Exact cups and quarts for any crowd — holiday dinner, Sunday roast, or anything in between.
Here is what nobody tells you about hosting a big dinner: you can nail the turkey. You can make the most beautiful mashed potatoes of your life. The rolls can be golden, the stuffing can be perfect, the table can look like something out of a magazine. And then someone picks up the gravy boat, tips it over their plate, and the thing runs dry.
Halfway through the table.
I have watched this happen more times than I want to admit — at holiday dinners, at Sunday roasts, at family gatherings where everything else went exactly right. The gravy is the one thing that disappears faster than you expect every single time, because it goes on the turkey and the potatoes and the stuffing, and people go back for more of all three.
Here's the thing: this is a completely solvable problem. Gravy isn't complicated to scale. You just need to start with the right number, and that number depends on a few things — how many people you're feeding, what else is on the table, and whether your crowd are the kind of people who puddle their entire plate or just add a tasteful drizzle.
That's what the calculator below is for. Plug in your crowd, tell it what's on the menu, and it will tell you exactly how many cups and quarts to make. No guessing. No scraping the bottom of the pan while your guests sit there with dry mashed potatoes.

Jump to:
- Quick Answer: How Much Gravy Per Person
- Jump to the Calculator
- Why ⅓ Cup Is the Magic Number
- The Full Chart: 10 to 100 Guests
- How Much Do Turkey Drippings Actually Make?
- Make It the Day Before. Seriously.
- Troubleshooting: When Something Goes Wrong
- Serving Gravy for a Crowd: What You Actually Need
- FAQ
- Plan the Rest of Your Meal
- Final Thoughts
- Related
- Pin to Pinterest
Quick Answer: How Much Gravy Per Person
If you need a number right now:
| Serving Style | Per Person | For 12 People | For 20 People | For 30 People |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Light / lots of other sauces | ¼ cup | 3 cups | 5 cups | 7½ cups |
| Standard holiday dinner | ⅓ cup | 4 cups | 6⅔ cups | 10 cups |
| Gravy lovers / mash-heavy plate | ½ cup | 6 cups | 10 cups | 15 cups |
The baseline rule: ⅓ cup per person. That's your number for most dinners. Adjust up if mashed potatoes and stuffing are both on the table. Adjust down if you have a lot of other sauces or it's a lighter meal.

Jump to the Calculator
Your exact number — based on your guest count, the occasion, what's on the menu, and how your crowd eats — is in the calculator below. It outputs cups AND quarts, because when you're making gravy for thirty people, you're thinking in quarts.
GRAVY CALCULATOR
Get exact cups of gravy, broth, flour, and butter — for Thanksgiving, Christmas, Sunday dinner, or any crowd, figured out for you.
| Ingredient | Amount | Notes |
|---|
| Guests | Total gravy | Broth | Flour | Butter |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 8 | 3 cups | 3 cups | 4 tbsp | 4 tbsp |
| 10 | 4 cups | 4 cups | 5 tbsp | 5 tbsp |
| 15 | 5 cups | 5 cups | 7 tbsp | 7 tbsp |
| 20 | 7 cups | 7 cups | 9 tbsp | 9 tbsp |
| 30 | 10 cups | 10 cups | 13 tbsp | 13 tbsp |
| 50 | 17 cups | 17 cups | 22 tbsp | 22 tbsp |
| 75 | 25 cups | 25 cups | 33 tbsp | 33 tbsp |
| 100 | 33 cups | 33 cups | 44 tbsp | 44 tbsp |
Why ⅓ Cup Is the Magic Number
Most people use gravy the same way. They spoon it over the potatoes. They spoon it over the turkey or roast. They might go back for a little more. That pattern holds pretty consistently from table to table, which is why the ⅓ cup guideline is so reliable — it accounts for the doubling up on mashed potatoes and the main protein without over-planning.
Where it shifts is the sides.
Mashed potatoes are the biggest gravy driver on any table. People pour generously over a mountain of mash in a way they don't over other sides. If mashed potatoes are on your menu, add about an extra tablespoon per person to your total. It sounds small. It adds up fast when you're feeding twenty people.

