Plan a gala dinner with this sequence: set budget and headcount, source 3-5 venues via RFP, confirm menu and dietary needs, brief AV and entertainment, arrange table plans, and run a rehearsal walkthrough. Allow 3-4 months lead time. Budget 80-200 EUR per person all-inclusive depending on city and standard.
The gala dinner is the single most high-stakes evening of most corporate events. It's also the evening planners most often leave understaffed and underspecified. Here's the full checklist.
Venue
- Capacity at banquet rounds of 8-10 with a stage
- Separate reception space for pre-dinner drinks
- Kitchen capacity to plate 150-500 covers simultaneously
- Loading access for staging and production
- Cloakroom / security check-in
Flow
- T-60min: reception drinks + canapés
- T: call to dinner, seated
- T+20min: welcome + starter
- T+60min: main course + entertainment interlude
- T+100min: awards + speeches
- T+140min: dessert + DJ/live music
- T+180min: open bar continues
- T+240min: close
Menu
- 3-4 course plated or premium buffet
- Wine pairing ideally 2 reds + 2 whites + bubbles
- Minimum 20% vegan/vegetarian main option
- Sommelier for pours at scale events above 200
- Non-alcoholic options at every course, not just water
Entertainment
- String quartet or jazz trio during reception
- One 'moment' during dinner (not over 10 minutes)
- DJ or band for post-dinner dancing
- MC if awards are involved
- Photographer + roving video
AV
- Stage with lectern and screen for awards
- Lavalier + handheld mics
- Dance floor lighting (not overhead fluorescents)
- Ambient room lighting warm and dimmed
- Background music playlist for setup and teardown
Budget benchmarks
European corporate gala for 200 guests: €250-500 per cover all-in (venue, F&B, entertainment, AV). High-end galas (Michelin kitchen, headline entertainment): €500-1,200 per cover.
Plan seating the week before, not the week of. Seating plan for a 200+ gala takes 6-10 hours to do well.
Never schedule speeches during dessert. Attendees want to eat, then be spoken to, then dance. The order matters.
Timeline: 90 Days to Gala Night
Ninety days out, confirm the final venue, sign the catering contract, and begin collecting dietary requirements from attendees. Send a registration form that asks specifically about allergies, intolerances, and dietary choices. Vague questions produce vague answers. Ask attendees to select from a specific list and add a free-text field for anything unusual. Seventy-two hours after the form closes, share the finalised dietary breakdown with the hotel catering team.
Sixty days out, finalise the room layout, confirm the AV setup, and schedule a menu tasting if you have not already done one. Thirty days out, confirm the final guest count and share the seating plan framework with the hotel. Fourteen days out, walk through the entire evening with the hotel events manager: arrival drinks location, table arrangement, service sequence, entertainment cues, and the departure process. Surprises on the night of a gala almost always trace back to details that were not confirmed in this walkthrough.
Managing Dietary Requirements at Scale
For galas over 100 guests, dietary management becomes a logistics challenge. A table with eight people may have three different dietary requirements, and the service team needs to know which plate goes where without disrupting the flow of the dinner. The most reliable method is a colour-coded place card system: each dietary variant gets a specific card colour that the kitchen, the service captain, and the banquet manager all understand.
Brief the hotel on your approach at least two weeks before the event, not on the day. Experienced hotel catering teams will have their own systems for managing this, but they need to know your guest list structure and the specific variants in advance. If your event includes a buffet rather than plated service, ask the hotel to label every dish clearly and to position the allergen-free options in a dedicated section to prevent cross-contamination.