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12 Restaurant Marketing Promotions for Easter and Passover

a photo of Bianca Esmond

Bianca Esmond

5 min read

Mar 26, 2025

12 Restaurant Marketing Promotions for Easter and Passover

With Easter spending averaging $177 per person in 2024, it’s time, once again, to capitalize on the annual tradition. For many, the Easter and Passover holidays center around food — brunch anyone? 

 To make your restaurant the place to be this year, plan sprawling menus and events guests can enjoy in-house or at home. There’s no stopping the Easter Bunny and Elijah from coming to town, so you’ll need to schedule your marketing promos now. 

Below are 12 restaurant marketing promotions for Easter and Passover that are sure to drive sales.

1. Offer a prix fixe Easter brunch or Passover dinner menu

Encourage guests to book reservations for a yummy Easter brunch or Passover dinner at your venue. Holidays laden with tradition are perfect opportunities to impress with a prix fixe menu you can scale as needed. (Think: creamy quiches and benedict, deliciously crusty honey-glazed hams, flakey gefilte fish, fluffy mashed potatoes and pale pink bellinis — you know, for aesthetics.)

Wit and Wisdom in Sonoma is hosting a mouth-watering 3-course prix fixe menu for Easter brunch giving guests options to choose from for each course.

Spago Beverly Hills is keeping the tradition alive, offering their 41st annual sprawling Passover Charity Seder spread. In addition to dinner and service, each guest will enjoy Kosher wine pairings and traditional desserts packaged to go.

2. Offer family dinners to go

Since the Easter Bunny tends to make house calls, why not make it easy for diners to celebrate at home with Easter dinner and Passover-themed meal kits available for online ordering, curbside pickup and delivery

Pull together traditional menu items like lamb and glazed carrots for Easter or brisket and matzo ball soup for Passover. Add a recipe card to each takeout order so guests can put the finishing touches on these dishes at home. 

3. Add enticing upgrades and upsells to the reservation process

Allow guests to customize their reservations with irresistible a la carte upgrades and prepaid add-ons they can select during your reservations and booking flow.

Incorporate higher-margin items you can honor for both dine-in and takeout requests, like a champagne toast, personalized desserts or bottles of wine, giving guests access to special touches they’re looking for when celebrating a holiday.  

Cater to groups by offering family-style batch cocktails, to-go drinks and wine packages that’ll elevate their Easter dinners and events.

Pro Tip

Holiday or otherwise, make sure your reservations tool is equipped to capture revenue in advance. With SevenRooms, you can create customized widgets that include optional add-ons or upsells guests pay for ahead of time, so you can order and staff accordingly.

4. Inspire early bookings and FOMO with email and texts

For Easter, effective and enticing communication is key to filling your restaurant and maximizing revenue. 

Emails are perfect for storytelling, sharing menu details and enticing guests with early-bird offers. By leveraging your guest database or a CRM system, you can target previous diners who celebrated Easter at your venue last year and send them a personalized email to encourage early reservations.

As the date approaches, turn to text marketing to create urgency to fill any remaining tables. With a 98% open rate, texts are hard to ignore and perfect for inspiring FOMO (fear of missing out). For Henry Kaminski, founder of Brand to Table and former CMO of Fabio Viviani Hospitality, text marketing efforts sold out their Easter brunch last year.

“Within an hour [of hitting send], $5,800 came in. So, we did one more blast after that because we only had a few seats left. And you know what? We sold the house out. This brought revenue in before we even served our first brunch plate. It blew me away. Text messaging is powerful stuff." - Henry Kaminski

5. Host an Easter egg hunt or egg decorating contest

At your venue

After tearing through Easter baskets in the morning, parents will want an opportunity to get sugar-hyped kids out of the house. Why not invite them to your establishment with an onsite egg decorating station or easter egg hunt?

We suggest setting up in one centralized location, (outdoors if possible), rather than at each table to avoid making a mess. 

If you’d rather keep guests in their seats, design an Easter egg hunt on paper kids can search for and color on at each table. Similarly, trivia cards or fill-in-the-blank games can entertain guests of all ages. Integrate a contest guests can enter to win a complimentary meal or another offer.

Pro Tip

When engaging with your guests at your venue, find ways to encourage them to offer up key details you can use to boost the guest experience, like an email address and birthday or anniversary date. Then, use SevenRoom’s hospitality CRM system to store this information to power your marketing efforts.

Via social media

Use Easter as a reason to engage with your followers. Drop ‘Easter eggs,’ otherwise known as hints or clues, into your existing social media posts. Offer prizes for those that can crack the code, like gift cards to your restaurant, discounts on takeaway orders or a special bottle from your wine cellar. 