Stuffing is the second biggest draw. Same logic — people want gravy on their stuffing, and if both mash and stuffing are on the table, plan for ½ cup per person minimum. That's your classic Thanksgiving scenario.
If you have a lot of other sauces or it's a lighter meal, ¼ cup per person is enough. Holiday dinner with cranberry sauce, mint sauce, a pan sauce — gravy is one of several options and people spread it accordingly.
The calculator accounts for all of this automatically. But now you know why.
The Full Chart: 10 to 100 Guests
Cups to make for every crowd size and every serving style. For larger batches, I've included quarts because that's how you'll be thinking when you're scaling this up.
| Guests | Light (¼ cup pp) | Standard (⅓ cup pp) | Gravy Lovers (½ cup pp) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 6 | 1½ cups | 2 cups | 3 cups |
| 10 | 2½ cups | 3⅓ cups | 5 cups |
| 15 | 3¾ cups | 5 cups | 7½ cups |
| 20 | 5 cups / 1¼ qt | 6⅔ cups / 1⅔ qt | 10 cups / 2½ qt |
| 25 | 6¼ cups / 1½ qt | 8⅓ cups / 2 qt | 12½ cups / 3 qt |
| 30 | 7½ cups / 1¾ qt | 10 cups / 2½ qt | 15 cups / 3¾ qt |
| 40 | 10 cups / 2½ qt | 13⅓ cups / 3⅓ qt | 20 cups / 5 qt |
| 50 | 12½ cups / 3 qt | 16⅔ cups / 4 qt | 25 cups / 6¼ qt |
| 75 | 18¾ cups / 4¾ qt | 25 cups / 6¼ qt | 37½ cups / 9⅓ qt |
| 100 | 25 cups / 6¼ qt | 33⅓ cups / 8⅓ qt | 50 cups / 12½ qt |
All amounts rounded to the nearest practical measurement. Always round up — never down.
How Much Do Turkey Drippings Actually Make?
This is where most hosts get blindsided. You roast a whole turkey, you're feeling good about the drippings situation, and then you strain the pan and realize what you actually have is nowhere near enough for your crowd.
Here's the honest reality by bird size:
| Turkey Size | Usable Drippings After Straining |
|---|---|
| 10–12 lbs | ~1½–2 cups |
| 12–14 lbs | ~2–3 cups |
| 14–16 lbs | ~2½–3½ cups |
| 18–20 lbs | ~3–4 cups |
| 20+ lbs | ~4–5 cups |
For a table of 12 people at the standard ⅓ cup serving, you need about 4 cups of gravy. A 12–14 pound turkey gives you maybe 2–3 cups of drippings. You're already short, before you account for anyone going back for seconds.
This is why you almost always need to supplement with stock. The drippings are flavor — they're gold — but they're rarely enough volume on their own. A good boxed turkey or chicken stock, well-seasoned, will stretch your drippings beautifully without losing that rich, roasty depth.

My sourdough discard gravy recipe is worth trying here if you're open to it — the discard adds a subtle depth that tastes like you've been simmering bones for hours. People always ask about it.
Make It the Day Before. Seriously.
I know this sounds like extra work, but it's actually the opposite. Making gravy base the day before is one of the single best things you can do for your sanity on a big hosting day.
Here's the method:
The day before: Make a base gravy using butter, flour, and good stock. Season it well but not all the way — you'll adjust again after you add the drippings. Cool it completely and refrigerate.
The day of: Roast your turkey or whatever protein you're making. Strain the drippings, skim the fat, whisk the drippings into your pre-made base, and reheat gently. Taste, adjust seasoning, done.
What you end up with still tastes completely fresh — the drippings do all the work of making it taste like day-of gravy. What you don't have to do is stand over the stove making gravy while simultaneously carving a turkey and fielding questions about when everything will be ready.

Storage times:
- Homemade gravy: up to 3–4 days in the refrigerator
- Frozen gravy: up to 3 months — cool completely, store in airtight containers, reheat gently on the stove with a whisk
- Don't freeze gravy that has cream or milk in it — it will separate
If you're planning the full spread and want to see how gravy fits into the bigger picture, the Buffet Portions Per Person guide will help you balance every dish on the table, not just the gravy.
Troubleshooting: When Something Goes Wrong
Even when you've planned perfectly, gravy can still surprise you. Here's how to fix the most common problems fast.
Too thin. Simmer it longer uncovered — this is almost always the fix. If you need it thick fast, whisk a teaspoon of cornstarch into a tablespoon of cold water and stir it in gradually. Don't dump it all at once.
Too thick. Add warm stock a splash at a time, whisking constantly. Never add cold liquid to hot gravy — it shocks it and creates lumps.
Bland. It needs salt. More than you think. Taste it over a piece of bread or a bite of potato to get the true flavor — gravy seasoned on a spoon always tastes more intense than it does on a plate. Also try a small splash of Worcestershire sauce or a tiny pinch of poultry seasoning. Those two things fix a lot of bland gravy problems quietly.

