Wine serving calculator

How many glasses are in a bottle of wine?

A standard 750 ml bottle pours about five glasses — but it depends on the bottle and how generous the pour is. Work it out below, then size up exactly how much to buy for a dinner or party.

How many glasses are in a bottle of wine?

Glasses per bottle

5
glasses per bottle

How many bottles do I need?

4
standard bottles

Based on standard 750 ml bottles and your chosen pour size, rounded up.

The quick answer

Five glasses, give or take

A 750 ml bottle holds five 150 ml glasses, or six at a more modest 125 ml restaurant pour. A magnum doubles that to about ten, and a Champagne flute (100 ml) stretches a bottle to seven or eight. For planning a party, count on two to three glasses per guest over an evening.

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Dig deeper into pairing

See the thinking behind the app, meet Sophia, and browse pairing guides on the journal.

FAQ

Glasses & bottles questions

How many glasses are in a standard bottle of wine?
A standard 750 ml bottle pours about five 150 ml glasses, or six at a smaller 125 ml pour.
How many glasses of champagne are in a bottle?
Poured into 100 ml flutes, a standard bottle of champagne gives about six to eight glasses — more than still wine because the pour is smaller.
How many glasses are in a magnum?
A magnum holds 1.5 litres — twice a standard bottle — so roughly ten 150 ml glasses.
How many bottles of wine do I need for a party?
Plan on two to three glasses per guest across an evening. The calculator above turns your guest count into the number of standard bottles to buy.
What is a standard pour of wine?
A standard pour is 150 ml (5 oz), which gives five glasses per bottle. Restaurants often pour 125 ml, and a tasting pour is smaller still.

Sorted the glasses? Now the wine

However many bottles you're opening, Gastrona helps you pick what to drink — free pairings, recipes and Sophia, your AI sommelier.

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