Should I open a catering business in 2027?
Direct Answer
Yes — open a catering business in 2027 if you can secure a recurring corporate or wedding-venue contract pipeline *before* you sign a commissary lease, you have $45,000-$120,000 in working capital, and you (or a co-founder) have already run banquet lines at scale. Probably not — unless you can show 6-12 booked deposits in your first 90 days.
Realistic floor: $45K all-in for a shared-kitchen launch, $120K-$250K for a dedicated commissary build. Breakeven typically lands at months 8-14; Year-1 owner cash flow ranges from negative $15K to positive $55K depending on event mix. Corporate drop-off (recurring, $420 average order) is more bankable than weddings ($25K per event but lumpy and seasonal).
Do not open this business on borrowed restaurant logic — it is a logistics business with food attached, not a restaurant.
The Real Numbers
The U.S. Caterers industry (NAICS 722320) is a $15.7 billion market in 2026, growing at a 6.7% CAGR over the prior five years per IBISWorld. The industry is highly fragmented — no operator holds >5% market share — which means a disciplined local operator can carve out share without competing with a Sysco-scale incumbent.
RestaurantOwner.com's 2023 survey pegs median catering startup cost at $75,000, but actual ranges vary by 10x depending on kitchen model.
Below are the honest 2027 unit economics a first-time owner should underwrite against, blended from IBISWorld 722320, National Restaurant Association member data, ezCater corporate-catering benchmarks, and shared-kitchen operator quotes.
| Metric | Home/Cottage Model | Shared Commissary | Own Commercial Kitchen |
|---|---|---|---|
| Startup CapEx + working capital | $2,000-$10,000 | $15,000-$45,000 | $50,000-$250,000 |
| Monthly fixed cost | $400-$900 | $1,800-$4,500 | $9,000-$22,000 |
| Food cost (% of revenue) | 27-29% | 27-29% | 27-29% |
| Labor cost (% of revenue) | 12-15% | 16-17% | 18-22% |
| Gross margin | 40-55% | 30-45% | 30-50% |
| Net (EBITDA) margin | 10-18% | 7-15% | 5-12% |
| Year-1 revenue (typical) | $40K-$120K | $180K-$420K | $450K-$1.2M |
| Breakeven | months 3-6 | months 8-14 | months 14-24 |
| Payback on CapEx | <12 months | 18-30 months | 36-60 months |
Per-event benchmarks (BusinessDojo / ezCater / National Restaurant Association, 2026):
- Corporate drop-off average order: $420 (up 12% YoY), 25 headcount average
- Mid-range wedding: $25,000 per event (range $8K-$40K+)
- Per-guest revenue: $45 industry average; $16-$35 budget; $35-$70 mid; $100-$250+ full-service
- Top decile catering operators hit 15-20% net margin; industry median is 7-12%
Who Wins With This Business
The catering operators who clear $50K+ in Year-1 owner earnings share a common profile, and it is not "loves to cook."
- Former banquet chefs or hotel F&B managers. They already know production timing for 200 covers, the difference between a convection oven hold and a dry pan, and how to staff a 4-hour event at a 1:25 server-to-guest ratio. Skill transfer is direct.
- Operators with a built-in corporate channel. A spouse in HR at a 400-person SaaS company, a connection to a hospital cafeteria contract, or a relationship with a wedding venue's preferred-vendor list is worth more than $50K in marketing spend.
- Process-oriented founders. Catering is prep-list discipline, BEO accuracy, and load-out checklists — the chef who can write a timed pull-sheet beats the chef with more Michelin stars.
- Owners willing to specialize. Indian wedding catering, kosher corporate, BBQ drop-off, vegan-only — narrow lanes get $8-15 per-head pricing premium and lower CAC through community referral.
- Markets with 250K+ population, 5%+ household income growth, and active wedding-venue clusters — DFW exurbs, Charlotte, Boise, Nashville, Tampa, Phoenix West Valley.
Who Loses With This Business
- The "I love to host dinner parties" founder. Hosting 12 friends is zero correlation to plating 180 covers off a 6-burner in a parking lot in August. This founder runs out of cash by month 9.
- Anyone underwriting wedding-only revenue. Weddings concentrate in May, June, September, October — 70% of revenue in 4 months is a payroll bomb in February.
