Springtime is a time for the regeneration of nature, rebirth, and…waste? March and April mean shelves filled with plastic eggs, candy wrapped in both plastic, and cheap baskets designed for one-time use.

We know Easter celebrations fill kids with excitement, so we’re not suggesting you cancel your egg hunt or replace their chocolate bunnies with carrots. But how do we celebrate Easter sustainably?

The following sustainable Easter crafts, activities, and ideas will ensure egg-citing and eco-friendly Easter celebrations. Let’s hop in!

Contents: Eco-Friendly Easter Ideas

  1. Eco-Friendly Easter Eggs Jump to section
  2. Eco-Friendly Easter Basket Filler Jump to section
  3. Repurposed Sustainable Easter Basket Ideas Jump to section
  4. Eco-Friendly Easter Activities Jump to section
  5. Sustainable Easter Candy Jump to section
  6. Eco-Friendly Easter Egg Packaging Jump to section
  7. “Giftless” Sustainable Easter Gifts Jump to section
  8. Eco-Friendly Fillable Easter Eggs Jump to section
  9. Compost Your Easter Eggs Jump to section
  10. Reduce Food Waste Jump to section
  11. Sustainable Easter Outfits Jump to section
  12. Host A Sustainable Easter Egg Hunt Jump to section
  13. DIY Sustainable Eco-Friendly Easter Decorations & GIfts Jump to section

Eco-Friendly Easter Eggs

We produce more than 380 million tons of plastic waste a year. Included in the staggering figure are the ever-popular plastic Easter eggs.

A much better option for a sustainable Easter Egg Hunt is to use eco eggs®, which are 100% recycled and recyclable. They’re also BPA-Free, non-toxic, made with natural dyes, and made in the USA under the strict B Corp certification label.

If you prefer to dye Easter eggs using old-fashioned chicken eggs, start by sourcing humane options. It might be tempting to reach for the cheapest bulk option—especially given the price of eggs these days—but free-range eggs, or better yet, those sourced from local famers, support more ethical chicken farming.

Rest assured, brown eggs dye, too. You just may need to use darker colors and let them soak for longer.

Just as we want sustainable dyes used on our clothing, we should use them on our eggs, too. Store-bought dyes are generally laced with chemicals that pollute freshwater ecosystems and damage natural waterways. Instead, try natural dyes you can make from vegetables, spices, and fruits in your kitchen.

Boil a quart of water with two tablespoons of white vinegar. Simmer with the ingredients for 30 minutes. Cool and strain the dye and let it soak for 30 minutes. Red cabbage in water will create a vibrant blue. Red onions create a jade green, grape juice an egg-cellent lavender, and paprika a pink-red.

Turmeric and beet root powders dye Easter eggs those perfect bright yellows and pinks—just be sure to wear gloves because they’ll also dye your skin.

Eco-Friendly Easter Basket Filler

eco eggs® also makes an eco-friendly alternative for all that pre-made and expensive paper or plastic grass used for filling your Easter baskets. It’s called eco grass® and is made from 100% post-recycled and recyclable paper.

If you want to avoid the plastic grass bag that comes in, Decor Botanic offers eco-friendly Easter grass in a variety of colors made from reusable sisal fiber and packaged in paper bags.

Go DIY and turn basket making into an eco-friendly craft for kids by busting the scissors to make paper grass or foraging for natural grass, flowers, leaves, and twigs together. Or keep it simple and simple and cut up some colorful old clothes or bedsheets and use to line the basket. This is our yearly go-to.

You can also use living grass to fill your basket. Line the basket with newspaper and put a few inches of soil in it. Sprinkle some wheatgrass seeds on top. Keep the soil moist and when the seeds start to sprout, put them in the sun. By the time Easter morning comes around, you should have a nice organic basket filled with fresh and real grass.

Repurposed Sustainable Easter Basket Ideas

The average person who celebrates Easter spends a whopping $170 on the holiday. Instead of wasting your money on a new, plastic Easter basket, kill two birds with one sustainable stone by looking in your local thrift store. You should find plenty of rustic and unusual options, and you’ll be preventing more unnecessary waste.

As with the grass, you can get creative and make your own eco-friendly Easter baskets using pots, umbrellas, rain boots, buckets, or even disposable plastic bottles.

