Build a lender-ready catering business plan in under 20 minutes. Walk through 7 guided sections, get real Year-1 projections built on industry per-event, food-cost, and labor benchmarks, and download a 9-sheet Excel model you can hand to a banker, landlord, or wedding-venue partner.
Business Overview
Start with the basics — what's your catering business, where is it based, and how is it structured?
Services & Menu
Define the events you'll cater, your signature menu, and how you'll price.
Market Analysis
Who are you serving, who are you competing with, and how will you win clients?
Operations Plan
Your day-to-day setup: kitchen, fleet, staffing, equipment, and licenses.
Startup Costs
Estimate your total upfront investment. Edit any line to match your situation.
| Category | Amount ($) |
|---|---|
| Kitchen Lease Deposit & Build-Out (or commissary deposit) | |
| Commercial Kitchen Equipment (range, oven, walk-in, prep) | |
| Refrigerated Transport Vehicle(s) | |
| Cambros, Chafing Dishes & Buffet Equipment | |
| China, Glassware, Flatware & Linens Inventory | |
| Smallwares (pots, sheet pans, utensils, knives) | |
| POS, Event Management Software & Website | |
| Licenses, Permits & ServSafe Certifications | |
| Initial Food & Packaging Inventory | |
| Branding, Website, Photography & Launch Marketing | |
| Insurance Deposits (liability, product, auto, workers' comp) | |
| Staff Hiring, Uniforms & Training | |
| Working Capital Reserve (3-6 months) | |
| Miscellaneous & Contingency (10%) | |
| Total Startup Investment | $215,000 |
Financial Projections
Enter your assumptions — we'll calculate Year 1 revenue, profit, and break-even automatically.
Your Business Plan
Review your complete catering business plan below. Use the Download Excel button at the bottom to export it as a full 9-sheet workbook.
Your Excel workbook includes a Cover Page, Executive Summary, Services & Menu, Market Analysis, Operations, Startup Costs, Year 1 P&L, 12-Month Cash Flow, and Pre-Launch Action Plan.
Get a 9-sheet professional spreadsheet with Year 1 P&L, 12-month cash flow, and break-even analysis — ready for your lender.
Turn your paper menu into an interactive online menu that your customers can browse and order from anywhere.
The template walks you through seven guided steps that together produce a complete, lender-ready plan. Each step focuses on one part of your catering business so you can think it through carefully instead of staring at a blank document. Expect the first pass to take 20-30 minutes — then plan to come back over a week or two to sharpen the numbers with real vendor quotes, kitchen lease terms, and competitive research before you hand it to a banker or pitch your first wedding venue.
A catering business plan is the document a lender, kitchen landlord, health department, or wedding-venue coordinator reads before they’ll give you money, lease you a kitchen, schedule your inspection, or add you to their preferred-vendor list. It’s also the document you’ll wish you had written if you try to launch a catering business without one and hit your first cash crunch in month three when the wedding deposits stop and the off-season starts. A complete plan answers six core questions: What is this catering business? Who is it for? Why will it win? How does it actually deliver a 150-guest event on a Saturday afternoon in June? How much does it cost to launch? And how much money will it make over a full year of seasonal swings?
Most catering business plans run 18-28 pages and follow the same seven-section structure this template uses. The first section is your executive summary — a one-page pitch of the whole plan, written last even though it appears first. Then comes your company overview (concept, mission, legal structure, founders), your services and menu section (event types, signature dishes, service style, sourcing, pricing), your market analysis (target client, competition, differentiation), your operations plan (kitchen, fleet, staffing, equipment, permit timeline), your marketing strategy (how you’ll fill the calendar in February, not just June), and finally your financial projections (startup costs, Year 1 P&L by month, 3-year forecasts, break-even, funding request).
What makes a catering plan different from a generic restaurant plan is the weight you put on three specific things: per-event unit economics (you make or lose money on each event, not on a steady daily covers count), off-premise logistics (transport, hot-holding, setup, breakdown, dishwashing all happen at the client’s venue with rented or borrowed infrastructure), and seasonality (wedding-heavy caterers do 50-60% of annual revenue between April and October; corporate caterers spike in December and dip in summer). Lenders who’ve seen restaurant plans will flag a catering plan that skips these details. Spend extra time on them.
The uncomfortable truth most catering owners learn the hard way: a refrigerated van costs more than your back-of-napkin estimate, and china/linens inventory adds up fast once you commit to owning instead of renting. A home-based or cottage-kitchen caterer can launch for $15,000 to $40,000. A commissary-launched caterer with no dedicated kitchen runs $25,000 to $70,000. A mid-size operation with a leased commercial kitchen and one refrigerated van typically costs $80,000 to $200,000. A full-service caterer with multiple vehicles, owned china/linens inventory, and a dedicated production kitchen lands $150,000 to $350,000+.
