Blog /Strategy
8 min read 2026-03-22

Easter brunch marketing 2026: 3 tactics to turn holiday guests into regulars

Your dining room will be packed on April 20th. Easter brunch fills tables with families who found you on Google, booked two weeks ago, and will forget your name by April 22nd.

The industry average: 76% of holiday guests never return. Not because they didn’t enjoy the meal — because nothing triggered a second visit. They go back to their default rotation of 3-4 restaurants and you become a “that place we went for Easter” memory.

The restaurants that break this pattern do three things before the holiday, not after. Here’s what works, with real numbers.

Tactic 1: set up a gamified reward before Easter week

The biggest mistake: trying to launch a retention system on Easter Sunday. Staff is stressed, the kitchen is at capacity, and nobody has time to explain a new process.

Set it up 1-2 weeks before. The QR code goes on every table. The prize wheel is configured with Easter-themed rewards. Staff gets a one-line script: “Scan the QR on the table when you’re done — you’ll win something for your next visit.”

Easter-specific prize ideas:

Why before Easter matters: Staff training takes one 15-minute meeting. Testing the QR flow takes 10 minutes. But doing it on Easter morning with 200 covers? That’s how you get a broken flow and frustrated servers.

Real numbers: Restaurants using gamified QR flows see 55% of guests providing their email address — compared to 8% industry average. That’s 7x more guest data from the same crowd. On Easter, when families are relaxed and kids are excited, scan rates go even higher because the “spin a wheel” mechanic feels like part of the holiday fun.

Tactic 2: wallet passes that survive the holiday amnesia

Paper coupons from Easter brunch end up in the car, then in the bin. Email coupons get buried under Monday morning’s inbox avalanche.

A Wallet pass — Apple Wallet or Google Wallet — stays on the phone’s lock screen. Every time the guest checks the time for the next two weeks, they see: “15% off at [Your Restaurant] — expires May 4th.”

The setup:

  1. Guest spins the wheel, wins a reward
  2. “Add to Wallet” button appears immediately
  3. The pass shows the prize, your logo, and an expiry date
  4. Optional: location notification when they’re within 500m of your restaurant

Why this works for Easter specifically: Holiday guests are often from outside your regular area — visiting family, traveling for the long weekend. A Wallet pass works regardless of geography. When they visit the area again (Mother’s Day, summer holidays), your restaurant pops up on their phone.

Real numbers: Wallet pass holders return at 2.3x the rate of email-only recipients. The 25% return visit rate that restaurants on the platform see is largely driven by the persistent visibility of wallet passes.

Tactic 3: timed review asks and follow-up sequence

Easter Sunday, 2pm. The family just finished a beautiful brunch. The kids are happy, the parents are relaxed, the food was great. This is the peak emotional moment — and the only window where a review request feels natural.

The flow:

  1. End of meal — server mentions the QR
  2. Guest scans, spins, wins a reward
  3. Soft prompt: “While you’re here, would you leave us a quick Google review?”
  4. The reward creates reciprocity — they just received something, a review feels fair

Post-Easter email sequence:

Real numbers: 34 out of 100 guests who scan the QR code leave a Google review. Industry average without gamification: 3%. For a restaurant serving 200 Easter covers, that’s potentially 68 new Google reviews in one weekend.

The math: Easter gamification vs paid ads

Paid ads (Easter)Gamified QR flow
Cost$200-500$30/month
ReachCold audienceWarm guests (already dining)
Email capture0%55% of guests
Google reviews034% conversion
Return visits0%25% within 14 days
Long-term assetNoneEmail list + reviews + wallet passes

The ad fills the seat once. The QR flow fills it again — and again.

Timeline: 2 weeks before Easter

WhenWhatTime needed
2 weeks beforeSet up account, configure prizes30 minutes
10 days beforeTrain staff (one meeting)15 minutes
1 week beforeTest QR flow at a real table10 minutes
3 days beforePrint QR stickers/table cards5 minutes
Easter SundayStaff mentions QR at every table5 seconds per table
Monday afterEmail sequence starts automatically0 minutes (automated)

Total hands-on time: under 1 hour. Everything after Easter Sunday runs automatically.

Frequently asked questions

How much does a gamified Easter campaign cost to run?

The prizes are menu items you already have. The technology starts at $30/month. Compare that to $200-500 for an Instagram ad reaching cold audiences. The QR flow costs less and produces 55% email capture, 34% review conversion, and 25% return visits.

Will families actually scan a QR code during brunch?

When the server mentions it, scan rates jump from 20-30% (passive table card) to 45-60%. Easter puts families in a playful mood — a prize wheel feels like part of the holiday.

What prizes work best for Easter brunch?

Mix instant and future rewards. Free kids’ dessert creates excitement at the table. A discount on the next visit gives a reason to return. Weight the wheel so low-cost items win 75-90% of the time.

Can this work for a small cafe?

Yes. Counter-service spots put QR codes on receipts or at the register. Cafes often see higher scan rates because the interaction is quicker.

How quickly can I set this up before Easter?

Under an hour for the technical setup. Even 3 days before is enough — QR on tables, staff script, prizes configured.

What happens after Easter — do I turn it off?

No. The Easter-themed prizes rotate out, but the system keeps running year-round. Mother’s Day, summer weekends, Christmas — every holiday becomes a retention opportunity.

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