I used to think Easter was one of those holidays that didn’t need much planning. You hide some eggs, bring out a ham, and let the kids eat too much chocolate. Easy, right?
Then my daughter turned five and asked me if the Easter Bunny was going to come to our house “like a real party.” And something about the way she said it — with this excitement in her eyes that told me she’d been imagining a full-blown Easter celebration for weeks — made me realize I’d been phoning it in.
So that year, I went all in. Not all in financially — I think I spent about $40 total — but all in with effort and creativity. I set up an egg hunt with actual thought behind it. I made a brunch that looked like something from a food blog. I planned games. I decorated the table. I even made a silly “Easter Bunny Was Here” footprint trail from the front door using baby powder and a cotton ball.
My daughter talked about that Easter for months. Literally months. Her teacher told me she wrote about it in her journal at school. And the thing that got me was how simple everything actually was. Nothing I did was complicated. Nothing was expensive. I just… planned. And the planning made all the difference.
If you want your 2026 Easter to be the one your family talks about — the one your kids remember when they’re grown — these 25 ideas will get you there. Some are for little kids. Some are for older kids. Some are for the adults who deserve to enjoy Easter too. All of them are tested, practical, and designed to create the kind of day that feels genuinely special.
Setting the Scene: Easter Decorations
1. Build a Pastel Balloon Arch for the Entrance
Greet your guests with a pastel balloon arch at your front door or in the main party space. Use a mix of light pink, lavender, baby blue, mint green, and white balloons in different sizes for a lush, organic look.
A balloon strip (basically a long plastic strip with pre-cut holes) makes this project shockingly easy — no helium, no special skills. Inflate balloons with a hand pump, push them into the strip holes, and shape the strip into an arch using command hooks or tape on the wall. The entire project takes about 30 minutes and costs under $15 for supplies.
The visual impact is worth every minute. When kids walk through a balloon arch, they immediately know this isn’t just brunch at grandma’s house — it’s a real celebration.
Pro Tip: Add a few flower clusters between the balloons — just tape small bunches of artificial flowers from the dollar store directly onto the balloon strip. This elevates the arch from “party decoration” to “wow” for about $3 extra.
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2. Create a “Spring Has Sprung” Table Setting
Your Easter table sets the mood for the entire celebration. Start with a simple white or pastel tablecloth (even a white bedsheet works in a pinch), then layer in spring details.
Place a runner of fresh or faux greenery down the center. Scatter a few painted eggs, small potted flowers, and tea light candles along the runner. At each place setting, fold a napkin into bunny ears (it’s easier than it sounds — fold into a triangle, roll tightly, bend into a circle, and pull up two “ears”). Add a small name card written on a decorated egg for a personal touch.
The whole setup takes 20 minutes and costs under $15, but the result looks like you hired a party planner. The key is having a consistent color palette — pick 2-3 colors and stick with them for everything.
3. Make an Easter Photo Backdrop
Set up a simple photo area where guests can take pictures throughout the party. Hang a pastel fabric (a $5 plastic tablecloth taped to the wall works great), add a few balloon clusters, a “Happy Easter” banner, and a basket of photo props — bunny ears headbands, oversized sunglasses, signs that say “Some Bunny Loves Me” and “Egg-cited for Easter.”
A phone on a small tripod with a self-timer turns this into a self-serve photo booth. Kids love posing with props, parents love having the photos afterward, and the backdrop makes every picture look intentional rather than random.
After the party, share a link to a shared Google Photos album so everyone can grab their favorites.
4. Hang a DIY Easter Garland
Cut egg, bunny, and flower shapes from colored card stock or patterned scrapbook paper. Punch holes in the tops and thread them onto twine or ribbon to create a festive garland. Hang it across the mantel, above the food table, or along the porch railing.
This is a perfect pre-party craft to do with your kids the day before Easter. They love helping cut shapes and choosing colors, and seeing their handmade garland displayed at the actual party gives them a sense of pride and ownership over the celebration.
Total cost: about $3 for card stock and twine. Time: 15-20 minutes.
5. Set Up an Easter Bunny Footprint Trail
The morning of the party (or the night before), create a trail of “bunny footprints” from the front door to the Easter basket or egg hunt starting point. Sprinkle baby powder on the floor through a stencil made from cardboard cut into a bunny paw shape. Add a few cotton balls as “dropped” bunny tail fluff along the trail.
