato bar.
Tell me about your crowd
How are you serving them?
Any adjustments?
Your Mashed Potato Plan
12 adults · Side dish · Average appetites
| Who | Raw Pounds | Notes |
|---|---|---|
|
👨👩👧 Adults
—
|
—lbs | — |
|
🛒 Total to buy
—
|
—lbs | — |
| Guests | Side Dish ½ lb pp |
Main Side ¾ lb pp |
Potato Bar 1 lb pp |
|---|---|---|---|
| 6 | 3 lbs / 6 cups | 4.5 lbs / 9 cups | 6 lbs / 12 cups |
| 8 | 4 lbs / 8 cups | 6 lbs / 12 cups | 8 lbs / 16 cups |
| 10 | 5 lbs / 10 cups | 7.5 lbs / 15 cups | 10 lbs / 20 cups |
| 12 | 6 lbs / 12 cups | 9 lbs / 18 cups | 12 lbs / 24 cups |
| 15 | 7.5 lbs / 15 cups | 11.25 lbs / 22.5 cups | 15 lbs / 30 cups |
| 20 | 10 lbs / 20 cups | 15 lbs / 30 cups | 20 lbs / 40 cups |
| 25 | 12.5 lbs / 25 cups | 18.75 lbs / 37.5 cups | 25 lbs / 50 cups |
| 30 | 15 lbs / 30 cups | 22.5 lbs / 45 cups | 30 lbs / 60 cups |
| 40 | 20 lbs / 40 cups | 30 lbs / 60 cups | 40 lbs / 80 cups |
| 50 | 25 lbs / 50 cups | 37.5 lbs / 75 cups | 50 lbs / 100 cups |
The Two Numbers You Need to Know
½ pound raw per person is your side dish number. This is the amount when mashed potatoes are one of three or four sides on the table — Thanksgiving style, where there's stuffing and green beans and sweet potatoes all competing for plate real estate.
¾ pound raw per person is your main side number. This is when mashed potatoes are the side — the thing you're serving with roast chicken or a holiday roast where they're doing the heavy lifting. It's also your number if you know your crowd eats generously, or if you want leftovers.

The conversion is clean: 1 pound of raw potatoes = 2 cups finished mashed potatoes. Every number in this post uses that conversion. It accounts for peeling, cooking down, and the butter and cream you're adding to bring it together.
It Depends What Else Is on the Table
This is the detail that makes the most difference and that almost nobody accounts for.
Multiple sides on the table. Thanksgiving is the classic example — stuffing, sweet potatoes, green beans, rolls, cranberry sauce. People are filling their plates with a little of everything. Half a pound per person is genuinely enough. They're not loading up on any one thing.
Mashed potatoes as the main side. Sunday roast with potatoes and a vegetable. A weeknight dinner where the potatoes are the event. Go to ¾ pound per person minimum. People will take more when there isn't much else competing for their plate.
Holiday crowd with big appetites. If you've got teenagers, football players, or anyone who treats the side dishes like the main course — go to ¾ pound per person across the board. You know your crowd better than any formula does.
Mashed potato bar. Toppings encourage larger portions, full stop. When you put cheese, bacon, sour cream, chives, and gravy on the table, everyone fills their bowl twice. Plan 1 pound per person for a mashed potato bar. This is not negotiable.
The Full Chart: 10 to 100 Guests
Side dish portions (½ lb pp) and main side portions (¾ lb pp), with finished cup amounts.
| Guests | Side Dish — Raw | Side Dish — Mashed | Main Side — Raw | Main Side — Mashed |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10 | 5 lbs | 10 cups | 7.5 lbs | 15 cups |
| 15 | 7.5 lbs | 15 cups | 11.25 lbs | 22 cups |
| 20 | 10 lbs | 20 cups | 15 lbs | 30 cups |
| 25 | 12.5 lbs | 25 cups | 19 lbs | 38 cups |
| 30 | 15 lbs | 30 cups | 22.5 lbs | 45 cups |
| 40 | 20 lbs | 40 cups | 30 lbs | 60 cups |
| 50 | 25 lbs | 50 cups | 37.5 lbs | 75 cups |
Based on 1 lb raw = 2 cups finished mashed. All amounts rounded up.
How Many Actual Potatoes Is That?
Because at the store you're counting potatoes, not pounds.
On average, 1 pound of medium russet potatoes is about 2 to 3 potatoes. Yukon Golds run slightly smaller — count on 3 to 4 per pound.
| Raw Pounds | Medium Russets | Yukon Golds |
|---|---|---|
| 5 lbs | 10–15 potatoes | 15–20 potatoes |
| 10 lbs | 20–30 potatoes | 30–40 potatoes |
| 15 lbs | 30–45 potatoes | 45–60 potatoes |
| 20 lbs | 40–60 potatoes | 60–80 potatoes |
Trust me on this: buy by the pound, not by count. Potato sizes vary too much to count reliably, especially with russets. Get on a scale at the store or buy bagged potatoes where the weight is labeled.
Which potato to use: Russets give you the fluffiest, most classic mashed potato — they're high in starch and low in moisture, which means they absorb butter and cream beautifully. Yukon Golds are creamier and naturally buttery-tasting with a slightly denser texture. Both are excellent. Avoid waxy potatoes like red or fingerling for mashing — they turn gluey.
How Much Butter and Cream for a Crowd
This is what nobody tells you when you scale up a mashed potato recipe. The amounts seem alarming. They are correct.
A reliable starting point for fluffy, rich mashed potatoes:
| Raw Potatoes | Butter | Heavy Cream or Whole Milk | Serves (as side) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5 lbs | 1 stick (½ cup) | 1 cup | 10 people |
| 10 lbs | 2 sticks (1 cup) | 2 cups | 20 people |
| 15 lbs | 3 sticks (1½ cups) | 3 cups | 30 people |
| 20 lbs | 4 sticks (2 cups) | 4 cups | 40 people |
Add gradually and taste as you go — potato variety, how well you drained them, and personal preference all affect the final texture. These are starting amounts, not hard limits. Salt aggressively. Potatoes need more salt than you think.

