Creative Easter Egg Hunt Prizes for Big & Little Kids

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Ready to take your Easter Egg Hunt to the next level? Instead of filling the eggs with candy, why not fill them with reward tokens that the kids can redeem for prizes? Follow this easy tutorial to set up a different kind of Easter Egg hunt this year.

colorful plastic eggs in a jumbled mess.

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Easter egg hunts can be loads of fun. Who can collect the most? Who can find the trickiest-hidden eggs? How much candy would you get?

A traditional Easter Egg Hunt can be loads of fun. But at the end of the hunt, you’ve got candy wrappers everywhere and kids hyped up on too much sugar. 

As a mom I watching my kids’ excitement in experiencing the challenge of the hunt and other fun activities, like our Empty Tomb Cake, but I don’t love all the candy and sugar that we consume over the Easter holiday.

Don’t get me wrong. I love Easter candy. A little too much. 

A few years ago, I decided to switch the focus of our Easter egg hunt from candy to other fun treats, and it was one of my best great ideas ever! And has become one of our family Easter traditions from here on out.

This fun twist is simple and easy and is a great way to gift your kids and friends practical items as well as a chocolate Easter bunny or two.

I was inspired by my mom’s practice of, once we were grown, hiding plastic Easter eggs filled with money when she came to visit.

While I’m not ready to hide cold hard cash in plastic eggs in my yard, I decided it was a good time to move away from candy-filled eggs for our egg hunts.

Instead of candy or money, I fill the eggs with tokens, kind of like play money. Then the kids can redeem their “egg money” for easter egg hunt prizes.

girl dressed all in pink hunting for eggs, holding a teal basket.

Why Give Easter Egg Hunt Prizes

It’s can be sugar-free. While you can certainly include Easter candy in your prize store, you don’t have to. There are enough Easter treats to be had, anyway. And you don’t have to hunt high and low for non-candy Easter egg fillers!

It’s fun for older kids as well as younger kids. You can vary your Easter Egg Hunt Prizes so that the whole family will enjoy the experience.

It can be very budget-friendly. You don’t have to buy expensive prizes. In fact, you could make many of the prizes be experiences rather than things, much like you would in a DIY Coupon Book.

You don’t have to worry about finding all the eggs. In the case of plastic eggs filled with chocolate, you might not want to leave any out in the yard for the dog to find. Since it’s just a piece of paper inside, you’re not risking much.

The eggs and fillers are safe for all ages. While some candies and easter egg fillers might not be appropriate for little ones or kids with food allergies, offering a prize system eliminates issues with allergens and choking hazards.

How to Set up Easter Egg Hunt Prizes

paper tokens and plastic easter eggs in a basket and on the table.

1. Print some tokens and fill your eggs.

I made my paper tokens to look like yolks. One yolk or two? 😉 You might say they are yolkens

You can make your own kind of prize ticket on slips of paper or grab my free printable to make it easy. I’ve even seen generic prize tokens for sale at Target this year (similar to these) as well as wooden tokens on Amazon that list a prize on the token.

I like my way the best — haha! Simply print off as many sheets as you like, cut the yolks apart, and fill your plastic eggs.

Get the free printable page of yolkens when you subscribe to the Life as Mom newsletter. You’ll get instant access to the printable and the Life as Mom Free Resource Library, including guides and printables for all seasons and holidays.

an assortment of easter egg prizes on black table.

2. Choose some prizes.

Choose prizes that you know your kids will enjoy getting as an alternative to candy. I get a variety of items that I might have bought the kids in spring/summer anyway so that I’m not buying a ton of junk to pick up later. Typically, it’s stuff I know they will use and enjoy.

Egg Hunt Prize Ideas

Don’t feel like you have to get special prizes if you don’t wanna. My littles were super excited about some new toys, but they were equally thrilled with redeeming their tokens for good quality candy the year before. In other years, I’ve loaded up on stationery and fun items from the Japanese dollar store.

Think about the ways you’ve been preparing for Easter spiritually. Are there relevant prizes you can include?

easter egg hunt prizes with post-it note pricetags.

3. Set up your store.

Your Easter Egg Hunt Prizes store is similar to that counter at Chuck E Cheese where kids can turn in their tickets. Same concept, but cooler because it’s at home and cheaper.

