Walk-in cooler sizing is the #1 build-out mistake operators make
A walk-in undersized by 20% costs you ~$3,000/year in lost product (turn-aways, can’t accept full deliveries) and pushes you to a renovation by year 3. A walk-in oversized by 30% costs you ~$80/month in extra electric and 30 sq ft of kitchen real estate that could be a prep station. Both are common. The right size comes from seven variables, not from a salesperson’s guess.
The 7 variables
- Cubic feet of stored product at peak (typically end-of-week before delivery).
- Door-open frequency at peak service (correlates with kitchen pace).
- Ambient kitchen temperature at the wall where the walk-in sits.
- Product turnover rate (days inventory on hand).
- Safety stock buffer (% over peak for emergencies, growth, supply hiccups).
- Future menu expansion (your one-year plan, not your five-year plan).
- Evaporator coil sizing (matches the condensing unit’s cooling capacity to the door-open / heat-load reality).
The first six size the volume. The seventh sizes the cooling power.
Step 1 — Calculate cubic feet of stored product
For each major product category, estimate weekly volume + days of inventory on hand:
Cubic feet needed = (weekly product volume) ÷ 7 × (days inventory) × packaging factor
The packaging factor is 1.5–2.5× the product volume to account for cases, crates, and air space between items.
Worked sub-example: a 50-cover diner
- Produce: 30 cu ft/week × 3 days inventory ÷ 7 = 13 cu ft × 2.0 packaging = 26 cu ft
- Dairy: 8 cu ft/week × 5 days ÷ 7 = 5.7 × 2.0 = 11 cu ft
- Meat (cooler portion, not freezer): 12 cu ft/week × 3 days ÷ 7 = 5.1 × 2.0 = 10 cu ft
- Prepared / leftover: 10 cu ft persistent average × 1.5 = 15 cu ft
- Beverages (kegged, bottled): 6 cu ft × 1.5 = 9 cu ft
- Subtotal: 71 cu ft
That’s a baseline. Now layer the multipliers below.
Step 2 — Apply door-open and ambient multipliers
| Door-open frequency | Multiplier |
|---|---|
| Slow (open every 30+ min) | 1.0× |
| Moderate (open every 5–10 min) | 1.15× |
| High (open every 1–3 min during service) | 1.3× |
| Very high (constant traffic, multi-station kitchen) | 1.5× |
| Ambient kitchen temp at walk-in wall | Multiplier |
|---|---|
| 65–75°F (cool prep area) | 1.0× |
| 75–85°F (typical kitchen back-of-house) | 1.1× |
| 85–95°F (hot line adjacent) | 1.2× |
| 95°F+ (open-flame kitchen, summer with weak HVAC) | 1.3× |
For our diner example: moderate door-open (1.15×) × typical kitchen 80°F (1.1×) = 71 × 1.27 = 90 cu ft adjusted.
Step 3 — Add safety stock and growth buffer
Standard buffer: 15–25% over current peak.
71 × 1.27 × 1.20 = 108 cu ft target volume
For new restaurants where menu is still in flux: 30–40% buffer instead. For multi-unit operators with predictable demand: 10–15% buffer.
Step 4 — Convert volume to walk-in dimensions
Standard walk-in sizes:
| Footprint | Approx interior cu ft | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 6’×6′ (36 sq ft) | ~210 | Smallest practical walk-in |
| 6’×8′ (48 sq ft) | ~290 | Most common in small restaurants |
| 8’×8′ (64 sq ft) | ~390 | Mid-volume operations |
| 8’×10′ (80 sq ft) | ~490 | Standard 75-cover full-service |
| 10’×10′ (100 sq ft) | ~620 | High-volume operations |
| 10’×12′ (120 sq ft) | ~745 | Catering, banquet, large F&B |
| 10’×16′ (160 sq ft) | ~990 | Production / commissary kitchens |
The “cubic feet of stored product” you calculated is roughly 50–60% of interior cubic feet (the rest is aisle space, shelving overhead, door swing area).
For our 108 cu ft target product → divide by 0.55 = 196 cu ft interior → 6’×6′ walk-in is enough on the math, but the next step up (6’×8′) gives breathing room and is recommended for the 50-cover diner.
Step 5 — Match condensing unit to heat load
Walk-in cooler manufacturers spec condensing units in BTU/hr based on the heat load the box must remove. Heat load comes from:
- Heat infiltration through walls (insulation thickness, ambient temp delta)
- Heat from incoming product (truck-temp deliveries vs already-cold)
- Heat from people (operators in the box average 600 BTU/hr each)
- Door-open heat dump (estimated as % of running time)
- Lighting, fan motors
Manufacturer cut sheets specify required condensing unit capacity. Default rule for a 6’×8′ walk-in cooler in 80°F ambient: 1.5 to 2 HP condensing unit, drawing roughly 4,000–6,000 BTU/hr nominal.
Step 6 — Door, lighting, and accessories
Don’t skip:
- Door type: standard hinged for most uses; sliding doors for tight spaces; strip curtains inside for high-traffic.
- Lighting: LED is now standard. Replace any incandescent walk-in lighting on day one — heat output kills compressor life.
