No. I · The Eight Checks
What a large group has to confirm.
Step I
Count the dining seats, not the beds.
The single most useful number for a large group is how many people sit at one table, because a villa that sleeps 20 and seats 12 splits your group every dinner. Ask for the indoor and outdoor dining capacity by seat, and treat it as the real measure of whether the house works for the party you are bringing.
Step II
Check the bathroom ratio against the headcount.
Twenty guests sharing six bathrooms is a morning queue, not a holiday. Confirm the number of full bathrooms and ensuites against the real headcount, because the bedroom count and the bathroom count rarely scale together in a villa built to impress rather than to house a crowd.
Step III
Confirm parking and the arrival flow.
A large group arrives in multiple cars and transfers, and a villa up a single-track road with parking for four is a bottleneck on day one. Confirm parking capacity, the access road, and how a staggered arrival is handled, the same way a split airport transfer needs planning for any group.
Step IV
Decide between one villa and an estate.
Above 16 guests, weigh a single large house against a two-villa estate or two adjacent properties. An estate often gives better real capacity, more bathrooms, and a clearer split between sub-groups, while one house keeps everyone together. Price both per head, because the estate is frequently the better value at scale.
Step V
Read the event and occupancy terms.
Large groups trip clauses a couple never sees. Over a certain headcount, often around 24, a villa may charge an event surcharge, cap day guests, or require event terms even for a family gathering. Confirm the maximum occupancy, the day-guest limit, and any surcharge before you book, using our guide to villa house rules.
Step VI
Confirm the staffing scales to the group.
A villa staffed for eight is stretched by 20. Confirm the housekeeping hours, whether a chef can cater the full group at one sitting, and whether extra staff are arranged and costed for the larger party. A house that looks fully serviced for a couple may need topping up for a crowd.
Step VII
Structure the payment for a large party.
A large group needs one named payer who collects each share and sends a single deposit, not 20 separate transfers. Agree the per-head split, the deadlines, and the drop-out rule in writing before anyone pays. Our guide to splitting villa costs with a group covers the methods that hold up at scale.
Step VIII
Appoint one person to run the whole booking.
A 20-person trip cannot be booked by committee. One organiser holds the contract, the payment, the bedroom map, and the arrival plan, and acts as the single point of contact with the villa. The larger the group, the more this single owner of the booking is the difference between a smooth week and a frayed one.