Planning pizza for a party sounds easy until you start doing the math. One person wants pepperoni, another needs gluten-free, the kids barely eat, and the adults might come hungry. In this episode of Beyond the Crust, host Mike Downer speaks with Kerry Petersen, owner and founder of Northern Lights Pizza, about the real-world rules behind feeding groups of all sizes. The central question is simple: how much pizza for 20 people? The answer depends on appetite, timing, toppings, sides, and whether your crowd is made up of adults, children, athletes, or a mix of everyone.
According to Kerry, the biggest mistake people make is assuming there is one perfect number for every event. Pizza ordering depends heavily on context. A lunchtime office meeting is different from a children’s birthday party, which is different again from feeding a football team after practice.
The first thing to consider is whether pizza is the main meal or just a snack. If pizza is the centerpiece of lunch or dinner, you need more. If it is being served alongside pasta, salad, appetizers, breadsticks, or dessert, you can reduce the pizza count slightly.
Kerry also points out that appetite varies by group. Adults typically eat more than young children. Teenagers and athletes may eat far more than the average guest. For corporate catering, he even considers the mix of the group because some audiences naturally eat heavier portions than others.
For adult groups, Kerry recommends estimating about two and a half slices per person when pizza is served as a meal. This guideline is based on large pizzas, which are typically cut into eight slices. That means one large pizza usually feeds about two to three adults comfortably, or possibly four lighter eaters.
The two-and-a-half-slice rule also leaves room for common sides. If you are serving breadsticks, Kerry suggests planning for about two breadsticks per person. That may be slightly more than some guests will eat, but it creates a helpful buffer because some people will naturally go back for extra.
This buffer matters. In catering, running out of food is one of the worst outcomes. Guests may forgive having leftovers, but they will remember leaving hungry. Kerry’s philosophy is clear: it is better to have a little too much than not enough.
Children usually need less pizza than adults. For younger kids under ten, Kerry estimates about one slice each, or slightly more if pizza is the main lunch. Older kids and teenagers may need adult-sized portions, especially if they are active or attending after school, sports, or another energy-heavy activity.
Sides also change the math. If you are serving salad, breadsticks, pasta, wings, or other filling foods, you may be able to reduce the estimate to about two slices per adult. If pizza is the only food, stay closer to the full two-and-a-half-slice estimate.
Time of day matters too. Lunch crowds may eat a little lighter, while dinner guests may expect a fuller meal. Late-night events can also be unpredictable because guests may snack casually rather than eat a structured meal. The safest approach is to think about how hungry people are likely to be when the food arrives.
Kerry has catered events ranging from small gatherings to crowds of thousands, and his stories show why planning matters. At one wedding, the team brought enough food, but allowing guests to self-serve a pasta bar caused the buffet to disappear quickly. Some guests piled plates high, leaving less for others. The lesson was not just about quantity, but about service style.
For large events, portion control and setup are just as important as the number of pizzas ordered. Buffet lines can slow down when there are too many choices. Self-service can lead to uneven portions. Delivery timing can also affect the experience, especially when hundreds of pizzas need to arrive hot.
Kerry explains that Northern Lights Pizza has coordinated orders of hundreds of pizzas by using multiple locations and careful timing. That kind of experience helps ensure food arrives fresh, hot, and ready to serve.
When ordering for a crowd, Kerry recommends keeping most pizzas simple. Pepperoni, sausage, and cheese are reliable choices because they appeal to the widest range of people. Too many specialty options can slow down the line and make decision-making harder for guests.
That does not mean you cannot add variety. A few specialty pizzas can be a nice touch, but they should not make up the majority of the order unless you know your group well. For most events, the safest approach is to order crowd-pleasing basics first, then add a smaller number of specialty or dietary-specific pizzas.
Dietary needs should be communicated early. Kerry stresses that restaurants can often accommodate requests, but they need enough notice to prepare properly.
Gluten-free orders require special care because cross-contact can be a serious issue. Kerry explains that his team uses dedicated steps, including separate cutting tools, to reduce risk. Allergies are treated with even greater seriousness. Fresh ingredients, careful handling, and clear communication all help protect guests.
Vegetarian options are usually easier to provide, while vegan requests may require more specific discussion because expectations can vary. The key is to tell the caterer what is needed before the event, not when the driver arrives.
One of the most common mistakes is ordering based only on personal preference. The host may love a certain specialty pizza, but that does not mean the whole group will. Another mistake is underordering to save money. In practice, too little food creates stress and a poor guest experience.
Hosts also underestimate setup time. Large orders need space, tables, serving tools, and a plan for keeping lines moving. Finally, Kerry advises customers to trust experienced caterers. Professionals who feed large groups regularly know which combinations work, how much people tend to eat, and where problems usually happen.
A good rule is about two and a half slices per adult when pizza is the main meal. If you are serving sides, you may be able to plan closer to two slices per person.
Younger children usually eat about one slice each. Older kids and teenagers may need more, especially if they are hungry or active.
Most large pizzas are cut into eight slices. Some thin-crust pizzas may be cut into squares, but the large-pizza estimate still works well for group planning.
Cheese, pepperoni, and sausage are the safest choices for most groups. Add a few specialty pizzas only after covering the basics.
Yes, especially for events where pizza is the main meal. Extra pizza can be taken home, but running out can leave a bad impression.
Mention them when placing the order. Gluten-free needs, allergies, vegetarian requests, and vegan preferences are easier to handle safely with advance notice.
Know your audience, estimate your headcount carefully, keep the menu simple, give your caterer enough notice, and remember the question every host eventually asks: how much pizza for 20 people?