Summer Events & Music Festivals: Water Pallet Logistics Guide

2026 Apr 9th

Summer Events & Music Festivals: Water Pallet Logistics Guide

Summer Events & Music Festivals: Water Pallet Logistics Guide

Summer is festival season. Whether you're running a music festival, outdoor corporate event, wedding reception, or multi-day sporting tournament, one thing is non-negotiable: water.

Lots of it.

Get the water wrong and you're looking at dehydration complaints, liability headaches, and attendees posting about it on social media for months. Get it right and nobody even thinks about it—which is exactly the point.

This covers everything: how much to order, when to order it, where to stash it, how to move it, and what happens when something breaks.

How Much Water Does Your Event Actually Need?

Most planners underestimate. Every single time.

Health Canada says 1 liter per person per day. That's for sitting indoors in air conditioning. Outdoors in summer under the sun with thousands of people? You're looking at something totally different.

Start with these baseline numbers:

  • 1.5–2 liters per person on a normal day (outdoor venues, people standing around, moderate heat)
  • 2–3 liters per person when it's hot or people are moving (festivals with dancing, sports, actual heat waves)
  • Even more at night if there's alcohol served—dehydration gets worse and people don't realize they're thirsty
  • Heat accelerates dehydration. So does physical activity. Dancing in direct sun? You're easily at the 3-liter mark. A construction site event in July? Same story.

    Then add: most events have an attendance estimate that's off. You're planning for 1,000 people but 1,500 show up. Or it's hotter than forecasted. Or the event runs longer. Your buffer evaporates fast.

    Let's do the math:

    A standard pallet in Canada = 40 cases × 24 bottles (500ml each) = 240 liters.

    Example 1: 1,000-person 2-day festival
  • 1,000 people × 2 days × 1.5L = 3,000 liters
  • Divide by 240L per pallet = about 13 pallets
  • Add 10% buffer = 15 pallets total
  • Example 2: 5,000-person festival, 2 days, hot weather, dancing
  • 5,000 × 2 × 2.5L = 25,000 liters
  • Divided by 240L per pallet = about 104 pallets
  • Add 10% buffer = 115 pallets total
  • Then add 10–15% more on top. Bottles break, people grab two instead of one, consumption spikes during the hottest hours. Someone knocks over a case. Someone steals cases (yes, this happens). Running dry isn't just bad logistics—it's a liability nightmare. People get dehydrated, your reputation takes a hit on social media, and you're dealing with complaints for months.

    Also: if you charge for water, make sure the price covers your actual cost. A lot of events price water at cost, not accounting for spillage and loss. You end up underwater financially.

    Sourcing Water Pallets: Timeline & Availability

    Summer is peak season. What takes 3 days in March takes 2 weeks in July. Plan accordingly.

    Lead times (Canada):
  • Regular season: 5–7 business days
  • June–August: 10–14 business days (suppliers are slammed)
  • Rush: 2–3 days, but you'll pay for it and stock is tight
  • Last-minute orders: Don't. Availability disappears
  • Order 4–6 weeks ahead. This gets you:
  • Multiple supplier options if your first choice is booked
  • Wiggle room to adjust if attendance changes
  • Time to source backup suppliers if needed
  • Peace of mind instead of panic the week before
  • Where to actually source it:
  • Big brands: Nestlé (Pure Life), Coca-Cola (Dasani)—they're everywhere, reliable, but sometimes pricier
  • Hospitality suppliers: Places like ChickenPieces handle event volumes constantly. They know your region, understand seasonal demand, and often have better pricing
  • Direct from distributors: 50+ pallets? Call manufacturers directly—you can negotiate bulk discounts
  • The sourcing tip: Most hospitality suppliers have relationships with multiple brands. If Pure Life is out, they can pivot to Nestlé or Coca-Cola products without losing time. That flexibility is worth more than saving a few dollars chasing the absolute cheapest option.

    Get at least two quotes. Not to play them off each other necessarily, but to understand your actual market pricing and have a backup if your primary supplier gets slammed.

    Storage: The Part Nobody Plans For

    You ordered 15 pallets. They're showing up Thursday. Where the hell do they go?

