Calculate restaurant wine bottle price using a wholesale cost and markup multiplier. Compare standard and progressive markup strategies.
Wine markup is one of the most debated topics in restaurant management. The traditional approach is a simple multiplier — typically 2.5x to 4x the wholesale cost — applied uniformly to every bottle on the list. A bottle purchased at $12 wholesale would be priced at $36-$48 on the menu.
However, the industry has shifted toward progressive (or sliding-scale) markups, where lower-cost wines receive a higher multiplier and higher-cost wines receive a lower one. This approach makes premium wines more accessible to guests while maintaining strong margins on entry-level bottles. A $10 wholesale bottle might carry a 4x markup ($40), while a $50 wholesale bottle might carry a 2x markup ($100).
This calculator helps sommeliers, beverage directors, and restaurant owners quickly compute menu prices using their wholesale cost and chosen markup multiplier, making it easy to build a well-priced wine list.
Restaurant owners, hotel managers, and event coordinators depend on accurate wine markup 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.
Accurate wine pricing protects your margins while remaining competitive with neighboring restaurants. Over-marking wines leads to poor by-the-bottle sales. Under-marking leaves profit on the table. This calculator helps you find the sweet spot for every bottle on your list and experiment with different markup strategies. Instant results let you test multiple scenarios so you can align pricing, staffing, and inventory decisions with current demand and cost pressures.
Menu Price = Wholesale Cost × Markup Multiplier Profit per Bottle = Menu Price − Wholesale Cost Wine Cost % = (Wholesale Cost ÷ Menu Price) × 100
Result: $42.00 menu price
A bottle purchased at $14 wholesale with a 3x markup is priced at $14 × 3 = $42.00. The profit is $42 − $14 = $28 per bottle. The wine cost percentage is ($14 ÷ $42) × 100 = 33.3%.
A profitable wine list offers options at multiple price points. Entry-level bottles ($30-$45 menu price) attract casual drinkers and pair well with everyday dining. Mid-range ($50-$80) serves the majority of wine drinkers. Premium ($80-$150+) appeals to enthusiasts and special occasions. Each tier should contribute meaningfully to overall wine revenue.
By-the-glass programs are among the most profitable beverage categories. If a bottle costs $12 wholesale and you pour 5 glasses, pricing each glass at $12-$14 means the first glass covers the wholesale cost and the remaining four glasses generate $48-$56 in margin from a $12 investment. Use Coravin or wine preservation systems to offer premium by-the-glass options.
Wine is perishable and capital-intensive. Dead stock — bottles that sit on the shelf for months — ties up cash and may eventually be sold at a loss. Turn your wine list over by promoting slow movers, offering staff picks, and updating the list seasonally. Target a wine inventory turnover of 4-6 times per year for optimal cash flow.
The traditional markup is 2.5x to 4x wholesale cost. The national average is approximately 3x. Fine dining may use 3-4x. Casual dining often uses 2.5-3x. Wine bars and by-the-glass programs may use higher multipliers.
Progressive markup applies higher multipliers to lower-cost wines and lower multipliers to higher-cost wines. This makes premium bottles more accessible while maintaining strong margins on entry-level selections. It encourages guests to spend more.
A common approach: the glass price should equal or exceed the wholesale bottle cost. Since a 750ml bottle yields about 5 glasses (5 oz each), selling one glass at the bottle’s wholesale cost means the remaining 4 glasses are nearly pure profit.
In most US restaurants, prices are listed before tax. However, the effective markup should account for the fact that guests see the after-tax total. Ensure the total including tax still feels reasonable for the wine’s perceived value.
Wine markup covers not just the liquid but also glassware, storage, climate control, staff training, breakage, spoilage, and the insurance of dead stock. A sommelier’s expertise and curated list provide value beyond the bottle itself.
Research local restaurant wine pricing by dining at competitors. Check online wine retail prices for reference. Guests are generally comfortable paying 2-3x retail price at a restaurant. Much beyond that and they may bring their own (if BYO is allowed).