- Operators relying on Instagram and Yelp. Corporate catering buyers use ezCater, Hungry, CaterCow, and direct-rep relationships — consumer review platforms drive <10% of B2B catering revenue.
- Undercapitalized founders. Catering has a 45-90 day A/R cycle for corporate (net-30 invoice + 2-week approval drift) but food and labor are weekly cash out. $30K minimum working capital is the floor; $60K is safer.
- Markets with >3 dominant incumbents holding the top wedding venues. If 3 caterers own the preferred-vendor lists at the top 8 venues, your wedding pipeline is structurally capped before you start.
2027 Market Conditions
Four forces shape catering economics in 2027, and they cut in different directions.
Tailwinds. Return-to-office (RTO) mandates at Fortune 500 employers continue driving corporate lunch budgets — ezCater reported 12% YoY growth in corporate average order value. Wedding spend rebounded to $33,000 average wedding per The Knot's 2025 Real Weddings Study, with catering at 35-40% of that budget.
Hybrid work created a new SKU: "team offsite" catering for monthly in-office days, a higher-frequency lower-ticket pattern.
Headwinds. Food cost inflation ran 3.2% in 2025 (BLS CPI Food Away From Home) and continues at 2.5-3.5% projected through 2027 — operators who locked menu pricing into annual corporate contracts in 2025 are getting margin-squeezed in 2027. Kitchen labor is structurally tight: BLS reports food prep wages up 18% since 2022 with no slack expected.
Liability insurance for foodborne illness has hardened — premiums up 15-25% since 2023.
The 2027-specific shift is the rise of ghost-kitchen-as-catering. Operators like CloudKitchens and Reef now offer commissary + delivery + dispatching as a bundle at $2,200-$3,800/month, undercutting traditional commercial leases and lowering the CapEx floor by 40-60% for drop-off catering specifically.
The 90-Day Decision Tree
- Days 1-15: Channel test before kitchen lease. Email 20 corporate prospects (HR, EA, office-manager titles) and 5 wedding venues with a single-page sample menu and pricing. Goal: 3 paid test orders or 2 venue preferred-vendor inquiries. If you get zero, your local market is saturated — stop and pivot to a specialty (kosher, halal, vegan, ethnic-specific).
- Days 16-30: Kitchen decision. With test orders in hand, choose shared commissary ($15-50/hr) if you project <10 events/month, dedicated month-to-month rental if 10-25 events/month, or own build-out only if you have a signed 12-month corporate contract worth $200K+. Do not lease ahead of revenue.
- Days 31-45: Permits and insurance. Get food-manager certification (ServSafe, $100-200), county health department permit ($150-800), general liability ($500-1,500/year), product liability ($500-1,500/year), commercial auto on any vehicle used for transport, and workers' comp if you have W-2 staff. Form LLC or S-corp before first invoice — never operate as a sole prop with food liability.
- Days 46-60: Build the operating spine. Adopt Total Party Planner, Curate, or Caterease ($75-200/month) for BEOs and scheduling; QuickBooks Online ($35-100/month) for books; Gusto ($40 + $6/employee) for payroll. Create 6 menu tiers (drop-off lunch, plated dinner, buffet, hors d'oeuvres, breakfast, dessert station) with per-head pricing, minimums, and gratuity policy.
- Days 61-75: Hire the first two. A sous chef ($22-32/hr) and a lead server / event captain ($20-28/hr). Both must be W-2 for liability. Cross-train so either can run a small event solo.
- Days 76-90: First 10 events. Track food cost % per event (target <30%), labor cost % per event (target <22%), gross margin per event (target >40%), and NPS / 5-star review rate (target >85%). Adjust pricing if any number misses by 5 percentage points.
Alternative Plays
If full catering looks too capital-intensive, four adjacent plays capture 60-80% of the upside at 20-40% of the capital risk:
- Drop-off corporate lunch only. No servers, no on-site cooking, no rentals. $15K-$25K all-in, list on ezCater + Hungry, target office-manager buyers. Top operators clear $300K-$600K revenue at 18-22% net margin.
- Personal chef / in-home dinner parties. $3K-$8K startup, $80-$150 per guest, no commissary needed (cook in client home). The Personal Chef Association estimates median earner at $52K-$78K post-Year-2.
- Specialty single-product caterer. BBQ trailer, taco cart, paella truck, dessert bar specialist. $25K-$60K in equipment, higher per-head pricing, lower competitive density. Often hybridizes with food truck licensing.
