By the Templateez Team · Licensed Attorney · June 2026

Catering & Event Planning Intake Forms: What to Capture Before the First Tasting

A caterer who arrives at a 250-person wedding reception and discovers that 30 guests are vegan, the venue has no working kitchen, and the client assumed the bar was included in the per-person price is facing a night of improvisation that could have been prevented entirely. The event will still happen. The food will still go out. But the margin, the client relationship, and the team's morale will all take damage that started weeks earlier — at an intake conversation that did not go deep enough.

Most catering companies collect an event date, a guest count, and a vague menu preference. That is a lead form, not an intake form. A real catering and event planning intake form captures everything your team needs to plan the menu, staff the event, coordinate with the venue, price the job accurately, and protect the business when things change — because in events, things always change. Here is what that form should include.

Event overview: the foundation of every decision that follows

Every catering engagement starts with the event itself. The type of event, its scale, and the venue dictate everything from staffing ratios to equipment loads to how much lead time you need on prep. Your intake should capture:

Client and billing: who is paying and how

Events are frequently booked by someone who is not the person paying. A mother books her daughter's wedding. An executive assistant books a corporate retreat. An event planner books on behalf of a nonprofit. Your intake needs to untangle these relationships immediately:

Menu planning: the core of the engagement

This is the section that separates a professional catering intake from a generic event form. The menu drives your food cost, your prep timeline, your kitchen staffing, and the client's perception of the entire event. Your intake should capture enough detail to build a preliminary proposal:

Beverage service: bar type, staffing, and liability

Alcohol service is where catering companies take on the most concentrated risk in the shortest window of time. The bar is also one of the highest-margin components of an event — or one of the biggest cost overruns if the terms are not clear. Your intake should establish:

Staffing and logistics: getting the ratios right

Understaffing an event is the fastest way to turn a well-planned menu into a chaotic experience. Your intake form should establish staffing expectations based on the event profile:

Venue coordination: kitchen, power, and access

The venue's infrastructure determines what you can and cannot do on-site. A gorgeous event space with no kitchen, limited power, and a freight elevator that fits four people is a venue that requires advance planning your intake should trigger:

The venue coordination section of your intake overlaps with what any event vendor captures. Photography businesses face similar questions about venue access, lighting conditions, and timeline coordination — and on most events, the caterer and photographer need to work together more closely than either does with any other vendor. Restaurants that host private events in their own space face a different version of this problem — the venue is the restaurant, the kitchen is already there, and the challenge shifts to managing a private event alongside regular dinner service. A restaurant and event planning intake form captures F&B minimums, buyout clauses, and the operational constraints that come with running events inside an active restaurant rather than at an outside venue.

Rentals and decor: who coordinates what

Event planning frequently involves multiple vendors supplying different pieces of the physical setup. Your intake needs to clarify ownership of each element so nothing falls through the cracks:

Timeline and production: sequencing the evening

Every event is a sequence of moments, and the kitchen needs to be synchronized with every one of them. Your intake should establish the event timeline so your production team can build a prep and firing schedule backwards from each service point:

Insurance and permits: the compliance layer

Catering involves transporting and serving food — often including alcohol — to large groups of people at locations that are not your own kitchen. The compliance requirements are significant and venue-specific:

Contract terms: the fields that prevent disputes

Your intake form is not the contract, but it establishes the terms the contract will formalize. Getting these on paper at the intake stage prevents the "I thought it was included" conversation that derails event planning:

Building the event from the intake forward

A thorough catering intake form is the foundation of every successful event. It replaces assumptions with documented answers. It surfaces logistical problems weeks before they become day-of emergencies. It protects your margin by establishing pricing terms, staffing expectations, and change-order procedures before the first menu is drafted. And it tells the client — from the very first interaction — that your operation is professional, detail-oriented, and built to execute flawlessly.

If you are building documentation across a multi-service professional operation, the Professional Services Bundle includes catering and event planning alongside 34 other professional categories, each with industry-specific intake fields.

Catering & event planning intake forms — $19.99 complete set

Fillable PDF intake form + client questionnaire. Event overview, menu planning, dietary restrictions, beverage service, staffing ratios, venue coordination, rentals, insurance, and contract terms. Built for caterers and event planners.

View Catering & Event Planning Forms