ORIGINAL BENCHMARK REPORT

Corporate Event Budget Benchmarks Europe 2026

The definitive per-person budget benchmark data for corporate events across Europe in 2026. Based on 2,100+ real quote records from European hotels covering events from 20 to 400 attendees. Median costs by event type, city tier, and season. Year-over-year change since 2024. The data planners and procurement teams need to calibrate budgets accurately.

Published April 23, 2026  ·  12 min read  ·  By Easy RFP team, Easy RFP
TL;DR: European corporate event median is 780 euro per person all-in for a 2-day event. Tier 1 cities (Paris, London, Zurich) 1,100+ median. Tier 2 (Barcelona, Berlin, Amsterdam, Dublin) 780. Tier 3 (Porto, Valencia, Warsaw) 540. Costs rose 14 percent from 2024 to 2026 driven by F&B (+22 percent) and accommodation (+12 percent). Contingency should be 8 to 15 percent depending on season and destination risk.
€780
European median 2-day per person
+14%
YoY cost growth 2024 to 2026
40-48%
Accommodation share of total
2,100+
Quote records analysed

Benchmark 1: per-person cost by event type and city tier

The foundational table. Median per-person all-in cost (gross of VAT, including accommodation where applicable, F&B, venue, AV, basic production).

Event typeTier 1 medianTier 2 medianTier 3 median
Half-day workshop 30 people€185€140€98
Full-day offsite 50 people€340€260€195
1-day training 80 people€280€215€165
1-night retreat 40 people€640€485€360
2-day SKO 60 people€1,130€820€560
2-day all-hands 100 people€950€720€510
3-day retreat 80 people€1,520€1,180€840
Customer summit 150 people€880€680€495
Holiday dinner 80 people€215€165€115
Partner summit 200 people€1,060€830€600

Tier definitions. Tier 1: London, Paris, Zurich, Munich, Stockholm. Tier 2: Amsterdam, Barcelona, Berlin, Dublin, Madrid, Milan, Copenhagen, Vienna. Tier 3: Porto, Valencia, Warsaw, Krakow, Prague, Budapest, Bucharest, Athens.

Benchmark 2: seasonal cost variation

Event costs vary meaningfully across the calendar. Peak windows concentrate around late September to mid-October and the first two weeks of December.

SeasonCost variance vs annual medianBest for
Deep winter (Jan-Feb)-18% to -10%Value-sensitive events
Spring (Mar-May)-5% to +2%Standard pricing, strong availability
Early summer (Jun)+3% to +8%Good balance
Peak summer (Jul-Aug)+5% to +12% (urban), -20% (destination)Destination resort events
Peak corporate (late Sep-Oct)+15% to +25%Strategic events worth premium
Early Nov0% to +5%Overlooked sweet spot
Late Nov-early Dec+10% to +18%Holiday premium begins
Peak December+20% to +35%Accept premium or shift dates
Tip: The two underutilised value windows are early November (week 1-2) and late January. Both deliver Tier 2 quality at Tier 3 pricing because corporate demand is soft. If your event does not have a hard calendar dependency, these windows save 15 to 25 percent.

Benchmark 3: cost breakdown by category

Where your budget actually goes for a typical 2-day corporate event.

CategoryShare of total2024 to 2026 change
Accommodation40 to 48%+12%
Food and beverage25 to 30%+22%
Venue hire7 to 10%+4%
AV and production5 to 8%+6%
Transport and transfers3 to 6%+9%
Gifts and signage2 to 5%+7%
Contingency5 to 10%Structural increase recommended

The F&B increase is the single most impactful shift in European corporate event budgeting from 2024 to 2026. Raw food costs have risen dramatically, hospitality labour has become more expensive, and hotels have repriced their banquet packages significantly. Planners who budget F&B off 2023 numbers are systematically 20 to 25 percent under.

Benchmark 4: year-over-year cost changes

Tracking a consistent basket of event specifications from 2024 to 2026 to isolate pure price movement.

Metric2024 median2025 median2026 medianTotal change
2-day SKO 60 people Tier 2€710€760€820+15.5%
1-day offsite 50 people Tier 2€225€240€260+15.6%
Holiday dinner 80 people Tier 2€140€152€165+17.9%
Customer summit 150 Tier 2€600€640€680+13.3%
3-day retreat 80 people Tier 2€1,020€1,100€1,180+15.7%

A consistent 13 to 18 percent increase over 24 months across event types. Holiday events grew fastest due to December demand premium stacking on the broader F&B inflation. Customer summits grew slowest because hotels compete aggressively for larger groups.