    Space reality:

    Each pallet = 1.2m × 1m × 1.5m high. 15 pallets need about 30 square meters of flat ground. Somewhere dry. Not in the sun.

    Heat warps the plastic, rain ruins the boxes. Get tarps. Store it near where you'll be distributing from—moving pallets multiple times costs time and spills water everywhere.

    For a 2-day event:
  • Have it delivered 2–3 days before so you can actually prepare
  • Keep it cool if you have storage space (people want cold water in summer, warm water doesn't move)
  • Set up multiple distribution points instead of one central station—front entrance, back field, VIP area, parking
  • Use a tent if you're staging on-site, especially near the main stage
  • Quick win: Pre-chill cases in coolers the night before the event. Cold water outsells warm water dramatically. People grab cold water without thinking, the cooler empties, you move more volume. Fewer leftovers, happier attendees, better metrics for next year.

    Pro event planners pre-stage everything. They break down pallets into distribution units the day before, chill what can be chilled, and position cases at every station before the event starts. This takes about 3–4 hours total with 3–4 people. Absolutely worth it for the time you save on event day.

    Getting It There: The Actual Logistics

    Equipment & access:

    Do you have a pallet jack or forklift? If not, rent one ($100–300/day). Some outdoor festival grounds can't even fit a delivery truck—confirm this early, not the week before.

    Timing:

    Tell the supplier an exact delivery window. 10 pallets showing up at 3 AM when nobody's ready = chaos. Be specific. "Thursday 10 AM–2 PM" not "sometime Thursday."

    Unloading:

    Budget 2–3 people for 2–3 hours to get a large order off the truck, staged, and organized.

    Costs (rough):
  • Local (within 50km): $75–150 per pallet
  • Regional (50–500km): $150–300 per pallet
  • Remote/rural: Get a quote
  • Sneaky fees they won't mention upfront:
  • Inside delivery (into your storage) costs more than dropping at the dock (+$25–50)
  • After-hours or weekend delivery = premium pricing
  • Fuel surcharge during peak season (expect this in summer)
  • Some suppliers charge restocking fees if you return unopened cases
  • Get everything in writing. Seriously.

    Distribution: Getting Water Into Hands

    You've got the water. Now move it fast.

    Station setup:

    1 station per 500–750 people. A 5,000-person festival needs 7–8 stations minimum. Put them at entry points, near food vendors (hot + eating = thirsty people), bathrooms, and anywhere people hang out.

    Staffing:

    2–3 people per station for 8–12 hour shifts. This isn't optional if you want things to actually work. They prevent theft, keep lines moving, manage the crowd instead of letting it pile up into chaos. One person alone gets overwhelmed fast, especially during peak hours (mid-afternoon heat, after meals, during performances). Two can trade breaks. Three is ideal for high-traffic events.

    Pay them. Don't ask volunteers to staff water all day in the sun. You'll get poor service and they'll resent you.

    Cold vs. warm:

    Cold water sells itself. Warm water sits there. Use coolers, ice, chilled containers. Pre-chill cases the night before if you can.

    Pricing:

    Free water is best for loyalty and good PR. If you charge, keep it $1–2 max. Otherwise people just get dehydrated to save a few bucks, and that's a liability.

    Pre-stage it:

    Break pallets into smaller quantities the night before:

  • Full cases (24 × 500ml) for VIP, vendors, staff tents
  • Individual bottles for the general crowd
  • This saves massive time on event day and cuts labor costs. Don't wait to break it down while people are thirsty.

    What Goes Wrong (& How to Handle It)

    Heat spikes:

    Consumption goes up 30–50% overnight. Keep your supplier's phone number handy and know if they can do emergency rush orders. They usually can during peak season.

    Late delivery:

    Your 5-pallet order shows up 2 days late. Is your event still running? Identify a backup supplier before you need them. Not after.

    Truck breaks down:

    Cooling vehicle fails en route. Move everything to on-site coolers immediately or rent a backup truck. Have a plan, not a panic.