- Floor: insulated floor for outdoor walk-ins or where the floor is below grade. Non-insulated floor is fine for most indoor installs on slab.
- Shelving: NSF-certified plastic-coated wire shelving. Adjustable. Plan ≥ 4 levels per side.
- Floor drain: mandatory. Plan during construction.
- Alarm system: temperature alarm with phone alert. $100–$500. Pays for itself the first after-hours failure.
Worked examples by operation type
50-cover diner
- Calculated: 108 cu ft product → 196 cu ft interior
- Recommended: 6’×8′ walk-in cooler (~290 cu ft interior, generous buffer)
- Condensing: 1.5 HP, air-cooled, top-mount
- Cost band: $11,000–$16,000 installed
100-cover full-service restaurant
- Calculated: ~220 cu ft product → 400 cu ft interior
- Recommended: 8’×10′ walk-in cooler (~490 cu ft interior)
- Condensing: 2.5 HP
- Cost band: $16,000–$22,000 installed
Catering / banquet kitchen (300+ covers, event-based)
- Calculated: 350+ cu ft product (varies wildly by event book)
- Recommended: 10’×12′ walk-in + separate freezer
- Condensing: 3 HP for cooler, 2 HP for freezer
- Cost band: $35,000–$55,000 installed combined
Ghost kitchen (delivery-only, 100 orders/day)
- Calculated: 60–90 cu ft product (smaller because of higher turnover)
- Recommended: 6’×6′ walk-in or two reach-ins
- Condensing: 1 HP if walk-in
- Cost band: $9,000–$12,000 installed
Common sizing mistakes
| Mistake | Real cost |
|---|---|
| Sizing for “current” volume, not summer peak | Lost product in July–August, supplier truck turn-aways |
| Skipping safety stock buffer | Year-2 menu expansion forces walk-in expansion or off-site rental |
| Trusting the salesperson’s “you’ll grow into it” math | Either way too big (energy waste) or way too small (paid retrofit) |
| Forgetting the floor drain | $2,000+ retrofit + slip hazard while operating without it |
| Putting walk-in next to the cookline | Condenser stress + energy waste; relocate or build a heat shield |
Frequently asked questions
1. Indoor vs outdoor walk-in?
Indoor is default. Outdoor (Polar King, e.g.) makes sense when interior space is at premium and you have a covered location with electrical service. Outdoor units cost 25–40% more than indoor equivalents.
2. Walk-in cooler vs walk-in freezer — sized differently?
Yes. Freezers run at 0°F or below; coolers at 36–38°F. Freezers need more insulation and stronger condensing units, ~20–30% higher cost per cubic foot.
3. Should I buy a combination walk-in (cooler + freezer in one shell)?
Often yes for kitchens with limited footprint. You share one walk-in shell with an interior wall separating cooler and freezer. Saves 20–25% on combined acquisition cost vs separate boxes.
4. How much should I budget total?
For a typical full-service restaurant: 6’×8′ walk-in cooler installed = $11,000–$16,000. Add 30–50% if you also need a freezer. Add construction prep cost if your floor needs leveling or a recessed slab.
5. What about pre-fab modular vs site-built?
Pre-fab (most common) ships as panels and assembles on-site in 1–2 days. Site-built is custom — used in odd-shaped spaces or for very large installs. Pre-fab is cheaper and faster for typical builds.
6. ENERGY STAR walk-ins — worth the premium?
Yes if your local utility offers a rebate (DSIRE.org). Typical premium: $1,500–$3,000. Typical rebate: $500–$2,500. Net: roughly break-even on day-1 cost, then ~$80–$200/year energy savings.
Internal links
- Pillar: Commercial Refrigeration: The Operator’s Complete Guide
- Siblings: Walk-In vs Reach-In · Walk-In Cooler Installation: Code, Permits, and Common Mistakes · Commercial Walk-In Freezer Sizing
- Cross-cluster: Restaurant Kitchen Layout · Restaurant Electrical / Gas / Plumbing Guide · HACCP for Equipment Operators
The Walk-In Sizing Worksheet (lead magnet)
References
- NSF/ANSI 7-2023 — Commercial Refrigerators and Freezers. Current revision (2024 edition effective April 1, 2027). https://webstore.ansi.org/standards/nsf/nsfansi2021-2459291
- FDA Food Code 2022 — §3-501.16 Cold Holding (≤41°F / 5°C). U.S. Food and Drug Administration model code. https://www.fda.gov/food/fda-food-code/food-code-2022
- ENERGY STAR Commercial Refrigerators and Freezers — Version 5.0. Revised November 2022. https://www.energystar.gov/products/spec/commercial_refrigerators_and_freezers_specification_version_5_0_pd
- ASHRAE Refrigeration Handbook — Commercial Refrigeration chapter. Industry-standard sizing and design reference. https://www.ashrae.org/technical-resources/ashrae-handbook
- NSF/ANSI 12-2023 — Automatic Ice Making Equipment. Sanitation and design for ice makers and storage components. https://webstore.ansi.org/standards/nsf/nsfansi122023
- ENERGY STAR Commercial Ice Makers Specification — Version 3.0. Effective January 28, 2018. https://www.energystar.gov/products/spec/commercial_ice_makers_specification_version_3_0_pd