P6 — Unit economics pillar
Free tool · P6 unit economics

Cocktail cost calculator India

Enter ingredients, pour sizes, and bottle prices to calculate cost per drink, beverage cost percentage, and gross profit for any cocktail, mocktail, shot, or bar drink. Add multiple recipes, compare cost % across the menu, and get a suggested sell price. Print or export CSV. No signup.

2
Recipes
26.50%
Cost % (selected)
₹127.20
Total Cost
₹352.80
Gross Profit

Ingredients

IngredientQtyUnitBottle / Pack sizePrice per bottle (₹)Cost (₹)
96.00
3.00
3.20
8.00
Ingredient cost
₹110.20
Total cost per drink
₹127.20
Beverage cost %
26.50%
Acceptable
Suggested price (22%)
₹580
excl. GST
DrinkTypeSell PriceCostCost %Gross ProfitSuggested Price
Whisky SourCocktail₹480₹127.2026.50%₹352.80₹580
Virgin MojitoMocktail₹220₹29.4013.36%₹190.60₹140

Beverage cost benchmarks for Indian bars and restaurants

Beverage cost percentage (BCP) is the single most important metric for bar profitability. It measures what proportion of the drink's selling price goes to ingredient cost. A lower BCP means more margin per drink. The challenge in India is that beverage costing intersects with excise regulation — some states set MRPs on alcohol, limiting the upside on pricing, while others leave pricing to the licensee.

  • House spirits (IMFL whisky, rum, vodka). Target BCP: 18–22%. At 60ml pour from a 750ml bottle at ₹800–1200, the cost per pour is ₹64–96. A sell price of ₹320–480 achieves the target. Most QSR bars and casual dining operate in this range.
  • Premium and imported spirits. Target BCP: 15–20%. Premium bottles at ₹3,000–8,000 per 750ml yield a cost of ₹240–640 per 60ml pour. Sell prices of ₹1,200–3,200 are typical at premium venues. The margin per drink is higher in absolute terms but requires the right market positioning.
  • Craft cocktails and signatures. Target BCP: 20–28%. Multi-ingredient cocktails with fresh juices, syrups, garnishes, and premium base spirits have higher complexity. The labour time per drink is also higher, which should inform the sell price — a cocktail that takes 3 minutes to make should sell at a higher margin than a simple pour.
  • Beer by bottle or can. Target BCP: 25–35%. Beer is MRP-regulated in most Indian states, and the bar's purchase price from the distributor is typically 70–80% of MRP, leaving limited room. Draft beer (kegged) has a better margin profile — typically 18–25% BCP — because the price per ml from a keg is lower than from a bottle.
  • Mocktails and non-alcoholic beverages. Target BCP: 15–20%. Mocktails are entirely market-priced, and ingredient costs are lower than alcoholic drinks. A well-priced mocktail at ₹180–280 from ₹25–40 of ingredients delivers excellent margin — mocktails are among the highest-margin items on a bar menu when properly costed.
  • Wine by glass. Target BCP: 22–30%. A standard 150ml pour from a 750ml bottle means 5 pours per bottle. At a purchase price of ₹800 per bottle, each pour costs ₹160. A sell price of ₹600–700 per glass achieves 23–27% BCP. The risk with wine by glass is open-bottle spoilage — factor this in when calculating effective BCP.

Common costing errors in Indian bars

  • Using the bar price list price instead of the invoice price. Spirits in India are sold to licensees at a distributor price that differs from the MRP stamped on the bottle. Always use the actual purchase price on your distributor invoice, not the MRP, when calculating BCP.
  • Ignoring spillage and over-pouring. The average bartender without a jigger over-pours by 15–30%. A 60ml jigger serves 12.5 drinks from a 750ml bottle; uncontrolled pouring delivers 9–10. Apply a 10–15% wastage factor on top of the calculated pour cost to get a real-world cost per drink.
  • Not accounting for opening-bottle costs. Opening a new bottle for a single premium pour that the rest of the bottle is then held — and possibly not sold — is an inventory cost that standard BCP calculation misses. Track open-bottle consumption separately for slow-moving premium spirits.
  • Ignoring garnish and consumable cost. A citrus wheel, an olive, a cocktail umbrella, a cocktail pick, and a paper straw may collectively cost ₹15–25 per drink. Across 100 cocktails a night, this is ₹1,500–2,500 in uncosted expense.

Where this fits