While you’re on a roll making eco-friendly Easter decorations, take empty toilet roll cardboard tubes and turn them into Easter Bunny decorations or egg holders to put in and around your basket.

Eco-Friendly Easter Activities

Easter baskets have been a traditional Easter go-to gift for many years. You often find them filled with chocolate, candy, and new toys. Rather than using the holiday to reinforce a culture of materialism, offer a gift for sharing and making memories for a more environmentally friendly Easter.

Suggest a trip to a local farm to see the new baby animals, a cooking class for the family using fresh ingredients, or a walk in the park to see nature change its colors.

Sustainable Easter Candy

Chocolate is the most delicious part of Easter, but poor working conditions, forced labor, and slave conditions leave a bad taste in our mouths. The global Easter candy market exceeds $3 billion annually, so imagine if that money was going toward ethical chocolate instead.

Companies like the Raw Chocolate Company use their B Corp certification to prove they’re out to better the exploitative cocoa industry with their raw, palm oil free chocolate. You can still choose from all the standard Easter treats, like chocolate bunnies and filled Easter eggs.

Equal Exchange offer organic and fair trade chocolate bars, chips, and more, in just about every cacao percentage and flavor infusion imaginable.

Eco-Friendly Easter Egg Packaging

Did you know that many of the most popular Easter Egg brands are a quarter packaging by weight?

If you want more chocolate for your money, look for brands with minimal or zero waste packaging. An increasing number of chocolate egg and candy manufacturers are using recyclable or compostable wrappers nowadays, like Conscious Chocolate’s plastic free paper packaging printed with soy inks.

“Giftless” Sustainable Easter Gifts

If you want to give someone you love a gift this Easter, consider an Adopt-a-Tree from the Orangutan Project. Gifts start from just $10, and they’re a perfect way to celebrate spring and help the planet and its animals at the same time.

There are plenty of other gifts that don’t involve buying anything, like home-baked Easter treats.

Eco-Friendly Fillable Easter Eggs

Real eggs are fun to dye and decorate, but they go bad pretty quickly. How many painted eggs get tossed and wasted every Easter?

For the most eco-friendly Easter eggs, non-plastic reusable options are best. Consider wooden eggs instead, which double a a fun craft project for your kiddos. You can paint, dazzle, or stamp them just like you would a real egg—without the risk of them stinking if ALL the eggs aren’t found. Plus, you can always paint or decorate them a different way next year.

Red Barn Toys offer both pre-painted and unpainted hollow eggs so you can add candies, coins, and other eco-friendly Easter egg stuffers.

Compost Your Easter Eggs

Finish making your Easter eggs sustainable by properly disposing of them once the hunt is done. Egg shells and film inside make them both nitrogen and carbon rich (AKA the perfect balanced additive for your indoor compost bin). You can also crush them up and bury them directly in your ecological garden if you don’t compost.

Note you should NOT do this if you’ve used traditional egg dye or food coloring, as it can contaminate your compost bin with chemicals. All the more reason to use eco-friendly Easter egg dye!

Reduce Food Waste

You may not be able to eat all the Easter eggs you dye. Eventually, you’re going to get a little jaded eating hard-boiled eggs. Rather than throwing these food scraps in the trash or composting them, try recipes incorporating eggs in different ways. There are more ways to use your leftover hard-boiled eggs than you thought—and no, they’re not all egg salad sandwiches.

Sustainable Easter Outfits

Seeing your kids dressed up in their Easter outfits is always going to bring a tear to your eye, but this year, pick a planet-friendly look for their Easter portrait session. Narrow your search to organic kids’ clothes, or thrift for low-price, low-waste outfits.

Host A Sustainable Easter Egg Hunt

Egg hunts are an iconic way to celebrate, especially for parents and kiddos.

Rather than hiding plastic Easter eggs or real eggs that won’t get eaten, make this year’s hunt less wasteful and hide small wooden toys or DIY reusable muslin bags. Your little ones will find this approach equally egg-citing.

DIY Sustainable Eco-Friendly Easter Decorations & GIfts

Create your own beautiful Easter gifts and treats to replace plastic eggs, foil-wrapped candy, and toys. The homemade touch for your eco-friendly Easter basket will bring a smile to friends and family alike.

DIY wild seed balls, for example, are a wonderful gift for the sustainable gardener in your life that will also help increase biodiversity through the propagation of pollinator-friendly, native plants