This takes five minutes, costs nothing, and the look on kids’ faces when they discover that the Easter Bunny was literally in their house is absolutely priceless. Even kids who are starting to question whether the Easter Bunny is real will be momentarily convinced.
Pro Tip: Take photos of the trail before the kids wake up or arrive. The footprints get smudged quickly once excited children start following them.
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The Main Event: Easter Egg Hunt Ideas
6. Run a Three-Level Egg Hunt by Age
The most common egg hunt mistake is putting all ages together. A four-year-old competing against a ten-year-old isn’t a hunt — it’s a comedy of frustration. Divide your space into three zones with different difficulty levels.
Toddler zone (ages 1-3): Eggs placed in completely obvious spots — sitting on chairs, on top of bushes, lying in the open grass. These little ones just want to practice picking up and putting in their basket.
Kid zone (ages 4-8): Eggs tucked behind planters, under benches, nestled in flower beds, behind trees. Visible if you’re looking, but requiring some actual searching.
Big kid zone (ages 9+): Eggs hidden in genuinely tricky spots — inside rain gutters, under overturned pots, behind fence posts, up on low branches. Include a few “golden eggs” with special prizes to keep the excitement high.
Color-code the eggs by zone so there’s no confusion about who hunts where.
7. Organize a Glow-in-the-Dark Evening Egg Hunt
Take your egg hunt to the next level — literally into the night. Buy glow sticks (the snap-to-activate kind), place one inside each plastic egg, and hide them around the yard after sunset. The eggs glow through the translucent plastic, creating a magical treasure hunt in the dark.
Kids carry baskets and flashlights, scanning the lawn for glowing colored orbs. The visual effect is genuinely breathtaking — it looks like a fairy garden scattered across your backyard. Adults enjoy watching from the porch with a warm drink just as much as kids enjoy the hunt.
This works as a “bonus round” after the daytime hunt, or as the main event for an evening Easter gathering.
8. Create a Clue-Based Scavenger Hunt
For older kids and teens who think egg hunts are “for babies,” a clue-based scavenger hunt brings the challenge and excitement back. Write a series of riddles where each answer leads to the location of the next clue.
Example clue chain: “I’m where you keep things cold” (refrigerator) → taped inside the fridge is the next clue: “I spin round and round when clothes are wet” (dryer) → inside the dryer is another clue → and so on through 8-12 locations ending at the grand prize.
Make later clues progressively harder — word puzzles, backwards writing, simple math problems where the answer is a house number. This engages older kids’ competitive brains and keeps them entertained for 30-45 minutes while younger kids do the traditional egg hunt.
9. Include Special Prize Eggs
Mix a few distinctive eggs into the regular hunt that contain prize tickets. A golden egg might win a $5 gift card. A sparkly egg might earn first pick of dessert. A silver egg might contain a ticket for “one special outing with mom/dad” (ice cream date, movie night, etc.).
You can also include silly prize eggs — one that makes the finder wear a bunny hat for an hour, one that means the finder gets to hide the eggs next year, one that earns the title “Easter Champion” with a construction-paper crown.
The possibility of finding a special egg adds electricity to the entire hunt. Kids who’ve already found plenty of regular eggs keep searching, hoping the golden one is still out there.
10. Set Up a “Stuff and Hide” Station
Before the hunt, let kids stuff their own eggs with candy, stickers, and small toys from a supply table. Then they hide those eggs for other kids to find.
This brilliant approach does three things. It creates an extra 20 minutes of activity (stuffing and hiding). It teaches generosity — kids are creating surprises for someone else. And it saves you from spending an hour the night before stuffing 200 eggs alone at the kitchen table.
Set out bowls of jelly beans, chocolate eggs, temporary tattoos, small erasers, and stickers alongside a pile of empty plastic eggs. Kids go to town.
Easter Brunch and Food Ideas
11. Build a Waffle Bar Brunch Station
A waffle bar is the ultimate Easter brunch move because it’s interactive, crowd-pleasing, and actually easier than cooking individual plates for everyone.