6. Bring in the Easter Bunny

Create a social-worthy and Instagrammable photo op by inviting the Easter Bunny to your restaurant. Dress the bunny in your company swag, create a logo-rich backdrop and encourage families to snap a family picture. The more people that tag your business, the greater your reach.

For example, the team at Giostra by Fabio Viviani convinced the bunny to attend their family-friendly brunch buffet on Easter Sunday — the perfect setup for family photos.

7. Sell tickets to a matzo ball soup or hot cross bun cooking class

Grab your chef and conduct a cooking masterclass that walks guests through all the steps of a traditional Passover or Easter menu, such as making fluffy matzo balls or light-as-air hot cross buns. 

You can do this at your venue or virtually via social media. TikTok marketing is so effective that even Wolfgang Puck has been known to post a cooking lesson or two on the platform. 

If you opt to go the live route, use an event widget that helps you customize every detail — including distinct pricing tiers or time slots. With the right technology in place, you can easily market and pre-sell unique events and experiences directly to your guest database. 

Collect reservation deposits ahead of time with PCI-compliant payments even if a customer doesn’t show up for the experience. Just ensure your no-show policy is clearly defined on your events page so customers aren’t upset when you deny a refund request.

Pro Tip

Don’t forget to promote your Easter or Passover celebration across every direct channel, including your website, marketing emails and social media, to ensure you reach as many customers as possible.

8. Make it a buffet

If your venue can support it, avoid cooking your full menu and opt for a themed brunch buffet instead. Stock up on eggs, bacon, potatoes, salads and pastel-colored desserts that are synonymous with the holiday.

Even better, make your brunch (or dinner) buffet its own activity. Pre-plan a few food action stations and allow guests to put the final touches on their own Easter feast.

9. Give away Easter-themed goodies

Easter baskets aren’t just for kids. Give your customers an easter basket full of themed goodies your guests can easily associate with your restaurant, like a mini bottle of your “special sauce” or condiment, a fan-favorite dessert menu item or a gift card to your venue. The more creative, the better. Just be sure to plan this well in advance. Making tens (or hundreds) of gift basket goodies is a big undertaking that will require your whole team’s help.

10. Toast the season with an Easter cocktail

 Work with your bartenders, sommeliers and mixologists to craft drink pairings for all your popular to-go entrees and appetizers, giving diners more options to spend money with your restaurant. 

Serve festive and decorative mocktails and cocktails as an upgrade or a stand-alone offering redeemable on Easter weekend. Then, share it on social media and encourage guests to snap a picture enjoying the drink and tag your venue.

Or, host an entire cocktail-themed Easter event like The Globe Perth. They’re hosting a weekend of Easter brunches that includes two hours of free-flowing spritz from their DYI bellini station and a welcome Easter cocktail.

11. Sub happy hour for high tea

For one afternoon only, convert your bar room (or other event space) into an elegant high tea room. 

The Haven in Australia invites guests to indulge in a chocolate high tea experiences offering endless tea and coffee paired with sweet and savory small bites. Should sippers want to add more flair to their experience, they can pre-order glasses of Moet & Chandon along with their booking.

At your venue, maybe the Easter Bunny stops by for a visit or you erect a family photo backdrop perfect for capturing those precious Easter outfits.

12. Donate to a charity 

Incorporating charity initiatives into your event calendars helps market your business and support your local community. A few Easter and Passover charity ideas for restaurants include:

Encourage guests to donate canned goods, toys, or another item in exchange for a reservation for a future event or a free appetizer.
Sell tickets to an exclusive Easter dinner or Passover meal and donate all or some of the proceeds to charity.
Donate themed meals to a local food bank. (Donations tend to drop off after the winter holidays, even though food insecurity is a year-round issue.)
Organize a 5-K, car show, egg hunt or live music event that benefits a local charity.

Easter and Passover FAQs

What is a traditional Easter and Passover dinner menu?

The traditional Seder plate tells the story of the Exodus using food items like a hardboiled egg, herbs, wine, lettuce greens, matzo, meat, and roasted bone. Many menus include lamb chops, horseradish, eggs, a green salad, and wine. Traditional Easter dinners involve many of the same ingredients: lamb (or other pork variations), eggs, bread, vegetables, and wine.

Egg hunts are the most popular Easter activity. In many societies, eggs symbolize new life, and the tradition is thought to date back to 16th century Germany in which the Easter Hare, now known as the Easter Bunny, would hide eggs for children to find.


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