You're hosting. The plan is a baked potato bar — easy, cheap, everyone-loves-it.
Now you're standing in the produce section staring at a wall of russets, wondering how many potatoes is "enough" for 30 people, whether you need a 10 lb bag or a 50 lb box, and how much sour cream is too much sour cream.
This guide has every number. Exact potato counts by crowd size, pounds to buy, all 8 main topping amounts, a calculator that does the math for you, and a fundraiser bulk-buy section if you're feeding the whole congregation.

Jump to:
- Quick Answer: How Many Potatoes Per Person?
- Baked Potato Bar Calculator
- What Size Potato to Buy
- Topping Amounts Per Person (The Chart Everyone Needs)
- The 4 Toppings That Always Run Out First
- Baked Potato Bars by Crowd Size
- How to Bake 30+ Potatoes at Once
- Keeping Them Warm for 2+ Hours
- Setting Up the Topping Bar
- Real-Life Example: Church Potato Night for 50
- Make-Ahead Game Plan
- FAQ
- Final Thoughts
- Related
- Pin to Pinterest
Quick Answer: How Many Potatoes Per Person?
Here's the number you need:
1 large potato per adult when the potato bar is the main meal.
¾ potato per adult when potatoes are a side dish next to a main.
2 potatoes per adult for big eaters or game day.
1 potato per child — usually a smaller one, or split a large one.
| Situation | Adults | Kids (under 12) |
|---|---|---|
| Main dish (potato bar IS the meal) | 1 large each | 1 small each |
| Side dish (next to a main) | ¾ potato each | ½ potato each |
| Big eaters / game day | 2 each | 1 each |
| Church / fundraiser | 1 each | 1 small each |
For the full picture of feeding a crowd, the how much food for 25–100 guests guide covers everything else on the table.
Baked Potato Bar Calculator
Plug in your guest count, pick whether the potato bar is a main, side, or fundraiser, and the calculator gives you exact potato counts, pounds to buy, and amounts for all 8 main toppings — butter, sour cream, cheese, bacon, chili, chives, broccoli, and salsa.
BAKED POTATO BAR CALCULATOR
Get exact potato counts, pounds to buy, and topping amounts for any crowd — main dish, side, or church fundraiser, all figured out for you.
| Who | Potatoes | Notes |
|---|
| Guests | Side (¾ pp) | Main (1 pp) | Big eaters (2 pp) | Fundraiser (1 pp) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10 | 9 / 6 lbs | 11 / 7 lbs | 22 / 14 lbs | 11 / 7 lbs |
| 20 | 17 / 11 lbs | 22 / 14 lbs | 44 / 28 lbs | 22 / 14 lbs |
| 30 | 25 / 16 lbs | 33 / 21 lbs | 66 / 42 lbs | 33 / 21 lbs |
| 50 | 42 / 27 lbs | 56 / 35 lbs | 111 / 70 lbs | 56 / 35 lbs |
| 75 | 62 / 39 lbs | 83 / 52 lbs | 165 / 104 lbs | 83 / 52 lbs |
| 100 | 83 / 52 lbs | 111 / 70 lbs | 221 / 139 lbs | 111 / 70 lbs |
What Size Potato to Buy
This is the part nobody tells you. The size of the potato changes everything — how many to buy, how long to bake, and how much topping fits on top.
Here's what's in a 10 lb bag, depending on size:
| Potato Size | Weight Each | Per 10 lb Bag | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jumbo | 10–14 oz | 15–17 potatoes | Main dish |
| Large | 8–12 oz | 18–20 potatoes | Main dish, default |
| Medium | 5–6 oz | 26–28 potatoes | Side dish only |
For a main-dish potato bar, get jumbo or large. A 6 oz potato is too small to be a meal on its own — it disappears under one scoop of chili. Save the small potatoes for when potatoes are a side.
For 50+ guests, ask your store about a 50 lb box. A 70-count or 80-count box of russets gives you 70–80 potatoes at 10–12 oz each, and it's almost always cheaper per pound than buying bagged. Costco, Sam's Club, and most regional grocery suppliers will sell them — call ahead and ask for the count per box.
