

A price comparison between buffet, set menu and finger food often fails on one mistake: only the per-person food price is compared, not the true total. This is exactly where the surprises on the invoice come from.
Each format follows its own cost logic. With a buffet you pay mainly for quantity and variety, but need almost no service. With a set menu you pay for courses, plating and above all for the service staff who bring every plate. With finger food you pay for many small, individually made components, but save on tableware and seating. The list price says little until the extra costs are included.
For budgeting this means the cheapest format on paper can end up the most expensive. How catering is calculated in general and which line items belong in it is set out in our guide to catering costs for companies. This article focuses on the direct comparison of the three formats.

Figure 1: Price range per person by format. Buffet around €18 to €30 (light salad and lunch buffets from about €15). Finger food around €25 to €40. Plated set menu around €30 to €55 including service. The figures cover food plus typical extra costs, not the bare list price.
The figure shows the pattern most enquiries confirm: buffet is cheapest on average, finger food sits above it, the plated menu tops the range. The deciding factor, though, is the spread within each format, because a light salad buffet and a three-course premium buffet are far apart in price.
The buffet is the value champion among the formats, as long as you keep the quantities under control. Per head it usually comes in lowest, because a single setup feeds many guests and no plate is served individually.
The range is wide. A light salad or lunch buffet starts at around €15 per person, a two-course buffet sits at about €25, and a three-course buffet with warm components reaches just under €29 per person. Premium and barbecue buffets are open-ended at the top and can cost well over €40 per person. For most company occasions the sensible buffet sits in the €18 to €30 corridor.
The catch with a buffet is quantity. It is calculated per person, but at the buffet everyone helps themselves differently. Caterers therefore build in safety quantities, which are part of the price. Order too tightly and you risk empty bowls before the end; plan too generously and you pay for leftovers. A realistic head count is the most important cost lever here.
In equipment, a warm buffet needs chafing dishes, buffet tables and tableware. These items are manageable but add up to a few euros per guest. Service staff are optional at a classic self-service buffet and often unnecessary, which makes the buffet considerably cheaper than the set menu.
Finger food is seen as the relaxed, easy-going format, but on price it is often the surprise. At around €25 to €40 per person it regularly sits above the buffet, even though the portions look smaller.
The reason lies in production. Finger food consists of many small, individually made bites that are more labour-intensive in the kitchen than one large buffet bowl. More handwork per bite means more labour time, and that lands in the price. An eGora finger-food menu, for example, sits at around €32 per person and clearly above a comparable buffet.
In return, finger food saves elsewhere. It needs no seating, almost no tableware, and suits formats where guests are meant to stand and network. For a reception, a gallery opening or a summer party with bar tables it is often exactly right. How finger food can be put together in practice is shown on our finger-food catering page.
Quantity planning matters: as a filling meal you need noticeably more pieces per person than at a buffet, often twelve to fifteen bites for a full meal. Anyone planning finger food as the main catering rather than just a snack should factor that in, otherwise the format gets expensive and still leaves guests hungry.

The plated multi-course menu is the most premium of the three formats and the most expensive. At around €30 to €55 per person including service it sits clearly above buffet and finger food, but offers the most representative experience.
The food price alone does not explain that. A menu for larger events starts at around €24 per person for the food and rises with the number of courses and the quality of the ingredients. The real cost driver is the service staff. Every plate is brought and cleared, which calls for roughly one server per 15 to 20 guests. At around €35 to €40 per hour per person, that adds up significantly over an evening.
On top comes plating. A composed plate needs more preparation, more tableware and an orderly kitchen logistic. This is exactly what makes the menu the format for occasions where impression counts: a gala dinner, a client event or a festive Christmas party with seated dining.
For a plain team lunch, by contrast, the menu is usually oversized. Anyone feeding staff on weekdays is far more economical with a buffet or simple lunch concepts from around €9 per person. The menu unfolds its value where representation and experience justify the higher price.
Only the extra costs make the comparison honest. Comparing food prices side by side compares three different things. Service, equipment, drinks and waste shift the picture, sometimes considerably.
With a buffet, equipment and a calculated safety quantity are added to the food price, while staff are often unnecessary. With finger food the food price is already the main driver, but tableware and seating logistics fall away almost entirely. With the menu, service staff are the biggest extra item and can raise the per-person price by several euros. Drinks, delivery and setup apply to all three formats and should never be forgotten. Which items tend to get overlooked is examined in our article on the budget per employee.

Figure 2: Decision matrix occasion to format. Daily team lunch: buffet or simple lunch concept, cheap and quick. Standing reception or networking: finger food, flexible without seating. Team event or summer party: buffet or barbecue buffet, sociable and plannable. Representative dinner or client event: plated set menu, premium with service. Large group of 100 or more: buffet, because it scales cheapest per head.
The matrix makes the heart of the comparison tangible: there is no generally best format, only one that fits each occasion. A realistic minimum order value and a clean head count are the basis for every format, as our overview of the minimum order value in catering shows.
The choice of format follows the occasion, not gut feeling. Three questions usually lead to the right decision: are guests seated or standing, how representative should the occasion feel, and how big is the group.
For weekday staff catering and the classic team lunch, the buffet or a simple lunch concept is the most economical choice. It is set up quickly, plannable and cheapest per head. For a reception, a product launch or a networking format where people should keep moving, finger food is the natural fit.
For representation, such as a client dinner or a festive seated meal, the plated menu justifies its higher price through the experience. And for very large groups of around 100 or more, the buffet remains the only variant that scales cleanly in both cost and logistics.
A combination is often sensible too, such as a finger-food reception to start and a buffet as the main catering. That way each part of the occasion gets the right format without the budget running away.

The price comparison of buffet, set menu and finger food cannot be won on the food price alone. The buffet is usually cheapest at around €18 to €30 per person and the solid choice for team lunch as well as large groups. Finger food sits above it at €25 to €40 and pays off where flexibility and standing formats count. The plated set menu is the most expensive at €30 to €55 including service and worth its price where representation is required.
For the team lunch the buffet stays the cheapest choice; for the client dinner the menu earns its surcharge. Folding service, equipment and waste into both calculations from the start gives a per-person price that matches the final invoice.
Usually the buffet at around €18 to €30 per person, because it needs little service and one setup feeds many guests. Light salad or lunch buffets even start at about €15 per person.
Because finger food consists of many small, individually made bites that take more labour time to produce than one large buffet bowl. A finger-food menu therefore often sits at around €32 per person, above a comparable buffet.
At a classic self-service buffet usually not, which makes it considerably cheaper than the plated menu. With a menu, by contrast, service calls for roughly one person per 15 to 20 guests at around €35 to €40 per hour.
For very large groups of around 100 or more, the buffet is usually the only variant that scales cleanly in cost and logistics. Plated menu and finger food tend to suit smaller and medium occasions.
As a full meal you reckon on around twelve to fifteen bites per person, far fewer as a reception snack. Anyone planning finger food as the main catering should factor in the higher count, otherwise it gets expensive and still leaves guests hungry.
Above all service staff, equipment such as chafing dishes and tableware, drinks, plus delivery and setup. Depending on the format, these items can shift the per-person price by several euros and belong in every honest calculation.
