Tableware is one of those line items that quietly eats a party budget — plates, cups, napkins, tablecloth, and it adds up before you’ve even got to the cake. We put together this guide to make picking it faster: what actually matters, what’s worth paying more for, and where you can save without the table looking cheap. Pair this with our Kids’ Birthday Party Checklist if you’re planning the whole day.
Quick Picks
The safest choice when you want everything to match without hunting down separate pieces. Look for a set that bundles all four essentials in one theme and colourway.
[PLACEHOLDER AFFILIATE LINK: coordinated party tableware set]
Skip the licensed character mark-up — plain coral, teal, or marigold tableware costs a fraction as much and still looks deliberate if you pick two colours and stick to them.
[PLACEHOLDER AFFILIATE LINK: plain colour party tableware multipack]
Worth the extra cost when the theme is the whole point of the party — dinosaurs, unicorns, superheroes. Buy exact headcount plus 10% rather than rounding up a full extra pack.
[PLACEHOLDER AFFILIATE LINK: licensed character party tableware set]
Sturdier than standard paper plates and breaks down properly afterwards. Slightly pricier per head, but there’s no washing-up and no landfill guilt.
[PLACEHOLDER AFFILIATE LINK: compostable bamboo party tableware set]
Compare at a Glance
| Pick | Best For | Typical Price Range |
|---|---|---|
| Coordinated Set | No-fuss matching table | ££ |
| Plain Colour Multipack | Tight budgets | £ |
| Licensed Character Set | Theme-led parties | £££ |
| Compostable Set | Eco-conscious hosts | ££ |
What to Look For
- Headcount, not guesswork — count RSVPs and buy for that number plus a couple of spares, not a round number.
- Plate sturdiness — thin paper plates buckle under a slice of cake and a scoop of ice cream. Check the material weight if it’s listed.
- Two-colour rule — if you’re not buying a themed set, pick two brand-adjacent colours (like coral and marigold) rather than one — it reads as intentional, not random.
- Bundle savings — sets bundling plates, cups, napkins, and tablecloth are almost always cheaper than buying each separately.
- Leftover-friendly — buying a few extra of the plain multipack option means spares carry over to the next party instead of going to waste.
FAQ
How much tableware do I actually need per guest?
One plate, one cup, and one napkin per guest, plus roughly 10% extra for spills, drop-and-smash moments, and any last-minute plus-ones. For a party of 15 kids, that’s about 17 of each.
Is licensed character tableware worth the extra cost?
If the theme is the centrepiece of the party, yes — it does a lot of the decorating work for you. If the theme is more of a loose colour scheme, a plain coordinated set gets you 90% of the visual impact for less.
Compostable or standard paper — which is actually better?
Compostable bamboo or palm leaf tableware tends to be sturdier than standard paper, so it’s a reasonable upgrade even setting the environmental angle aside. It costs more per head, so it’s worth it most for smaller, more intentional gatherings.
Final Verdict
For most kids’ parties, a coordinated set is the least stressful option — it’s one purchase and the table is done. If budget is the priority, plain colour tableware in two brand-adjacent shades looks just as intentional for a lot less. Save the licensed character sets for when the theme really is the whole party.
Want the full day mapped out? Our Kids’ Birthday Party Checklist covers timing, cake, and entertainment too — or browse more Kids’ Parties guides.