Make Them the Day Before
For a holiday dinner, this is the single most useful thing I can tell you. Mashed potatoes reheat beautifully and making them ahead takes one of the most labor-intensive dishes off your day-of plate entirely.
The method: Make your mashed potatoes fully — butter, cream, seasoning, all of it. Transfer to a baking dish or large bowl, smooth the top, press plastic wrap directly onto the surface so no skin forms, and refrigerate. They'll keep perfectly for up to 2 days.
To reheat: The oven is your best bet for large batches. Cover the dish with foil, bake at 350°F for 30 to 45 minutes until heated through, stirring once halfway. Add a splash of warm cream or milk if they need loosening. They'll taste freshly made.

The slow cooker method for serving: Transfer reheated potatoes to a slow cooker set to WARM. They'll stay at perfect serving temperature for 2 to 3 hours without drying out. Stir occasionally and add a splash of cream if needed. This is the move for buffet-style serving at a large gathering — no one has to babysit the pot.
Planning Leftovers Intentionally
Here's the thing about leftover mashed potatoes: they are genuinely not a problem. They're one of the most versatile leftovers in the kitchen.
If you want planned leftovers — and you should — increase your total by 25%. For 20 guests that means making 12.5 pounds instead of 10. The extra 2.5 pounds of potatoes costs almost nothing and gives you the ingredients for at least one more meal.
Leftover mashed potatoes become:
Shepherd's pie. Spread cold mashed potatoes over seasoned ground beef and vegetables, bake at 400°F until the top is golden. It's a completely different dish that tastes intentional, not like leftovers.

Potato pancakes. Mix cold mashed potatoes with an egg, a little flour, and whatever herbs you have. Pan-fry in butter until crispy on both sides. These are genuinely one of the best things to come out of a holiday meal.
Loaded mashed potato bowls. Reheat with cheese, bacon bits, sour cream, and chives. Suddenly the leftovers feel like a restaurant order.
Soup thickener. Stir a cup of cold mashed potatoes into vegetable or chicken broth for an instant creamy potato soup that takes fifteen minutes.
If you're planning the full holiday menu and want to see how mashed potatoes fit alongside other dishes, the How Much Food for 25 to 100 Guests guide covers every category at once.
Mashed Potato Bar: The Math Is Different
If you're doing a mashed potato bar — toppings spread out, guests serving themselves, the whole setup — the math changes completely.
Plan 1 pound of raw potatoes per person. No exceptions. When toppings are involved, portions expand. People come back for a second scoop to try a different topping combination. It is the nature of a topping bar.

