HomeCorporate events › New Orleans, LA

Corporate Event Bartenders in New Orleans

5 mobile bartending services around New Orleans, Louisiana show real evidence of corporate work — office holiday parties, team-building events, client mixers, grand openings — and 1 of them also show licensing-and-insurance evidence, the thing your venue will ask about first. Start every conversation with the certificate of insurance: your building or venue will want proof of general liability and liquor liability coverage, usually naming them as additional insured, and a professional service sends it within a day. Staffing math is the standard one bartender per 50–75 guests; in most states the host supplies the alcohol and the service brings the rest (dry-hire — confirm your state's rules and your building's policy). Rated services are ranked below by local reputation (rating weighted by review count), with clients' corporate mentions shown where reviews have them.

1. Tap Truck NOLA

5 ★★★★★ 41 reviews

1201 S Rampart St, New Orleans, LA

Corporate events Weddings Tap truck

2. Blue Book Barkeeps

5 ★★★★★ 38 reviews

8203 Zimpel St, New Orleans, LA

Corporate events Weddings

“I contacted Blue Book on the strength of some other online reviews because I wanted a bartender to sort of upgrade my annual holiday party. I ended up hiring both a bartender and…” — Rachel

3. Movers and Shakers | Bar Catering | Wedding Bartending | New Orleans, La

5 ★★★★★ 18 reviews

New Orleans, LA · serves the area

Corporate events Licensed & insured Weddings Dry hire

Insurance evidence on file — ask for the COI with your venue named before you sign.

4. BAR IN A BOX NOLA mobile bartending

5 ★★★★★ 4 reviews

New Orleans, LA · serves the area

Corporate events Weddings Dry hire

5. The High Horse Mobile Bar

5 ★★★★★ 3 reviews

3828 Bienville St, New Orleans, LA

Corporate events Weddings Tap truck

Booking a company-event bar in New Orleans: the planner's checklist

  1. Send the venue requirements with the first email. Venue name, date, headcount, hours — and "please send a COI showing general liability and liquor liability, with the venue named as additional insured." That one sentence does more vetting than an hour of calls.
  2. Confirm who buys the alcohol and how the list gets built. In most states that's the host side (dry-hire); an experienced service turns your headcount into an exact shopping list — two drinks per guest the first hour, one per hour after. Some venues require alcohol through their own license — check before purchasing anything.
  3. Put the zero-proof menu on the menu. A signature mocktail listed alongside the cocktails keeps the event inclusive for everyone in the room — ask what their mocktail program actually looks like, and see who does it well.
  4. Ask the building questions a wedding never has. Load-in path, freight elevator, dock access, setup window, where the bar can physically stand, and power if the setup needs it. Ten minutes with facilities now saves the event-day scramble.
  5. Get two quotes on identical scope. Same headcount, hours, and menu — then compare what's included (glassware, barback, travel, teardown). With 5 services around town, the second quote is cheap leverage — and for December dates, start months earlier than feels necessary.

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