Tortilla Calculator: How Many Tortillas Do You Need?

🫓 Tortilla Calculator

Calculate exactly how many tortillas you need for tacos, burritos, quesadillas, and more

Quick Presets
🧮 Calculator
Tortillas Needed
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tortillas
Packs to Buy
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packs (10-count)
Per Person
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tortillas each
With Buffer
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tortillas (recommended)
📊 Tortillas Per Person by Dish
3
Tacos
2
Burritos
2
Quesadillas
3
Fajitas
3
Enchiladas
4
Street Tacos
2
Wraps
2
Nachos Wraps
📏 Tortilla Sizes Guide
6"
Small — Tacos
8"
Medium — Fajitas
10"
Large — Burritos
12"
XL — Big Wraps
🧆 How Many Tortillas for a Crowd?
Dish TypeFor 4 PeopleFor 8 PeopleFor 12 PeopleFor 20 People
Tacos12243660
Burritos8162440
Quesadillas8162440
Fajitas12243660
Enchiladas12243660
Street Tacos16324880
Wraps8162440
🌽 Flour vs Corn Tortillas
FeatureFlour TortillasCorn Tortillas
Best ForBurritos, wraps, quesadillas, fajitasTacos, enchiladas, street tacos
Common Sizes8", 10", 12"6", 5"
Calories (1 medium)~146 kcal~52 kcal
Carbs (1 medium)~25g~11g
GlutenYes (contains wheat)No (naturally GF)
TextureSoft, pliable, chewyFirm, slightly crumbly
FlavorMild, neutralEarthy, corn flavor
Pack Count8–10 per pack30 per pack
📦 Standard Pack Sizes
Tortilla TypeSizeCount per PackBest For
Flour6 inch10Mini tacos, kids
Flour8 inch10Fajitas, soft tacos
Flour10 inch8Burritos, wraps
Flour12 inch6XL burritos, meal prep
Corn6 inch30Tacos, enchiladas
Whole Wheat8 inch8Healthy wraps, fajitas
💡 Tip: Always buy about 10–15% more tortillas than you think you need. Tortillas can tear when folding or rolling, especially corn tortillas that have not been warmed first. Warm them in a dry skillet or directly over a gas flame for 20–30 seconds per side.
💡 Tip: For a taco bar or party, plan on at least 3 tortillas per person as a base, then add your buffer. Guests tend to eat more when a variety of fillings is available. Offer both flour and corn options to accommodate all preferences and dietary needs.

Tortillas are slim, round flatbreads from Mesoamerica, usually made from masa. Today they are also made from wheat flour. The Aztecs and other Nahuatl-speakers called them tlaxcalli.

When Spanish conquistadors arrived in Mexico, they observed the native communities work with corn dough. It looked like a little cake to them, so they borrowed the word tortilla, which stayed until now

What Are Tortillas and How to Make Them

Corn tortillas start with nixtamalized masa, which really changes the taste and nutrition. Nixtamalization means to cook and soak dried corn in an alkaline solution, usually limewater. That process changes the corn deeply, giving it better flavor and nutrition, and making the masa work better.

They form the base of Mexican cooking and bring a rustic, real taste to the table. Honestly, it is a warning if a Mexican store does not offer them on the menu. Flour tortillas on the other hand have a taste near normal bread, imagine a crepe with a bit more weight.

Home made flour tortillas result surprisingly flexible and soft, ideal for wrapping any stuffing in your head. Simple masa works best: flour, salt, baking powder, fat and warm water do it easy. Some leave the baking powder out if they want something ultra-slim and tender.

For fat, olive oil, melted butter or avocado oil all work well in the masa. Vegetable oil or any neutral oil works without problem. Coconut and peanut oil?

They give character to the taste. For something special, fresh pork lard does an amazing, unbeatable resulte.

Corn tortillas are theoretically simple, but practically more difficult. Masa harina and water are enough, but the water amount is more important than you think. The masa can be stubborn; occasionally too crumbly, occasionally too wet.

A tortilla press helps to roll equal slim rounds. Flour tortillas can be rolled quite thin, but letting the masa rest helps a lot.

The cooking method is basic: a warm comal or skillet is the good way. A cast iron pan heated until really warm works perfectly. When the tortilla touches the surface, you will hear a gentle sizzle.

After 40 to 50 seconds, brown marks appear below and bubbles pop up. That signals you to flip. Mind not to overcook them…

Fresh tortillas break quickly.

Most store bought tortillas come pre-cooked and ready from the package. Supermarket flour tortillas commonly have too much salt, so mind that. Heat them before folding.

For the microwave, put them on a plate, cover with a paper towel and heat on high for 30 to 45 seconds. Corn tortillas can be cut into thirds and bake at 250 degrees on a sheet until golden and crispy for homemade chips.

Tortillas work surprisingly for soft tacos, fajitas, burritos, wraps and quesadillas, possibilities are truly infinite. They are extremely flexible and form the center of many dishes and snacks. Many eat them plain, which shows their appeal.

Tortilla Calculator: How Many Tortillas Do You Need?

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