The ultimate party food planning guide covers buying in bulk for any crowd-feeding format.

Topping Amounts Per Person (The Chart Everyone Needs)
This is the chart most people are looking for. Here's how much of each topping to plan per person — these amounts assume the potato bar is the main meal.
| Topping | Per Person | What That Looks Like |
|---|---|---|
| Butter | 1 Tbsp | 1 pat per potato |
| Sour cream | 3 Tbsp | A generous dollop — and they'll come back for more |
| Shredded cheese | 3 tablespoon (¾ oz) | About a small handful |
| Bacon (cooked, crumbled) | 1 Tbsp | ~1 cooked slice |
| Chili (as topping) | ½ cup | One ladle |
| Chili (as the headline) | ¾ cup | A heaping ladle, when chili is the star |
| Chives or green onions | 1 Tbsp | Sprinkle |
| Steamed broccoli | ¼ cup | Small pile |
| Salsa | 2 Tbsp | A spoonful |
A note on these amounts: they're meant for over-buying. Not every guest will use every topping. But you don't want to be the host whose sour cream ran out at 7 PM with 20 people still in line. Plan the full amount, accept that there will be leftovers on a few items, and you'll be fine.
For chili specifically, the ultimate party food planning guide has full chili math if you're making a big batch from scratch.
The 4 Toppings That Always Run Out First
I've watched this happen at every potato bar I've ever been to. The toppings that go first are not the ones you'd expect.
1. Sour cream. Always. By a wide margin. People put sour cream on everything — over the cheese, over the chili, on the side. Plan 3 tablespoons per person, not 2. Buy two 16 oz tubs when you think you only need one.
2. Shredded cheese. Especially with kids in the room. Buy at least an 8 oz bag per 10 guests, more if you're serving a crowd that loves cheese.
3. Bacon. Bacon is the topping people pile on when they think no one's watching. Cook ¾ lb to 1 lb of raw bacon per 10 adults — it shrinks by about half when cooked, and people take more than they should.
4. Butter. Easy to forget because it's "just butter." But potato bars need real butter, not a tiny pat per person. Plan one stick (8 Tbsp) per 8 guests minimum.
The other toppings — chives, broccoli, salsa, even chili if it's a topping rather than the headline — almost always have leftovers. Plan accordingly.

Baked Potato Bars by Crowd Size
Main Dish Potato Bar (1 large potato per adult)
| Guests | Potatoes | Pounds to Buy (Large 10 oz) |
|---|---|---|
| 10 | 11 | 7 lbs |
| 20 | 22 | 14 lbs |
| 30 | 33 | 21 lbs |
| 50 | 56 | 35 lbs |
| 75 | 83 | 52 lbs |
| 100 | 111 | 70 lbs |
These numbers include a 10% safety buffer. Always round up to the nearest full pound.
Side Dish Potato Bar (¾ potato per adult)
| Guests | Potatoes | Pounds to Buy (Large 10 oz) |
|---|---|---|
| 10 | 9 | 6 lbs |
| 20 | 17 | 11 lbs |
| 30 | 25 | 16 lbs |
| 50 | 42 | 27 lbs |
| 75 | 62 | 39 lbs |
| 100 | 83 | 52 lbs |
Mixed Crowds: Adults and Kids
Kids eat about half what an adult eats — one small potato or half a large one. For a typical mix of adults and kids, treat each child as half an adult and round up.
Real example — 30 adults and 10 kids, main dish:
- Adults: 30 × 1 = 30 potatoes
- Kids: 10 × 0.5 = 5 potatoes
- Subtotal: 35 potatoes
- With 10% buffer: 39 potatoes (~25 lbs of large potatoes)
For the rest of the meal, the meat per person guide and salad per person guide have the math for everything else on the table.
How to Bake 30+ Potatoes at Once
Here's the rule that matters most: never wrap baking potatoes in foil before they go in the oven. Foil traps steam, and steamed potatoes have soggy skins and gummy insides. The Idaho Potato Commission has been telling people this for decades, and it's still the most-broken rule at potato bars everywhere.