Lumpy. Strain it through a fine mesh strainer. If it's slightly lumpy and you don't have a strainer, an immersion blender for thirty seconds will smooth it right out without changing the flavor.
Too salty. Add more unsalted stock to dilute. If you've already thickened it and don't want to thin it out, a peeled potato simmered in the gravy for ten minutes can help draw out some salt — then pull the potato out before serving.
Not enough of it. This is the one you're trying to avoid. If you find yourself short the day of, heat additional stock in a separate pot, season it well, and whisk in a simple butter-flour roux. It won't have the dripping depth of your main gravy, but combined, it stretches beautifully. Nobody will know.
Serving Gravy for a Crowd: What You Actually Need
Gravy boats. A standard gravy boat holds about 1½ to 2 cups. For a table of 12 at the standard portion, you need two boats minimum so both ends of the table can reach without passing. For buffet service, use a wider-mouthed pitcher or small ladle setup so it doesn't drip everywhere.
Slow cooker for buffets. This is my favorite move for big crowds: keep gravy in a slow cooker on the warm setting. It stays at perfect consistency for hours, it's self-serve, and you're not hovering over the stove reheating throughout the meal. Set it, label it, forget it.
Ladle size matters. A 2-ounce ladle (¼ cup) is standard for gravy service. If you're doing buffet style with self-serve, guests will naturally take about two ladles — which is right in line with the ⅓ to ½ cup range.
Keep it warm. Gravy gets thick and gluey fast once it cools. If you're doing a plated dinner, warm your gravy boat with hot water first, dump it out, then fill with gravy. It buys you another ten minutes of perfect consistency. For the rest of the meal, a small candle warmer underneath the boat works well.
For everything else you need for a big gathering, the Ultimate Party Planning Equipment List has the full breakdown — from serving vessels to coolers to what size slow cooker actually feeds a crowd.
FAQ
How much gravy do I need for 10 people? At the standard ⅓ cup serving: 3⅓ cups. Round up to 4 cups to be safe — especially if mashed potatoes are on the table.
How much gravy for 12 people? Standard serving: 4 cups / 1 quart. If it's a holiday dinner with mash and stuffing both on the table: plan for 6–7 cups.
How much gravy for 15 people? Standard: 5 cups / 1¼ quarts. For a heavy gravy crowd: 7½ cups.
How much gravy for 20 people? Standard: 6⅔ cups — round up to 7 cups or just make 2 quarts and be comfortable. For heavy: 10 cups / 2½ quarts.
How much gravy for 25 people? Standard: 8⅓ cups / about 2 quarts. For gravy lovers: 12½ cups / 3 quarts.
How much gravy for 30 people? Standard: 10 cups / 2½ quarts. For a holiday spread with mash and stuffing: 15 cups / 3¾ quarts.
How much gravy for 50 people? Standard: 16⅔ cups / just over 4 quarts. This is where the slow cooker approach becomes non-negotiable.
How much gravy for 100 people? Standard: 33⅓ cups / 8⅓ quarts. At this scale, make in batches of 2 quarts and hold in full-size hotel pans or multiple slow cookers.
Can I make gravy the day before? Yes — and honestly, you should. Make the base with butter, flour, and stock the day before. On the day of, whisk in your fresh drippings and reheat. It tastes completely fresh and it's one less thing to manage.
How long does homemade gravy keep? 3–4 days in the refrigerator. Up to 3 months in the freezer.
How do I know if I made enough? The honest answer: you usually haven't. If you followed the calculator and added a 10% buffer, you're fine. If you eyeballed it, make a little more.
Plan the Rest of Your Meal
If gravy is on the menu, you're probably planning a full dinner. Here's what belongs alongside this post:
- How Much Meat Per Person — the protein math that most people get wrong. Covers turkey, beef, chicken, pork, and pulled meat by guest count.
- How Much Potato Salad Per Person — if it's a summer spread instead of a holiday dinner, this one's your companion calculator.
- Buffet Portions Per Person — planning a full buffet with multiple dishes? This tells you how to balance every item on the table.
- How Many Drinks Per Person — the other thing people almost always underestimate.
- How Much Food for 25 to 100 Guests — planning the whole menu at once? Start here.
- Ultimate Party Food Planning Guide — the full picture, every category, one place.
Final Thoughts
Gravy is one of those things that doesn't get enough credit until it runs out. Then suddenly it's the only thing anyone is thinking about.
The math isn't complicated. Start with ⅓ cup per person. Add a little more if mashed potatoes and stuffing are both on the table. Make it the day before if you can. Add your 10% buffer. Keep it warm.
Then pour generously, and enjoy the dinner you worked hard to put on the table — without watching the gravy boat run dry halfway through.
That's the whole thing. You've got this.
All portion calculations based on standard catering guidelines: ⅓ cup per person as the baseline sweet spot, ¼ cup for light service, ½ cup for heavy gravy crowds. Turkey drippings yields based on average roasting results after straining and skimming.
Related
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