Calculate the total cost of a cocktail by summing spirit, mixer, and garnish costs. Price cocktails for profitability with accurate recipes.
Every cocktail is a multi-ingredient recipe, and each ingredient contributes to the total cost. A classic Margarita includes tequila, triple sec, lime juice, and a salt rim. A craft cocktail might include a base spirit, two modifiers, house-made syrup, bitters, citrus, and an elaborate garnish. Knowing the exact cost of each cocktail is essential for profitable menu pricing.
This calculator breaks down cocktail cost into its core components: the primary spirit (measured by cost per ounce times ounces used), any secondary spirits or liqueurs, mixer costs, and garnish. The total gives you the all-in cost to produce one cocktail, which you then use to set a selling price that meets your target pour cost percentage.
For bars and restaurants that serve dozens or hundreds of cocktails nightly, even small costing errors compound into significant margin erosion. Precision matters.
Restaurant owners, hotel managers, and event coordinators depend on accurate cocktail cost numbers to maintain profitability while delivering exceptional guest experiences. Return to this tool whenever menu prices, occupancy rates, or staffing levels shift to keep your operations on track.
Cocktail costing prevents under-pricing drinks and protects your most profitable revenue stream. Many bartenders create recipes based on flavor without considering cost. This calculator bridges the gap between creativity and profitability, ensuring every cocktail on your menu earns its place. Instant results let you test multiple scenarios so you can align pricing, staffing, and inventory decisions with current demand and cost pressures.
Cocktail Cost = (Spirit 1: oz × $/oz) + (Spirit 2: oz × $/oz) + Mixer Cost + Garnish Cost Suggested Price = Cocktail Cost ÷ Target Pour Cost %
Result: $4.45 total cost
Spirit 1: 2 oz × $1.50 = $3.00. Spirit 2: 0.75 oz × $0.80 = $0.60. Mixer: $0.50. Garnish: $0.35. Total: $3.00 + $0.60 + $0.50 + $0.35 = $4.45. At a 20% target pour cost, the suggested price is $4.45 ÷ 0.20 = $22.25.
Every bar should maintain a master cocktail costing spreadsheet listing every drink on the menu with each ingredient, cost per ounce, ounces used, total ingredient cost, selling price, and pour cost percentage. This document becomes your pricing bible and should be updated quarterly or whenever vendor prices change significantly.
Garnishes are often an afterthought in costing, but they matter. A lemon wheel costs $0.10, but a sprig of fresh rosemary, a dehydrated citrus slice, and an edible flower can add $0.75-$1.50. For a $14 cocktail, that’s an additional 5-10% to the pour cost. Either keep garnishes simple or factor their true cost into the price.
Seasonal ingredients (fresh berries, stone fruits, herbs) can fluctuate in cost by 50-100% throughout the year. Rotating your cocktail menu seasonally — using in-season produce when it’s cheapest — controls ingredient costs while keeping the menu fresh. Just recalculate cocktail costs with each seasonal rotation.
The ingredient cost for a well cocktail is typically $1.50-$3.00. Premium cocktails range from $3.00-$6.00. Elaborate craft cocktails with multiple spirits and house-made ingredients can exceed $7.00.
Divide the wholesale bottle price by the number of ounces in the bottle. A standard 750ml bottle has 25.4 oz. A $30 bottle of gin costs $30 ÷ 25.4 = $1.18 per ounce.
Ice cost is minimal (typically $0.01-$0.05 per drink) and is usually absorbed as a general overhead cost. Specialty ice (large cubes, spheres) may add $0.10-$0.25 and should be included for precision.
Batching doesn’t change ingredient cost, but it reduces labor cost per drink and improves consistency. Batch cocktails are ideal for high-volume events and can be priced slightly lower while maintaining margin.
Target 18-22% pour cost for standard cocktails. Signature cocktails with premium ingredients may run 22-28% if the selling price is high enough. Well drinks should target 12-18%.
Calculate the cost to make a batch of syrup (sugar, water, additional ingredients, labor), then divide by the number of ounces produced. Use the per-ounce cost in your cocktail costing just like any other ingredient.