Below is a realistic breakdown for a mid-size full-service caterer with one leased commercial kitchen, one refrigerated van, and enough owned china/linens to serve 200 guests without rentals. Your numbers will shift based on city, real estate market, equipment age (new vs. used), and whether you start in a commissary kitchen for the first 6-12 months:
| Cost Category | Typical Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Kitchen lease deposit + build-out (or commissary deposit) | $0 – $80k | Commissary kitchens charge $15-$30/hr or $1k-$3k/mo with no build-out. Dedicated lease build-out runs $30k-$80k. |
| Commercial kitchen equipment (range, oven, walk-in, prep) | $25k – $80k | $0 if commissary. Walk-in alone is $10k-$25k. Used cuts equipment 40-60%. |
| Refrigerated transport van/truck | $10k – $40k | Used van $10k-$22k, new $20k-$40k. Refrigerated retrofit adds $5k-$15k. |
| Cambros, chafers, sterno, buffet equipment | $5k – $15k | Hot/cold cambros are non-negotiable for off-premise food safety. |
| China, glassware, flatware, linens inventory | $10k – $30k | Owning pays back vs. renting after ~15-25 events. Start with 1.5x your typical guest count. |
| Smallwares (sheet pans, utensils, knives, scales) | $3k – $8k | Hotel pans, half-sheets, chef knives, thermometers, scales. |
| Catering POS + event-management software + website | $3k – $7k | Total Party Planner, Caterease, Tripleseat, Curate (~$200-$500/mo). Website + booking. |
| Licenses, permits, ServSafe certifications | $1k – $4k | Business license, caterer’s license, health permit, ServSafe Manager. |
| Initial food + packaging inventory | $3k – $10k | Pantry build-out plus disposable containers and serving supplies. |
| Branding, website, photography, launch marketing | $5k – $15k | Logo, vehicle wrap, food photography, wedding-directory listings. |
| Insurance deposits (liability + product + auto + WC) | $3k – $8k | $1M minimum general liability. Product/liquor liability separate. |
| Staff hiring, training, uniforms | $2k – $8k | Branded chef coats, server aprons, training time before paid events. |
| Working capital reserve | $20k – $60k | 3-6 months operating cash. Catering revenue is lumpy — protect against gaps. |
| Total (mid-size full-service) | $80k – $300k | Commissary-launched: $25k-$70k. Multi-vehicle full-service: $250k-$500k. |
The single most overlooked line on this list is the refrigerated transport vehicle. New owners assume their personal SUV or a regular cargo van will do for the first six months, then realize you can’t legally hold cold food above 41°F or hot food below 135°F in transit — and one health-department complaint puts your permit at risk. Budget at least one refrigerated van. The second most overlooked: working capital. Catering revenue is lumpy — you’ll book a $25,000 wedding and collect a 50% deposit four months out, then have three slow weeks before the next event lands. New owners burn through startup cash on equipment and discover the business needs $15,000-$25,000 a month to operate during slow weeks. Budget a 3-6 month cash reserve so you can survive the seasonal gaps without desperate decisions. Pressure-test the total with our Restaurant Opening Calculator and check your unit economics with the Food Cost Calculator.
Financial projections are where most catering business plans fall apart — either the numbers are fantasy ("we’ll do $2M in Year 1") or they’re so vague no lender can evaluate them. A lender-ready catering P&L benchmarks against industry norms. Here’s what "normal" looks like for a successful independent caterer:
Revenue: Small caterers with 1-5 employees typically generate $80,000-$300,000 annually. Mid-size caterers with 6-20 staff land in the $300,000-$1.2M range. Large full-service catering companies with 20+ staff regularly produce $1M-$5M+. The drivers are events per month and average revenue per event. A healthy Year-1 mid-market caterer books 8-15 events a month at 60-120 guests each with an average per-guest revenue of $40-$80 (corporate drop-off skews lower, $15-$30; weddings skew higher, $60-$150). Don’t guess — pull pricing from 3-5 competitor websites in your market and build your assumptions from there. Wedding revenue is also heavily seasonal: 50-60% of annual revenue lands April-October.
Food Cost (COGS): The industry standard is 28-35% food cost across the menu. Corporate lunches typically run 25-32% (volume buying, simpler proteins), weddings 30-38% (higher-end proteins, more variety), specialty/cultural 28-34%, drop-off 25-30%. If your blended food cost runs above 35%, you’re either under-pricing per guest, over-portioning, or wasting too much. A caterer that lets food cost drift to 38% turns a profitable year into a break-even one. The 2026 ingredient-cost inflation environment makes this metric more important than ever — 82% of caterers report continued ingredient cost pressure, and the operators who survive are the ones tracking food cost weekly per event, not monthly.