Make a large batch of waffles in advance (keep warm in a 200°F oven on a wire rack) or set up a waffle iron on the buffet table. Lay out a spread of toppings: fresh strawberries, blueberries, sliced bananas, whipped cream, Nutella, peanut butter, maple syrup, honey, chopped pecans, chocolate chips, sprinkles, and powdered sugar.
Kids build their dream waffle. Adults enjoy a restaurant-quality brunch experience. Nobody complains about what’s for breakfast because they chose it themselves. And cleanup is easier than a plated meal because everything is self-serve.
Total cost for a crowd of 12-15: about $20-$25 in waffle mix and toppings.
Pro Tip: Set out a separate plate of “waffle sticks” — waffles cut into strips for dipping. Toddlers and young kids manage these much better than a full waffle, and the dipping adds extra fun.
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12. Make an Easter Candy Charcuterie Board
This is the most shareable, most photographed food idea on this entire list, and it requires zero cooking ability.
On a large board or platter, arrange Easter candies in an artistic layout — Cadbury eggs, Peeps, jelly beans sorted by color, chocolate bunnies, Robin eggs, candy-coated almonds, pastel M&Ms, and any other spring candy. Fill gaps with fresh strawberries, blueberries, pretzels, and graham crackers.
The result looks like it was designed by a professional party planner but literally takes 15 minutes of arranging candy on a board. Kids and adults both hover around it all day, and the colors are so vibrant it becomes a centerpiece in itself.
13. Serve Individual “Carrot Patch” Veggie Cups
Fill clear plastic cups with ranch dip, then stick baby carrots, celery sticks, and small broccoli florets upright so they look like vegetables growing in a garden. One cup per person.
These are adorable, practical, and a smart way to get vegetables on the table alongside all the sugar. Kids who ignore a veggie tray will eat these because the individual cup feels special and the presentation is fun. Adults appreciate having something fresh and crunchy between candy binges.
14. Bake and Decorate Easter Sugar Cookies
Bake sugar cookies in Easter shapes — eggs, bunnies, chicks, flowers, crosses — and set up a decorating station where guests frost and decorate their own. This is simultaneously a food item, an activity, and a take-home party favor all in one.
Use premade cookie dough to save time. Make simple icing by mixing powdered sugar with a splash of milk and food coloring. Set out squeeze bottles of icing, bowls of sprinkles, and edible markers. Cover the decorating table with parchment paper for easy cleanup.
The finished cookies can be displayed on a platter as edible art, or each guest can take theirs home in a small bag.
15. Create an Easter Punch Station
Make a large batch of festive punch in a clear punch bowl or beverage dispenser. A classic spring recipe: mix lemonade, sparkling water, and a scoop of rainbow sherbet. The sherbet melts into the punch, creating a pastel swirl that looks magical and tastes incredible.
For an adult version, add champagne or prosecco instead of sparkling water. Set up both versions side by side — “Bunny Punch” for kids, “Grown-Up Garden Fizz” for adults — with cute labels.
A punch station is cheaper than buying individual drinks, creates a visual focal point on the food table, and keeps guests hydrated all day without you constantly running to the kitchen.
Easter Activities and Games
16. Host an Egg-and-Spoon Relay Race
Divide players into teams. Each person must carry an egg on a spoon from the starting line to a turnaround point and back without dropping it, then pass the spoon to the next teammate.
Use hard-boiled eggs for a classic (messy but hilarious) version, or plastic eggs for easier cleanup. For extra difficulty, have older kids balance the spoon in their mouth instead of their hand. For toddlers, let them carry the egg in two hands and just walk the course.
This game gets everyone off the couch, creates genuine laughter, and works for all ages when you adjust the rules by age group.
17. Set Up an Easter Craft Station
A craft station keeps kids happily occupied for 30-60 minutes and gives them something to take home. Good Easter crafts include paper plate bunny masks, popsicle stick chicks painted yellow with googly eyes, egg-shaped suncatchers using contact paper and tissue paper pieces, and painting wooden craft eggs.
Cover the table with a plastic tablecloth for cleanup. Set out all supplies organized by craft with picture examples of the finished product. Having a teen or adult helper at the table keeps things running smoothly for younger kids.
18. Play Musical Easter Eggs
A spring twist on musical chairs. Place large plastic eggs (or egg-shaped cutouts) on the ground in a circle — one fewer than the number of players. Play spring-themed music while players walk around the circle. When the music stops, everyone scrambles to stand on an egg. The player without an egg is out. Remove one egg each round.
