How Many Porta Potties Do You Need? (Reference Tables + Calculator)
Whether you’re planning a wedding, a backyard party, a music festival, or a construction site, the question is the same: how many porta potties do I need? Get it wrong on the low side and you have viral-TikTok lines or OSHA citations. Get it wrong on the high side and you waste $50–$200 a day per extra unit. Here’s the math, by use case, in tables that take 30 seconds to scan.
The 30-second universal answer
For most outdoor events:
- 1 standard porta potty per 50 guests for a 4-hour event with no alcohol
- 1 per 25 guests if alcohol is served (people go ~2× as often)
- +1 ADA-compliant unit at every event regardless of size (often required by permit)
- +1 hand wash station per 75–100 guests if food is served
- Multiply by event length: every additional 4-hour block increases the count proportionally
If you’re doing construction or a festival, the math is different — jump to the relevant table below.
Event reference table (no alcohol)
| Guests | 4 hours | 8 hours | All day (12+) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 25 | 1 | 1 | 2 |
| 50 | 1 | 2 | 3 |
| 100 | 2 | 3 | 4 |
| 200 | 4 | 6 | 8 |
| 500 | 10 | 14 | 18 |
| 1,000 | 20 | 28 | 36 |
Event reference table (with alcohol)
When alcohol is served, bathroom use roughly doubles. Don’t under-spec.
| Guests | 4 hours | 8 hours | All day (12+) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 50 | 2 | 3 | 4 |
| 100 | 4 | 5 | 7 |
| 200 | 8 | 11 | 14 |
| 500 | 20 | 26 | 32 |
| 1,000 | 40 | 52 | 64 |
Construction site (OSHA 29 CFR 1926.51)
Federal OSHA mandates these worker-to-toilet ratios. Your safety officer needs documentation; we provide it with every quote.
| Workers on site | Toilets | Urinals |
|---|---|---|
| 1–20 | 1 | — |
| 20–199 | 1 per 40 workers | 1 per 40 workers |
| 200+ | 1 per 50 workers | 1 per 50 workers |
California (Cal/OSHA Title 8 §1526) is stricter — bump these counts up by ~10% if you’re building in CA. Full breakdown: OSHA construction restroom requirements.
Festival / large outdoor event
Festival math uses peak attendance, not total. A 3-day festival with 25,000 peak-day attendance scales by 25,000, not 75,000. Multi-day events also need overnight servicing.
| Peak attendance | Standard (dry) | Standard (with alcohol) | ADA | Hand wash |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5,000 | 50 | 100 | 5 | 10 |
| 10,000 | 100 | 200 | 10 | 20 |
| 25,000 | 250 | 500 | 25 | 50 |
| 50,000 | 500 | 1,000 | 50 | 100 |
Deeper coverage in our festival porta potty rental guide.
Weddings — usually a different math
For weddings of 75+ guests in formalwear, most clients skip standard porta potties entirely and rent a luxury restroom trailer. The cost-per-guest math actually favors trailers above ~150 guests because one trailer replaces 4–6 porta potties. Quick reference:
| Wedding guests | Recommended setup |
|---|---|
| Under 75 | 2 deluxe porta potties + 1 ADA + 1 hand wash |
| 75–200 | 2-station luxury trailer + 1 ADA |
| 200–500 | 4-station luxury trailer + 1 ADA + standard for vendors |
| 500+ | 8-station luxury trailer + attendant + ADA + standard for vendors |
Five common math mistakes
- Forgetting alcohol multiplies usage. If you’re serving beer, wine, or cocktails, double the count. Not 1.5×. Double.
- Counting only the guest list, not staff. Catering crews, DJs, valets, security, photographers all use the bathroom too. Add 5–10% for staff at any event over 100 guests.
- Skipping ADA. Most municipalities require at least one ADA-compliant unit at every permitted public event. Even at private weddings, an elderly grandmother in a wheelchair shouldn’t face a curb.
- Underestimating event length. A “4-hour wedding reception” usually runs 6+ hours when you count the ceremony, cocktail hour, and post-dinner dancing. Spec for what actually happens.
- Treating the calculator number as a maximum. The numbers above are minimums. If you’re hosting in 105°F Phoenix heat, an outdoor festival on a hot summer day, or a wedding with a heavy bar program, round up.