    Losses happen:

    Bottles break, people steal cases, spillage is a fact of life. That 10–15% buffer you added? This is why.

    Power fails:

    Event venue loses power. If you're relying on coolers or refrigeration, have backup ice sourcing already identified. Don't figure this out when it happens.

    Bad weather:

    Summer storms happen. Have tarps, shelters, and a plan to move operations indoors or to protected areas. Tents get expensive in an emergency.

    Insurance reality:

    Check your event liability policy. Some venues require proof of adequate water supply. Don't get caught short.

    What This Actually Costs

    For a 5,000-person 2-day festival (25,000 liters):
  • Water: 100 pallets × $150–200 = $15,000–20,000
  • Delivery: 100 pallets × $75–150 = $7,500–15,000
  • Storage tent: $500–1,500
  • Coolers/ice: $300–800
  • Labor (loading + distribution): $1,000–2,000
  • Buffer/contingency (10%): $2,400–3,800
  • Total: $26,700–43,100

    That's $5–9 per attendee. Not cheap, but for most festivals that's reasonable.

    Why you can't cut corners here:

    Skimp on water and you get dehydration complaints, people feeling sick, ambulance calls. You also get liability claims. If someone gets hospitalized and you documented that you knew they needed water but didn't budget for it, your insurance claim gets denied. Plus the reputation damage on social media—people will be posting about how your event nearly gave them heat stroke.

    One bad event reputation takes years to recover from. The water budget is cheap insurance against that outcome.

    Also: larger events sometimes negotiate per-pallet pricing or get sponsorship deals. If you have a beverage brand as a sponsor, sometimes they'll provide water as in-kind contribution, which cuts your cost significantly. It's worth asking.

    Timeline: Don't Miss These

  • 8 weeks out: Finalize headcount. Lock in water volume
  • 6 weeks out: Order from primary supplier, get backup quote
  • 4 weeks out: Confirm delivery date/time, arrange storage & unloading
  • 2 weeks out: Follow up with supplier, verify order status
  • 1 week out: Confirm arrival window, brief your team
  • 3 days before: Delivery arrives, stage it, pre-chill if possible
  • Event day: Staff stations, watch consumption, adjust as needed
  • Miss these and you're scrambling. Suppliers are slow, logistics are complicated, and there's no margin for error in July.

    Canada Region-by-Region

    Western Canada (BC, AB, SK, MB):

    Lots of local suppliers, reliable delivery in 5–7 days. Suppliers are used to summer rush. Rural events? Order earlier.

    Central Canada (ON, QC):

    Most competition, best pricing. Fastest delivery (3–5 days). Multiple suppliers everywhere. Heat waves can be brutal though.

    Atlantic Canada (NS, NB, NL, PE):

    Fewer suppliers, 10–14 day delivery. Order early. Coastal events? Watch for saltwater spray damaging boxes. Smaller festivals often get better local deals.

    Northern Canada:

    Very limited suppliers, 14+ day lead times. Order 8–10 weeks in advance. If pallet delivery is sketchy, look at bulk water stations instead.

    Actual Pro Tips

    1. Buy local. Faster delivery, better relationships, easier returns

    2. Ask for bulk discount. 50+ pallets? You can usually get 10–15% off

    3. Mix case sizes. Don't order all 500ml. Get some 1-liter bottles for vendors and staff

    4. Know return policies. Can you send back unopened cases? What's the deadline?

    5. Ask suppliers for advice. They do this 100 times a summer. Their recommendations are usually solid

    6. Write everything down. Orders, delivery confirmations, quantities. Protects you later if anything's disputed

    7. Debrief after. How much did you actually use? What was the consumption pattern? Use this for next year

    Bottom Line

    Summer events without enough water aren't just uncomfortable—they're dangerous. Dehydration happens fast in heat and crowds.

    Get this right: order early, source reliably, store properly, distribute efficiently. It's not glamorous work, but it's what separates a well-run event from a reputation disaster.

    Order more than you think you need. Order earlier than feels urgent. Have a backup plan.

    Your attendees will stay healthy, your team won't panic, and your liability insurance will stay happy.

    Now go run that festival. And bring the water.