The right method:
Scrub them, dry them, oil them, salt them. Rub each potato with a thin coat of olive or canola oil and a pinch of kosher salt. The oil crisps the skin. The salt makes it taste like a baked potato instead of a boiled one.
Pierce each potato 3–4 times with a fork. This lets steam escape while baking. Skip this step and one of them will explode in your oven — I've seen it happen.
Bake directly on the oven rack at 400°F for about 1 hour. A standard home oven holds 15–25 potatoes in a single layer across the rack. They're done when a fork slides in easily and the internal temperature hits 205–210°F.
For 30+ potatoes, run two ovens or stagger batches. Start the first batch 90 minutes before serving. Pull them, wrap each in foil to lock in heat, and stack them in a cooler lined with a thick towel. Then start the second batch.
For really big crowds (50+), use a roaster oven. An 18-quart roaster holds about 20 jumbo potatoes or one full 10 lb bag of regular russets. Bake at 400°F for 1 hour and 45 minutes. This is the secret weapon for church dinners and fundraisers — you can run a roaster on the counter and keep your main oven free for everything else.

Keeping Them Warm for 2+ Hours
Once they're baked, here's how to hold them so they don't dry out before the line forms.
Slow cooker on warm. Wrap each baked potato in foil (now it's okay — foil after baking holds heat in without ruining the skin), stack them in a slow cooker on the warm setting, and put the lid on. They'll stay perfect for 2–3 hours.
Cooler lined with hot water. This is the trick caterers use for big crowds. Boil a pot of water and pour it into a clean beverage cooler about 5 minutes before your potatoes come out of the oven. Drain the water right before adding the potatoes. The pre-warmed cooler holds heat for hours, and you can fit 40+ potatoes in a standard cooler.
200°F oven. If your oven is free after baking, just turn the temperature down to 200°F and leave the potatoes inside. Works great for up to 90 minutes.
Chafing dishes. If you already have catering equipment from a previous event, use it. Standard buffet chafing dishes will hold 30–50 potatoes hot for 2+ hours.
What not to do: Don't leave potatoes uncovered on a sheet pan on the counter. They cool and dry out within 15 minutes — fast enough that the third person through the line gets a lukewarm potato.
Setting Up the Topping Bar
The order of items on the buffet line matters more than people realize. Set it up wrong and the line backs up at the cheese.
Here's the order that flows:
- Plates
- Hot baked potatoes
- Hot toppings (chili, broccoli, anything in a slow cooker)
- Cheese
- Sour cream and butter
- Bacon
- Fresh toppings (chives, green onions, salsa, jalapeños)
- Salt, pepper, hot sauce, anything else
The slowest step — building the potato — happens at the end, so it doesn't back up the line. Hot toppings go first because they're served with a ladle and take a second longer than scooping cheese.
Use small bowls and label them. Even at a casual gathering, labels help — especially with allergies in the room. A bowl of "imitation bacon" looks identical to a bowl of real bacon.
Pre-cut the potatoes. Slit each potato lengthwise before guests arrive. Saves them from juggling a knife at the buffet, and the steam escaping makes the bar smell amazing.
For 50+ guests, set up two parallel lines. One on each side of a long table. Doubles your throughput and prevents the line from snaking around the room.
For more on running a buffet for any crowd, the buffet portion guide covers the full math.

Real-Life Example: Church Potato Night for 50
Here's what a real shopping list looks like for 50 people at a church Wednesday-night dinner. Potato bar is the main dish. Some kids in the mix.
