Wedding Catering Cost Per Person in Lansing: 2026 Pricing Guide
Wedding catering pricing is the question we get asked most often, usually in the first phone call. Couples want a real number before they fall in love with a venue and a vendor and find out the math does not add up. The honest answer is a range, because per-person pricing depends on service style, headcount, menu choices, venue logistics, and a handful of other variables. This guide walks every one of those, with real 2026 numbers from Lansing, East Lansing, Okemos, and the surrounding Mid-Michigan area.
The other piece couples often ask about is graduation party catering, which we covered in our MSU graduation guide. Wedding pricing follows similar logic but tends to run higher because the service expectations are higher, the bar is usually included, and rentals are more elaborate.
Per-Person Ranges by Service Style
Service style is the single biggest cost lever after headcount. The same menu costs different amounts depending on how it gets to the guest.
| Service Style | Per-Person (Food Only) | What's Included |
|---|---|---|
| Buffet | $30 to $50 | Two or three proteins, two starches, two vegetables, salad, rolls, china or disposable |
| Family-Style | $32 to $55 | Same menu items served to the table on shared platters |
| Plated Dinner | $35 to $65 | Composed plates, salad course, full place settings, more service staff |
| Chef-Attended Stations | $40 to $70 | Carving, pasta, sushi, taco, or themed stations with chef interaction |
| Heavy Hors d'Oeuvres | $25 to $45 | 8 to 12 passed and stationary items, no formal seated meal |
| Brunch | $22 to $40 | Egg dishes, pastries, fruit, breakfast meats, often Sunday afternoon |
The lower end of each range applies to simpler menus (chicken and pork rather than beef tenderloin and lamb), smaller cocktail hours, and venues that come with their own equipment. The higher end applies to premium proteins, dietary accommodations, more staff per guest, and rental-heavy setups.
What's Actually in the Per-Person Number
Per-person pricing is a starting point, not a total. Read carefully. Most reputable Lansing caterers itemize so couples can see what is in the food-only number and what gets added. The typical add-ons:
- Staff labor. Bartenders, servers, kitchen staff. Usually $25 to $40 per hour per staff member with a 4 to 6 hour minimum. A 100-guest wedding needs 4 to 6 servers and 2 bartenders.
- Bar service. Beer, wine, and a basic cocktail bar runs $18 to $30 per person for 4 hours of open bar. Premium liquor or a full mixology program runs $30 to $55 per person.
- Rentals. Linens at $12 to $25 per table. Upgraded china at $1.50 to $4 per place setting. Glassware at $0.75 to $2 per glass.
- Cake or dessert service. If the wedding cake is from a different vendor, most caterers charge $1 to $3 per person to cut and serve.
- Gratuity. Usually 18 to 22 percent on food and beverage. Some caterers include it, some leave it as the couple's discretion.
- Michigan sales tax. 6 percent on food and beverage. Tax on rentals varies by category.
The realistic total ends up roughly 1.5x to 2x the food-only per-person number once everything is added. A $40 buffet on paper often lands at $65 to $80 per person all-in.
What 100 Guests Costs
Couples find the per-person number abstract until it gets multiplied. Here is what the same Lansing wedding looks like at a typical 100-guest count, in 2026 dollars, including the realistic add-ons.
| Service Style | Food (100 guests) | Bar, Staff, Rentals, Tax | Total |
|---|---|---|---|
| Buffet (mid-tier menu) | $3,500 to $4,500 | $3,500 to $5,000 | $7,000 to $9,500 |
| Family-Style | $3,800 to $5,000 | $3,800 to $5,500 | $7,600 to $10,500 |
| Plated (3-course) | $4,500 to $6,000 | $4,000 to $6,000 | $8,500 to $12,000 |
| Chef Stations | $5,000 to $6,500 | $4,200 to $6,500 | $9,200 to $13,000 |
Those numbers assume a Saturday wedding with 4 hours of bar service, basic linens, china (not disposable), and 22 percent gratuity. Brunch weddings, smaller bar packages, or buffet with disposable china can pull a 100-guest event down toward $5,500.
What Moves the Number
Beyond service style, four variables decide where in the range a quote actually lands.
Headcount
Per-person pricing usually includes a sliding scale. Smaller weddings (under 50 guests) tend to run higher per person because the kitchen and staffing minimums spread over fewer people. Larger weddings (150+) often pull the per-person number down by 5 to 15 percent because the kitchen is operating closer to its efficient capacity. The sweet spot for cost-per-guest is usually the 100 to 150 range.