Kids love this because it combines the excitement of musical chairs with the Easter theme, and the egg-shaped playing pieces make it feel fresh even for kids who’ve played musical chairs a hundred times.
19. Organize an Easter Trivia Contest
Create 15-20 Easter-themed questions mixing easy ones for kids and harder ones for adults. Play individually or in family teams.
Sample questions: “What animal delivers Easter eggs?” (bunny — for little kids). “What flower is most associated with Easter?” (lily). “In what country did the Easter egg hunt tradition originate?” (Germany). “How many jelly beans do Americans consume at Easter — 9 billion or 16 billion?” (16 billion).
Read questions aloud, give 30 seconds to answer, and keep score visually where everyone can see. Award small prizes to the winning team — a basket of candy, first dibs on dessert, or the coveted “Easter Trivia Champion” title.

20. Run a “Bunny Hop” Dance Contest
Play upbeat spring music and have everyone do their best bunny hop dance. Start with everyone hopping freely, then each round a judge eliminates dancers until one “Bunny Hop Champion” remains.
For younger kids, skip the elimination and just let everyone dance — the joy is in the hopping and silliness, not the competition. For older kids and adults, the competition element creates hilarious moments and great photo opportunities.
Pro Tip: Film the bunny hop contest and share the video in the family group chat afterward. It becomes one of those family memories that gets replayed at every holiday for years.
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Easter Ideas for Adults
21. Set Up a Mimosa Bar
A self-serve mimosa bar is the quintessential adult Easter brunch addition. Set out champagne (or prosecco for a budget-friendly option), orange juice, cranberry juice, peach nectar, mango juice, and fresh berries for garnish.
Guests mix their own mimosas throughout the morning. The variety of juices means each drink is slightly different, which feels more special than just pouring OJ and champagne.
For non-drinkers, set up the same station with sparkling water instead of champagne — “Mockmosas” taste just as refreshing and look equally elegant.
22. Plan an Easter Wine and Cheese Hour
For adult gatherings, set up a wine and cheese pairing after the kids’ activities wind down. Select three wines — a crisp white, a rosé, and a bubbly — with complementary cheeses, crackers, grapes, and honey.
Print small tasting cards that describe each pairing. This creates a structured activity that gives adults something to enjoy beyond watching children hunt for eggs. Spring wines like Sauvignon Blanc and Provence Rosé pair beautifully with the lightness of the season.
23. Host an Easter Dessert Bake-Off
Ask each adult guest to bring their best Easter dessert for a friendly competition. Set up all entries on a dessert table with numbers (not names, to keep judging fair), give everyone a ballot, and vote for favorites.
Categories might include “Most Beautiful,” “Best Taste,” “Most Creative,” and “Most Easter-Themed.” Award small prizes — an apron, a baking tool, or just the bragging rights.
This turns dessert into entertainment, gets everyone contributing to the food spread, and sparks conversations between guests who might not know each other well.
Party Planning Details
24. Create an Easter Party Playlist
Music sets the energy for any party. Build a playlist that matches the flow of your celebration.
Arrival and brunch (calm, warm): “Here Comes the Sun” by The Beatles, “Walking on Sunshine” by Katrina and the Waves, acoustic covers, light jazz.
Egg hunt and games (upbeat, energetic): “Happy” by Pharrell, “Best Day of My Life” by American Authors, “Can’t Stop the Feeling” by Justin Timberlake, kid-friendly pop.
Wind-down (relaxed, sweet): “Somewhere Over the Rainbow” by Israel Kamakawiwoʻole, “What a Wonderful World” by Louis Armstrong, soft acoustic music.
Having the right music playing in the background transforms the atmosphere from “we’re at someone’s house” to “this is a celebration.”
25. Prepare Easter Party Favor Bags
Send every guest home with a small bag of goodies. Simple, affordable favor ideas include a few pieces of Easter candy, a small pack of stickers, a tiny toy bunny, bubbles, a seed packet for spring planting, or a decorated sugar cookie from the decorating station.
Use small cellophane bags tied with pastel ribbon, or simple paper bags stamped with a bunny shape. Attach a small tag that says “Thanks for hopping by!” or “Some bunny is glad you came!”
