Key takeaways
- Divide guests by seats per table and round up: guest tables = ⌈guests ÷ seats⌉.
- Seats depend on the table: a 60-inch round seats 8, a 72-inch round seats 10, an 8-ft banquet seats 8–10.
- Add tables for gifts, cake, food, and a head/sweetheart table.
- Make sure the venue or tent can physically fit the tables with room to walk between them.
The basic formula
Counting tables is mostly one piece of arithmetic: take your guest count, divide it by how many people sit at each table, and round up so nobody is left standing. The only judgment call is how many seats each table really holds, which depends entirely on the table type and how comfortable you want guests to be.
Chairs always equal your guest count, and you need one linen per table — including the gift, cake, and food tables, not just the seated ones. Let the table seating calculator do the rounding and the linen tally for you in one pass.
Seats per table by type
Round tables are measured by diameter, banquet tables by length. Here is the comfortable seating most rental companies and event planners use:
| Table type | Comfortable seats |
|---|---|
| 48-inch round | 6 |
| 60-inch round | 8 |
| 72-inch round | 10 |
| 6-ft banquet (rectangular) | 6–8 |
| 8-ft banquet (rectangular) | 8–10 |
| Cocktail (standing) | 0 seated |
These are comfortable numbers. You can usually add one or two extra seats to a round for a maximum, but place settings get tight and elbows start bumping — fine for cake and coffee, less fun for a full plated dinner. Cocktail tables seat nobody; they are perch-and-mingle stations, so they do not count toward your seated total at all.
A worked example: 100 guests
Say you are hosting 100 guests and renting 60-inch round tables that seat 8. Run the formula: ⌈100 ÷ 8⌉ = 13 tables (12.5 rounds up to 13). You will need 100 chairs — one per guest — and 13 linens to dress every table. Then add your non-seated tables on top: typically one for gifts, one for the cake or dessert, one or two for a buffet, and a head or sweetheart table for the guests of honor. That can easily bring your linen count to 17 or 18 even though only 13 tables hold diners.
Mixing types and leaving room to move
You do not have to use a single table type. Many hosts mix a long banquet head table with round guest tables, or drop in a couple of cocktail tables near the bar. Just total the seats across every table and check it covers your guest count.
The bigger trap is space. A room or tent has to physically fit the tables plus walking aisles, chairs pulled out, and any dance floor. As a rough guide, a seated 60-inch round needs about a 10-foot footprint once you account for chairs and clearance. Before you lock in a count, confirm the square footage with the venue capacity calculator, and if you are going outdoors, size the structure with the tent size calculator so your tables actually fit under cover.
Frequently asked questions
How many tables do I need for 100 guests?
At 60-inch rounds that seat 8: ⌈100 ÷ 8⌉ = 13 guest tables. Add a few more for gifts, cake, the buffet, and a head/sweetheart table.
How many people fit at a 60-inch round table?
A 60-inch round comfortably seats 8 adults — you can squeeze in 10, but settings get tight. Plan on 8 for a relaxed dinner.
Should I use round or banquet tables?
Rounds favor conversation and open dancing; long banquet tables fit more people into narrow rooms and suit family-style or buffet layouts. Mixing both is common.