Menu Choices
Premium proteins (filet mignon, sea bass, lamb) carry a $4 to $10 per-person premium over standard options (chicken, pork, baked salmon). Adding a vegetarian-only main raises the price. Adding a vegan-only main raises it further. Building a buffet or family-style menu around a single high-quality protein with strong sides usually beats adding more dishes at lower quality.
Venue Logistics
Some Lansing wedding venues come with full kitchen access, included rentals, and a working dish room. Others are blank-slate barn or estate venues where everything has to be brought in. The latter category usually adds $3 to $8 per person for additional staff, prep stations, and equipment rental. Ask the venue what comes included before pricing the catering.
Time of Year and Day of Week
Saturday evenings in May, June, September, and October are peak. Pricing is firm. Sunday afternoons, Friday evenings, and any weekend in November through March tend to carry 10 to 25 percent flexibility on the food-only line, sometimes more if the caterer is filling an open Sunday slot. Brunch weddings are the cheapest option at any time of year.
How to Get an Honest Quote
The fastest way to get a useful per-person quote is to share four pieces of information up front:
- Headcount range (a 20-person spread is fine; 90 to 110 is workable for a quote).
- Date or month, and whether the day is locked in.
- Venue name (or "venue not chosen yet").
- Service style preference, even if it's a "leaning toward buffet" rather than a final decision.
That gives a caterer enough to send a real proposal within one or two business days. Vague inquiries (just "wedding catering pricing") usually come back with vague pricing. Specific inquiries get specific pricing. A site like the Knot publishes its national average wedding catering survey each year if couples want a broader benchmark, but Lansing-specific pricing tends to run 10 to 20 percent below the national average.
Where to Save and Where Not To
Couples sometimes feel pressure to cut catering to fit the overall budget. Some places to cut work fine. Others damage the experience.
Cuts that work: shorter bar window (3 hours instead of 5), beer-and-wine instead of full bar, fewer protein options on a buffet, family-style instead of plated, dessert table instead of cake-cutting service, weekday or Sunday wedding.
Cuts that hurt: too few staff (guests wait in long buffet lines), trying to cater the wedding yourself or relying on family (kitchen logistics during the ceremony are no fun), under-counting the headcount (running out of food is the single most-remembered catering failure).
Ready for a Real Quote?
Tell us your date, headcount range, and venue. We'll send back a per-person breakdown and a full proposal within one business day.
Get a Catering QuoteFrequently Asked Questions
What is the average wedding catering cost per person in Lansing in 2026?
Wedding catering in the Lansing area averages $35 to $65 per person for a full-service plated dinner, $30 to $50 for buffet style, $32 to $55 for family-style, and $40 to $70 for chef-attended stations. Total per-person spend including bar, rentals, gratuity, and tax tends to land $20 to $40 above those food-only ranges. Most Lansing weddings book in the buffet range.
What does the per-person catering price actually include?
Food-only per-person pricing typically covers the menu items, basic china or disposables, serving utensils, and chafers for buffet service. It usually does not include staff labor, bar service, rentals (linens, glassware, additional china), gratuity, or sales tax. Reputable Lansing caterers itemize each line so couples can see what is in the per-person number and what gets added.
How much should we budget total for catering on a 100-guest Lansing wedding?
A 100-guest Lansing wedding typically lands at $5,000 to $9,000 for a buffet, $5,500 to $10,000 for family-style, $6,000 to $11,500 for plated dinner, and $7,500 to $13,000 for stations. Add $1,500 to $4,000 for staff, rentals, and gratuity, plus 6 percent Michigan sales tax. Budget $8,000 to $14,000 total for a typical buffet wedding of that size.
Why does plated dinner cost more than buffet?
Plated service requires more kitchen labor (each plate is composed in real time) and more front-of-house staff (one server per 12 to 15 guests instead of buffet's one per 25 to 30). It also requires more china and full place settings. The food cost itself is similar to buffet, but the staffing and rental load adds $5 to $15 per person depending on the menu and service style.
Are there ways to bring wedding catering cost down without going downmarket?
Several. A passed-appetizer cocktail hour with a plated entree skips the salad course and saves $4 to $8 per person. Family-style holds the elegance of plated at buffet pricing. Picking two proteins instead of three on a buffet saves $3 to $6 per person. A Sunday afternoon brunch wedding runs 25 to 35 percent less than a Saturday evening dinner. None of those reduce the experience, just the spend.
How far in advance should we book wedding catering in Lansing?
Book 9 to 12 months out for a Saturday in May, June, September, or October, the four busiest wedding months in Mid-Michigan. Other months, 6 months out is usually enough. Last-minute bookings within 90 days are sometimes possible but the menu options shrink and the price flexibility disappears. Lock the venue first, then the caterer immediately after.