  • It’s helpful to add price tags to the prizes so it’s really clear to the kids how many tokens they need to redeem for prizes.
  • Decide ahead of time who will “man the store”. My kids love taking turns acting as store keeper, for real prizes. Kids love to play store anyway, and here’s something real to exchange. (Depending on your crowd, you might want to put an adult in charge.)
  • Be sure to explain the hunt and store concept to the kids, lest there’s disappointment at paper-filled eggs. Honestly, my kids prefer the tokens and the Easter Egg Hunt Prizes. Just be sure to build it up excitingly. 

4. Hide your eggs and get the hunt started.

Once you’ve got your store set up and your eggs filled, let the hunt begin! It’s helpful to have lots of eggs so the kids have plenty of opportunities to find tokens. 

After the hunt is over, the kids can count up their tokens. If you included “double yolks”, those are a fun surprise for kids who can count.

Show the kids how to redeem their tokens for prizes and enjoy a great Easter!

boy opening plastic eggs to redeem tokens for prizes.

Tips for Hiding Eggs

  • Adjust where you hide eggs to suit the age and capabilities of the hunters. A lot of little kids will require eggs “hidden” in plain sight, while big kids will enjoy the thrill of the hunt more if you choose more challenging hiding places. In the case of the tricky eggs, remember where you hid them!
  • Got a little too much competitive spirit with your peeps? Assign different colors of eggs to each kid so there’s a built in limit to how many they can find.
  • Communicate to the kids were you’ve hidden the eggs. You don’t want them wandering in danger zones or crossing streets.
  • If the weather is bad, simply move the hunt indoors. You can hide the eggs inside, just be clear with the kids which rooms hold the hidden eggs.
  • For teens and adults (and those who won’t choke), there are small egg-size glow sticks you can add to the egg with the tokens to have a nighttime egg hunt. If you can find them at Walmart, they’re pretty cheap!
little girl picking up eggs hidden in plain sight.

More Easter Fun

What works for you?

Leave a comment below and let us know what works for you.

This post was originally published on March 26, 2015. It has been updated for content and clarity.

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56 Comments

  1. I did this last year, and my 10 year old daughter is so excited and can’t wait to do it again this year. I don’t know how the others feel about it. Haha. But they had fun last year, too. The only thing I’m doing differently this year is I’m not using tokens. I am literally going have them trade empty plastic eggs. It’ll be easier for Mom to keep up with. 😀

  2. I have done tickets in my plastic eggs for many years for my two grandsons , now 14 and 16, who would enjoy redeeming them for prizes; gum, snacks, etc. This year I changed it up a bit. I made a fun scavenger hunt with a riddle in each egg to find the next egg; such as : Look for a place to rest your rump,
    I once was a tree but now
    I’m a _________. Answer:(Stump)
    I also hide pretend money in the eggs that they can redeem for real cash.

  3. I started a nite time Easter egg hunt 2 years ago for my then 3 year old grand daughter, by placing colourful, flickering battery operated tea candles around my garden where the marshmellow eggs could be found by her. She loved the fun of running to all of the colourful lights dancing around in the pitch dark garden to find her stash, and I have done that for her every year since. Unfortunately, she was the only grand child here in Johannesburg, her other cousins living away in Nelspruit and Prague, meant the hunt was over very quuckly. But not this year. She has a brand new cousin, born only in March this year. So, all my adult children living near us will be coming to us for Easter and because Im loving the idea of the yolk tokens for swopping for trinkets for the 2 little ones, Im going to get busy with those and for my adult kids, hiding the little bottles of liquer for them, will add to the fun for them too. Im going to be starting a very special tradition for all our grandchildren and children for the years to come. And hopefully they will continue to do it when I can no longer. Thanks so much for all your great ideas ladies. ♥️

  4. What a fantastic idea!! I will share this with my daughter so she can do it next year. She also watches her kids sugar intake so she will appreciate this idea!

  5. I saw red tricycle posted your egg hunt idea on their list to try. I was like, ” I know that blog!”.

  6. One year when I was little, my mom did something different: she had a line of yarn for each of us to follow – we each got our own color of yarn – and I don’t remember exactly where it went, except that it was inside and went up the stairs. Along the path she put our treasures, whatever they were – a cookie, a piece of candy or whatever – and we had a great time following along our own path and finding what was in store to put in our baskets. It was really simple. I loved it. She never did repeat it, but I remember asking about it more than once, and I have never forgotten it.

  7. Love the idea!!! Our tradition had cute spin … we fill eggs w “bunny tail” or cotton balls … redeem in the same way … one year I even used those really cote little fluffy chicks I got at Big Lots … Great memories…