Party favors are the last impression of your party, and a thoughtful bag — even an inexpensive one — leaves guests feeling appreciated and makes kids’ eyes light up one more time before they head home.
Complete Easter Party Timeline
Here’s a sample schedule for a full family Easter celebration:
9:30 AM — Final setup. Put out food, hide eggs, start music playlist.
10:00 AM — Guests arrive. Mimosa bar and spring punch available. Casual mingling.
10:30 AM — Brunch served buffet-style. Waffle bar, fruit, veggies, candy board.
11:15 AM — Easter egg hunt. Start with youngest age group, work up by age. 15 minutes per group.
11:45 AM — Activities begin. Craft station opens, egg decorating contest, relay races. Kids rotate through while adults enjoy coffee and conversation.
12:30 PM — Easter trivia contest for everyone.
1:00 PM — Prize announcements and dessert. Egg hunt winners, trivia champion, craft contest, bake-off results. Bring out cake, cookies, and the candy board.
1:30 PM — Photo booth and free time. Guests mingle, kids play, everyone grazes on remaining food.
2:30 PM — Party favors distributed. Guests depart at their leisure.
Evening option: Glow-in-the-dark egg hunt at dusk followed by backyard bonfire and s’mores.
Budget-Friendly Easter Party: Under $50
- Plastic eggs (100 count): $8
- Candy for eggs: $10
- Waffle mix + toppings (serves 12): $12
- Grocery store flowers (2 bunches): $8
- Pastel balloons + banner: $5
- Paper plates/napkins/cups: $5
- Craft supplies (paper, markers): $2
Total: $50
Add things you already own — eggs for decorating, music from your phone, games that need no equipment — and the party is complete.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many eggs do I need for an Easter egg hunt?
Plan for 10-12 eggs per child. For 15 kids, that’s about 150-180 eggs. Plastic eggs are reusable year after year, so the upfront investment pays off over time. Buy in bulk from Amazon or dollar stores for the best price.
What do you put in Easter eggs besides candy?
Non-candy options include stickers, temporary tattoos, coins, small erasers, tiny figurines, bouncy balls, silly putty, stamps, hair clips, and activity coupons (“choose tonight’s movie” or “skip one chore”). These work great for families managing sugar intake.
What age is best for Easter egg hunts?
Kids 18 months and older can participate in a simplified hunt with visible eggs. The sweet spot for traditional hidden egg hunts is ages 3-10. For ages 11+, switch to clue-based scavenger hunts or glow-in-the-dark hunts to keep the excitement alive.
How do I keep adults entertained at an Easter party?
A mimosa bar, trivia games, wine and cheese pairing, dessert bake-off competition, and a photo booth give adults their own activities. Good conversation, comfortable seating, and background music do the rest. Adults enjoy Easter most when there’s something for them beyond watching children.
Can I throw a great Easter party on a small budget?
Absolutely. The ideas that make the biggest impact — age-grouped egg hunts, bunny footprint trails, waffle bars, candy boards, and backyard games — cost very little. A fully stocked Easter party is achievable for $50 or less. Creativity beats spending every time.
When should I start planning my Easter party?
Two to three weeks before Easter is plenty of time. Order plastic eggs and candy online first (they sell out close to Easter). Plan your food menu and activities one week before. Set up decorations and hide eggs the morning of the party.
[IMAGE 9: “Easter Party Checklist” graphic — key planning steps with timeline. Printable, organized, actionable. Size: 800x1000px + 1000x1500px Pinterest pin]
Make This Easter One They Never Forget
Easter isn’t about having the most elaborate party or spending the most money. It’s about creating a day where your family slows down, has fun together, and makes memories that last longer than the chocolate.
Pick five or six ideas from this list. Don’t try to do everything — that’s a recipe for stress, not celebration. Choose one egg hunt format, one food station, two activities, and two decorations. That’s a complete Easter party right there.
The bar isn’t perfection. The bar is intentionality. And the fact that you’re reading this guide right now tells me you’ve already cleared it.
Happy Easter from all of us at PartyBloomIdeas. Now go make some magic.
Love these ideas? Pin your favorites and share this guide with everyone planning Easter this year. Visit PartyBloomIdeas.com for celebration inspiration all year round!
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