- Cottage food + meal-prep delivery. 40+ states allow cottage food production under $50K-$100K annual revenue caps. Pair with weekly meal-prep subscription ($120-$200/week per household) for predictable recurring revenue.
FAQ
How much money do I actually need in the bank before opening a catering business in 2027?
Treat $45,000 as the absolute floor for a shared-commissary launch: $8K equipment, $5K permits and insurance, $3K software/marketing, and $29K working capital to cover 8-12 weeks of payroll, food float, and net-30 corporate receivables. Going below $45K means one slow month or one canceled wedding ends the business.
$60K-$80K is the realistic comfort zone for a first-time owner.
Is corporate or wedding catering more profitable in 2027?
Corporate is more bankable; weddings are higher-ticket. Corporate drop-off averages $420 per order, 25 headcount, recurring weekly at a single client — 15-18% net margin at scale. Weddings hit $25K per event but concentrate 70% of revenue in 4 months, require rentals + staffing, and carry higher cancellation risk — 7-12% net margin typical.
Most stable operators blend both: 60% corporate base, 40% wedding upside.
Do I need to own a commercial kitchen or can I use someone else's?
You can absolutely use someone else's, and most profitable first-year catering businesses do. Shared commissaries charge $15-50/hour or $1,800-$4,500/month for private blocks. Ghost-kitchen operators (CloudKitchens, Reef) offer commissary + delivery + dispatch bundles at $2,200-$3,800/month.
Renting a restaurant's off-hours (8 PM-6 AM) often runs $500-$1,500/month. Owning your own kitchen makes sense only above $500K annual revenue.
What kills most new catering businesses in the first 18 months?
Three causes, in order of frequency: (1) undercapitalization — running out of working capital during net-30 A/R lag; (2) wedding-season concentration — no revenue Jan-March; (3) food-cost drift — letting food cost creep from 28% to 38% without raising menu prices. Foodborne-illness incidents kill <2% of operators but end the business immediately when they happen — product liability insurance is non-negotiable.
How do I get my first 10 catering clients without spending on ads?
Skip Instagram and Yelp. For corporate: list on ezCater, Hungry, and CaterCow (B2B marketplaces), then cold-email 50 office managers and EAs at companies with 50-500 employees in a 10-mile radius. For weddings: apply to be a preferred vendor at 3-5 venues — bring a tasting plate and a one-page pricing sheet, not a pitch deck.
Word-of-mouth from venue coordinators drives 40-60% of mid-tier wedding catering bookings.
Bottom Line
Catering in 2027 is a viable but unforgiving business. The $15.7B fragmented market with 6.7% CAGR leaves room for disciplined local operators, but the median 7-12% net margin punishes anyone who treats it like a restaurant or a hobby. Win by booking 3 paid test orders before signing any lease, anchoring on corporate recurring revenue before weddings, capitalizing at $45K-$80K minimum, and obsessing over food cost % and labor % weekly.
Lose by underwriting wedding-only revenue, leasing your own kitchen before $200K of booked contracts, or going in without banquet operations experience. The realistic Year-1 outcome for a prepared first-time operator: $180K-$420K revenue, $12K-$55K owner earnings, breakeven months 8-14.
If those numbers excite you, this is the right business. If they disappoint you, specialty drop-off corporate or personal chef is the better play.
Sources
- IBISWorld — Caterers in the US Industry Analysis, NAICS 722320, 2026 edition
- U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics — Food Services and Drinking Places (NAICS 722) employment and wage data
- U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics — CPI Food Away From Home, 2025-2026
- RestaurantOwner.com — 2023 New Restaurant & Catering Startup Cost Survey
- National Restaurant Association — 2026 State of the Restaurant Industry Report
- EzCater — LunchRush corporate catering benchmark report, 2026
- The Knot — Real Weddings Study, 2025 catering spend data
- BusinessDojo — Catering average revenue, profit and margins, 2026
- Wifitalents — Catering Statistics, 2026 fact-checked compilation
- FinancialModelsLab — Catering Service Startup Costs and Break-Even Analysis
- StartCosts.com — How to Start a Catering Business in 2026 Complete Guide
- Restroworks — Catering Business Start Up Costs, Equipment, Licenses & Profit Guide