Labor: Budget 28-35% of revenue for labor including payroll taxes, benefits, and event-day server pay. Catering labor is unique because it spikes hard on event days — a 150-guest plated wedding needs 10-12 servers for 6-8 hours each, all paid event-day rates. Build your labor model around event-day hours per event-staff-member per guest, not a steady weekly payroll. Full-service caterers run higher labor (32-38%) because of plated-service staffing; drop-off caterers run leaner (22-28%). If your model shows labor under 25% as a full-service caterer, you’re either understaffed or undercounting prep hours.
Kitchen Rent + Occupancy: Target 3-7% of revenue. Catering kitchens are cheaper than restaurant rent because you don’t need a street-front location — aim for a warehouse-district commissary or industrial-park lease. If you’re starting in a commissary kitchen at $1k-$3k/mo, your occupancy will be even lower. If kitchen rent is 10%+, your space is too expensive for your projected event volume.
Vehicle, Fuel & Transport: Plan on 3-5% of revenue — gas, vehicle maintenance, insurance, eventual replacement. This is the line item most new caterers miss completely. A van that does 200 events a year burns through tires, brakes, and refrigeration units.
Other expenses (insurance, marketing, software, packaging, supplies, repairs): plan on 8-12% of revenue. Catering insurance runs higher than restaurant insurance because you have product liability (food served off-premise), auto liability, and event-specific risk. Marketing budgets are also higher in Year 1 because you’re paying for wedding-directory listings ($200-$600/mo each) and food photography.
Net profit margin: A well-run catering business nets 7-15% in a stable year (Catersource industry average is 7-8%). Premium full-service caterers and high-volume corporate caterers with strong repeat business can reach 15-25% by Year 2-3. Year 1 is typically lean — plan for 3-8% and celebrate if you beat it. To pressure-test individual event pricing, run menus through our Catering Pricing Calculator and check our Profit Margin Calculator before you finalize your plan.
A business plan is a starting point, not a finish line. Once your plan is done and funded, you’ll spend the next 3-6 months turning it into an actual catering operation — and the caterer’s license + health department permit timeline drives most of the schedule. Here’s the practical sequence most successful owners follow:
Months 1-2: Lock in kitchen, name, and structure. Decide whether you’re starting in a commissary (cheaper, faster, lower commitment) or a dedicated leased kitchen (more control, more cost). Most successful catering startups begin in a commissary for the first 6-12 months. The day you sign the kitchen agreement, file your caterer’s license, business license, and health permit — in most cities it takes 60-90 days. If you’re still picking a name, use our Catering Business Name Generator for ideas and check the state trademark database before you spend a dollar on signage or vehicle wrap.
Months 2-4: Fleet, equipment, permits, and inventory. Refrigerated vans take 6-12 weeks to source, retrofit, or have built. Walk-in coolers (if you have a dedicated kitchen) have 8-10 week lead times. China, glassware, and linens inventory can be ordered in 2-4 weeks — but plan to test serving 50, 100, and 150 guests with your actual china before booking events of that size. Get ServSafe Food Manager certification for the owner plus at least one on-site supervisor.
Months 3-4: Menu development and tasting program. Every dish needs to be standardized, scaled to event-size batches, and costed before you publish a price. A canape recipe that works for 12 doesn’t automatically scale to 200. Build a recipe binder with weights in grams, photos, per-portion cost, and serving-platter setup notes. Pricing is its own discipline — use the Catering Pricing Calculator to nail margins on every menu package before you take your first inquiry.
Months 3-5: Build your sales pipeline before you launch. Catering doesn’t work like a restaurant — you don’t just open the doors. You need confirmed bookings in the calendar before launch day. Run 3-5 friends-and-family events at heavily discounted pricing to earn early reviews, photos, and testimonials. Pitch 6-10 local wedding venues for preferred-vendor status. Set up paid listings on The Knot, Zola, and WeddingWire. Reach out to 20-30 corporate office managers in your target area with a sample menu and pricing.
Months 4-5: Build your digital presence. Your business plan probably mentioned an online menu, a Google Business Profile, an instant-quote tool, and wedding directory presence. Now you actually need to build them. Menubly gives you a beautiful, mobile-friendly digital menu with package pricing, QR codes for tasting events and venue partnerships, and commission-free online ordering for drop-off and boxed-lunch business — in about 30 minutes, for $9.99/month. No delivery-app cuts, no developer needed. It’s the fastest way to turn the marketing section of your plan into something real clients can browse, share, and book from.
Months 5-6: Test event + first paid bookings. Cook a full menu at scale for 20-30 paying friends-and-family before your first real event. Test transport time, hot/cold holding, setup speed, dishwashing flow, and breakdown. After the first 3 paid events, refine pricing. Many caterers underprice initially — raise your per-guest rate 10-15% by event 5.
When you’re ready to refine the financial and operational details, pair this plan with the rest of the Menubly toolkit — Catering Pricing Calculator, Recipe Cost Calculator, Catering Name Generator, and Restaurant Labor Cost Calculator — to stress-test every assumption before you sign a single check.