Watch out: If your internal event planning benchmarks were last updated before 2024, they are now systematically 13 to 18 percent under real costs. Update your benchmarks before the next budget cycle or expect scope cuts at booking time.

Benchmark 5: per-person cost distribution within each tier

Medians hide important variance. Here is the 25th to 75th percentile range for a 2-day 60-person SKO to show what reasonable cost variability looks like.

Tier25th percentileMedian75th percentileRange width
Tier 1€920€1,130€1,390€470
Tier 2€680€820€980€300
Tier 3€450€560€680€230

Useful for pressure-testing quotes. If your Tier 2 quote comes in at €1,050 per person, that is the 80th percentile, meaning you are paying more than 80 percent of comparable events. Often justifiable (premium property, unusual scope) but always worth questioning.

Benchmark 6: savings from BAFO competition round

For events where a Best And Final Offer competition round was run, the typical savings captured between round 1 and round 2 quotes.

Event budget rangeMedian savings from BAFOTop quartile savings
Under €15,0004.8%9.2%
€15,000 to €40,0009.6%14.8%
€40,000 to €100,00012.4%18.1%
€100,000+14.8%22.3%

BAFO savings scale with event size because larger bookings have more margin for hotels to give up in the competition. Events under 15,000 euro often do not justify the BAFO process overhead. Events over 40,000 euro almost always return materially more than the overhead.

Benchmark 7: contingency usage by event type

Planners often set contingency and never report on actual spend. We tracked contingency burn across event types.

Event typeAvg contingency budgetedAvg contingency usedOver-budget rate
Half-day workshop5%3.2%7%
1-day offsite7%5.4%11%
2-day SKO8%7.8%18%
3-day retreat9%8.9%22%
Customer summit10%11.2%31%
Q4 events (any type)10%12.6%38%

Three patterns. Longer events consume more contingency. Customer-facing events blow contingency more often (scope expansion). Q4 events run hottest on contingency due to supply-shift exposure. These are the categories where 12 to 15 percent contingency rather than 8 percent is warranted.

Methodology: Analysis based on 2,100+ hotel quote records for European corporate events collected between January 2025 and March 2026. Quotes collected via our RFP platform plus anonymised planner-shared data. All quotes normalised to gross-of-VAT, all-inclusive (room, F&B, venue, basic AV). Medians used for central tendency reporting. Tier classifications based on average room rate percentiles. 2024 and 2025 historical data reconstructed from quote records and planner self-reported budgets. For methodology questions or licensed use of the dataset, contact [email protected].

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Frequently asked questions

What is the median corporate event budget per person in Europe 2026?

For a 2-day corporate event with accommodation, F&B, venue, and AV, the European median is 780 euro per person all-in gross of VAT. Tier 1 cities (Paris, London, Zurich) run 1,100+ median. Tier 2 (Barcelona, Berlin, Amsterdam) at 780 median. Tier 3 (Porto, Valencia, Warsaw) at 540 median. Shoulder season rates (June, September) sit 15 to 20 percent below peak pricing.

How have European corporate event budgets changed from 2024 to 2026?

European per-person corporate event costs have risen 14 percent on average from 2024 to 2026, driven primarily by F&B inflation (+22 percent) and accommodation rate increases (+12 percent). Venue hire has held relatively flat (+4 percent). The largest increases are in premium urban destinations. Shoulder-season destination resort pricing has actually decreased 3 to 5 percent as supply caught up with post-pandemic demand.

Which European city has the best cost-quality ratio for corporate events?

Based on our data, Lisbon leads for cost-quality ratio in 2026, delivering Tier 1 quality infrastructure at Tier 2 to 3 pricing. Barcelona and Dublin follow. For Germanic markets, Vienna offers better value than Munich or Zurich. For larger groups (150+), Warsaw and Krakow deliver premium experiences at 40 to 50 percent of Western European pricing.

What is the cost breakdown of a typical European corporate event?

For a typical 2-day corporate event the cost breakdown is: accommodation 40 to 48 percent, F&B 25 to 30 percent, venue hire and AV 10 to 14 percent, transport and transfers 3 to 6 percent, production and materials 4 to 8 percent, contingency 5 to 10 percent. F&B has been the largest growth line in 2025-2026 and now represents the second-biggest single cost category.

How much contingency should planners build into 2026 event budgets?

Minimum 8 percent for stable markets and event types. 12 percent for Q4 events (December demand premium risk). 15 percent for destination events where currency or supply shifts can hit hard. Since 2024, contingency needs have risen structurally because F&B pricing renegotiates mid-cycle more than it used to.

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