For a mashed potato bar for 20 people: 20 pounds of raw potatoes, which gives you 40 cups of finished mashed potatoes.
Toppings to plan per person:
- Shredded cheese: 1 to 1.5 oz per person
- Sour cream: 2 tablespoons per person
- Bacon bits: 1 tablespoon per person
- Chives or green onions: 1 tablespoon per person
- Gravy: ¼ to ⅓ cup per person — see the How Much Gravy Per Person guide for exact amounts by crowd size
Keep the potatoes hot in a large slow cooker or an electric roaster. Set toppings in small bowls with spoons. Label everything — guests with dietary needs will thank you.
Common Mistakes
Using the finished volume instead of raw weight to calculate. The recipe says "serves 8" based on a 5-pound batch. You have 12 people. You make one batch. The math doesn't work and you know it doesn't work, but you do it anyway because it feels like it might be enough. It is not enough. Use raw pounds, not servings.
Not accounting for seconds. Mashed potatoes are the most frequently revisited side dish on any table. Plan for it. The ½ pound baseline already has some buffer, but if you know your crowd — really know them — go to ¾ pound.
Forgetting that kids love mashed potatoes. Children who refuse every other vegetable on the table will eat an adult-sized portion of mashed potatoes without hesitation. Count them at full portions, not half.
Making them too early without a plan for keeping them warm. Mashed potatoes cool down fast and get stiff when they do. Either make them ahead and reheat properly, or have a slow cooker ready to hold them. Cold, stiff mashed potatoes at a dinner party are a silent tragedy.
Underseasoning. Potatoes need a significant amount of salt — more than feels comfortable. Season the cooking water well. Season the finished potatoes. Taste them again. They probably need more. A bland mashed potato is a missed opportunity and a small sadness.
Draining incompletely. Watery mashed potatoes happen when the cooked potatoes aren't drained thoroughly before mashing. Let them steam-dry in the pot for a couple of minutes after draining — the residual heat evaporates excess moisture and gives you a fluffier, less watery result.
FAQ
How much mashed potatoes do I need for 10 people? 5 pounds of raw potatoes as a side dish — gives you 10 cups of finished mashed. If mashed potatoes are the main side, make 7.5 pounds.
How much for 12 people? 6 pounds as a side dish (12 cups mashed). For a main side: 9 pounds (18 cups).
How much mashed potatoes for 20 people? 10 pounds as a side dish (20 cups mashed). As a main side: 15 pounds (30 cups). For a mashed potato bar: 20 pounds.
How much for 25 people? 12.5 pounds as a side dish (25 cups mashed). Main side: 19 pounds.
How much for 30 people? 15 pounds as a side dish (30 cups). Main side: 22.5 pounds.
How much for 50 people? 25 pounds as a side dish (50 cups). Main side: 37.5 pounds. At this scale, make in large batches and hold in a full-size roaster or multiple slow cookers.
How far ahead can I make mashed potatoes? Up to 2 days ahead. Cool completely, press plastic wrap directly onto the surface, refrigerate. Reheat covered in the oven at 350°F or in a slow cooker on LOW.
Can I freeze mashed potatoes? Yes, but the texture changes slightly — they can become a little grainy after freezing. For best results, freeze in portions, thaw overnight in the refrigerator, and reheat gently with added butter and cream to bring them back together. Perfectly fine for leftovers, not ideal for making ahead for a special occasion.
Russet vs Yukon Gold — which is better for a crowd? Russets for the fluffiest, most classic result. Yukon Golds for a creamier, more buttery texture with less effort. Both work beautifully. For large batches, russets are easier to peel and generally less expensive.
How do I keep mashed potatoes warm for a party? Slow cooker on WARM is the best method. They'll hold well for 2 to 3 hours. Stir occasionally and add a splash of warm cream if they start to thicken up.
Plan the Rest of Your Meal
If mashed potatoes are on the menu, you're planning a full dinner. Here's what belongs alongside this post:
- How Much Gravy Per Person — mashed potatoes and gravy are inseparable. This tells you exactly how much gravy to make for your crowd, including the turkey drippings reality check.
- How Much Meat Per Person — the protein planning that pairs with your potatoes.
- How Much Potato Salad Per Person — for warmer weather gatherings where cold potato salad is on the menu instead.
- Buffet Portions Per Person — if it's a buffet-style setup, this covers how every dish scales together.
- How Much Food for 25 to 100 Guests — planning the whole menu at once? Start here.
- Ultimate Party Food Planning Guide — every category, every calculator, one place.
Final Thoughts
Mashed potatoes are not complicated. Half a pound of raw potatoes per person for a side dish. Three-quarters of a pound if they're the main event. One pound for a mashed potato bar. Make them the day before if you can. Season them more than feels right. Round up, not down.
Nobody has ever left a dinner table complaining that there were too many mashed potatoes.
Make extra. Make the potato pancakes the next morning. Call it a win.
All calculations based on standard catering portions: ½ lb raw potatoes per person as a side dish, ¾ lb as a main side. Raw to finished conversion: 1 lb raw potatoes = approximately 2 cups finished mashed potatoes after peeling, cooking, and mashing with butter and cream.
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