Ten years ago, food trucks were seen as the budget option — a step below "proper" catering. That perception has completely reversed. Today, food truck catering is the preferred format for festivals, outdoor weddings, corporate events, and private celebrations across Scotland. But that does not mean it is right for every situation.
This article breaks down the real differences between food truck catering and traditional sit-down catering, so you can make an informed decision for your event.
What Is Food Truck Catering?
Food truck catering uses a purpose-built mobile kitchen to prepare and serve food on-site. The truck arrives self-contained — with its own cooking equipment, power, water, and waste management — and operates independently of venue infrastructure.
Food trucks typically serve a focused menu designed for speed and hand-held eating. Think gourmet burgers, loaded fries, wood-fired pizza, tacos, and specialty items. The format is casual, fast, and social — guests queue, order, and eat at their own pace.
What Is Traditional Catering?
Traditional catering involves a caterer preparing food in a venue kitchen (or temporary kitchen facility) and serving it to seated guests, usually in courses. This format is structured — guests sit at assigned tables, courses arrive on schedule, and the service follows a pre-agreed timeline.
Traditional catering suits formal occasions where the meal is a central, structured part of the event: sit-down weddings, corporate dinners, awards ceremonies, and gala events.
Cost Comparison
Traditional catering typically costs £40–£100+ per head depending on the menu, venue, and service style. This includes food, staff, table service, linen, crockery, and venue kitchen usage.
Food truck catering operates differently. For private events, you typically pay a flat hire rate (£500–£2,000) or a per-head rate of £10–£25 depending on the menu. For festivals and public events, the truck often pays a pitch fee and retains its own revenue.
The cost difference is significant — and it is not because the food is lower quality. It is because the format is more efficient: no table service staff, no linen, no crockery, and no venue kitchen fees.
Guest Experience
Food trucks win on atmosphere. There is an energy around food trucks that sit-down catering cannot replicate. The theatre of watching food being prepared, the social aspect of queuing and choosing, and the freedom to eat when and where you want — these create a relaxed, engaging experience.
Traditional catering wins on formality. If your event requires structured timing, course sequencing, and a formal dining experience, a food truck is not the right format. Corporate dinners, formal weddings, and seated galas need traditional service.
Flexibility and Scale
Food trucks scale effortlessly. Need to cater for 200? One truck handles it. Need to serve 2,000? Add more trucks and traders. The modular nature of food truck catering means you can scale to any event size by adding units.
Traditional catering scales differently — it requires proportionally more staff, more kitchen capacity, and more dining space. Scaling from 100 to 500 guests is a significant operational jump that affects venue requirements and cost.
Venue Requirements
This is where food trucks offer a decisive advantage: they need almost nothing from the venue. A level surface and vehicle access — that is it. No kitchen, no power hookup, no water supply, no dining furniture.
Our Bite Me Food Truck is fully self-contained with onboard generator, LPG cooking, water supply, and grey water management. It operates on grass, gravel, tarmac — anywhere with vehicle access.
Traditional catering requires a commercial kitchen or temporary kitchen facility, dining space with tables and chairs, power, water, and waste management infrastructure. This limits venue options and adds cost.
Weather
In Scotland, weather is always a factor. Professional food trucks are fully enclosed and weather-protected — they operate in rain, wind, and cold without interruption. Guests queue under cover and food is served through a protected service window.
Outdoor traditional catering requires marquees, covered dining areas, and contingency for weather — all of which add significant cost and complexity.
When to Choose Food Truck Catering
- Outdoor events and festivals
- Casual weddings and celebrations
- Corporate away days and team events
- Events where atmosphere matters more than formality
- Events with limited venue infrastructure
- Events where budget efficiency is important
When to Choose Traditional Catering
- Formal sit-down weddings
- Corporate dinners and awards ceremonies
- Events where course sequencing is important
- Indoor venue events with full kitchen facilities
- Events requiring dietary precision for every guest
The Hybrid Approach
Many events now use a hybrid model: traditional catering for the main meal and food trucks for evening service, late-night food, or supplementary options. This gives you the best of both worlds — formal dining when it matters and casual food truck energy for the rest.
At Bite Me, we regularly operate alongside traditional caterers, providing food truck and bar service for the informal parts of an event while a venue caterer handles the formal dining.
Conclusion
The choice between food truck and traditional catering depends on your event format, audience, and priorities. For most outdoor events, casual celebrations, and festivals in Scotland, food trucks deliver a better experience at a lower cost. For formal, seated occasions, traditional catering remains the right choice.
Want to explore food truck catering for your event? Get in touch — we will help you decide the right format.