40 adults + 10 kids, potato bar as main dish, large potatoes
- Adults: 40 × 1 = 40 potatoes
- Kids: 10 × 0.5 = 5 potatoes
- Subtotal: 45 potatoes
- With 10% buffer: 50 potatoes
Shopping list:
- 50 lb box (80-count) of russets — about $20–25 from a wholesale supplier, or 5 × 10 lb bags of large russets from a regular grocery store
- 5 lbs butter (about 6 sticks) — 1 tablespoon per person
- 5 × 16 oz tubs sour cream — runs out first, over-buy
- 3 lbs shredded cheddar (six 8 oz bags) — cheddar or a cheddar blend
- 3 lbs raw bacon — cook it down to about 1.5 lbs crumbled
- 6 quarts of chili (~1.5 gallons) — if chili is the headline topping, double this
- 2 cups chopped chives or green onions
- 5 lbs steamed broccoli (one large head)
- 5 cups salsa (two 24 oz jars)
Total cost: Usually $100–150 for 50 people. About $2–3 per person — one of the cheapest ways to feed a crowd.
That's a real shopping list. Print it, hand it to the person doing the Costco run, done.
Make-Ahead Game Plan
For a big event, here's how to spread the prep across two days so you're not panicking the day-of.
Two days before:
- Buy potatoes
- Buy all toppings except dairy
- Cook bacon, crumble, refrigerate in airtight container
Day before:
- Buy dairy (sour cream, cheese, butter)
- Shred cheese if buying blocks
- Wash potatoes, pat dry, store in a single layer in a cool spot
- Make chili, refrigerate
- Chop chives and green onions, store in damp paper towel
Day of:
- 90 minutes before serving: Oil and salt potatoes, start baking
- 2 hrs-90 minutes before: Reheat chili in slow cooker (on low)
- 45 minutes before: Set up topping bar, fill bowls
- 30 minutes before: steam broccoli
- 15 minutes before: Pull potatoes, slit, transfer to slow cooker on warm
- Serve
For more party-prep timelines, the ultimate party planning equipment list covers everything you need to run a buffet.
FAQ
How many potatoes for 50 people?
Main dish: about 56 large potatoes, or 35 lbs. Side dish: about 42 potatoes, or 27 lbs. Buy a 50 lb box from a wholesale supplier for the best price.
How many potatoes for 100 people?
Main dish: about 111 large potatoes, or 70 lbs. That's 7 × 10 lb bags or one 50 lb box plus a backup bag. For jumbo potatoes, plan 84 lbs.
How long does it take to bake 30 potatoes?
About 1 hour at 400°F, regardless of how many you bake at once — as long as they're in a single layer on the rack. Stacking them or crowding the pan slows the cooking dramatically.
Can I use sweet potatoes for a baked potato bar?
Yes — and it's a great option for a fall potato bar or to serve alongside russets for variety. Use the same 1 potato per adult math. Sweet potatoes pair well with butter, brown sugar, pecans, marshmallows, or savory toppings like black beans and feta.
Do I have to use russets?
Russets are the classic for a reason — high starch, fluffy interior, sturdy skin. Yukon Golds work but they're creamier and less fluffy. Skip red potatoes and waxy varieties — they don't bake up the same way.
How far ahead can I bake the potatoes?
The day of, ideally. You can par-bake them the night before (30 minutes at 400°F), refrigerate, then finish baking 25–30 minutes before serving. Fully baking a day ahead and reheating works in a pinch but the texture suffers.
What if I don't have a slow cooker to keep them warm?
Use a cooler lined with towels. Wrap each baked potato in foil, stack them in a clean cooler, and shut the lid. They'll stay hot for 2–3 hours. This is the catering trick for events with no kitchen access.
Can I do a baked potato bar for breakfast?
Absolutely — and it's underrated. Top with scrambled eggs, breakfast sausage, cheese, salsa, and avocado. The charcuterie board guide has more morning-board ideas if you're going that direction.
Final Thoughts
A baked potato bar is one of the easiest ways to feed a crowd. Cheap, scalable, dietary-friendly, and the prep is mostly hands-off. Get the potato count right, stock the four toppings that always run out, and you're done.
The numbers to remember:
- 1 large potato per adult when it's the main dish
- ¾ potato per adult when it's a side
- 3 tablespoons of sour cream per person — not 2
- 1 hour at 400°F, no foil
- 10% safety buffer on everything
For the rest of the menu, the meat per person guide, the salad per person guide, the drinks per person guide, the appetizers per person guide, and the full party food planning guide have every other number you need.
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