Easter bingo with randomized word boards. Every card draws fresh from the Easter-themed word list (eggs, bunny, chick, basket, jelly beans, lily, and more) so no two players get the same board. Pick a border color from any of the ten swatches, pick a card size, click Generate. Built for Sunday-school groups, classroom Easter parties, and family brunch tables. Prints on plain US Letter, no signup.
The post-egg-hunt activity.
Egg hunts last about five minutes; kids have another hour of energy. Bingo fills it cleanly. Hand out cards as the prize-collection is winding down, settle the kids at a picnic table or on the church-basement floor, and call words from the Easter list one at a time. Jelly beans make the right markers (they’re already on the dessert table).
For brunch, run a parallel adult round at the table while the kids’ round is going. Use the larger 1-per-page format, print one card per couple, and play it as table-talk filler between courses. Foil chocolate eggs work for adult markers too — Easter is the one holiday where edible markers feel entirely on-theme.
Easter bingo, frequently asked.
Is the word list appropriate for Sunday school?
Yes. Family-friendly Easter imagery (eggs, bunny, chick, basket, jelly beans, lily) with no theology-specific language. Works in a church basement and at secular brunch alike.
Can I edit the prompts to add Bible-story words?
The Easter generator uses a fixed word list, but for a fully custom set (Resurrection, palm leaves, empty tomb), use our blank fillable bingo PDF — you can type any word into any cell.
What’s the right size for a classroom of 25?
The 4-per-page small format. One sheet covers four students, so 25 students need about seven sheets. Cards are still readable across a desk.
Will pre-readers be able to play?
Mostly. The list is short enough (egg, bunny, chick, basket) that even kindergarteners recognize most words by shape. Pair young players with an older buddy.
Does this work as a follow-up to the egg hunt?
It’s the most common use we see. Egg hunts last five minutes; bingo gives the kids the next 15.
Sunday school, brunch, post-hunt.
Easter bingo earns its place in three specific spots: the Sunday-school classroom on Palm Sunday, the kids’ table at Easter brunch while the adults are still arguing about whether the ham is done, and the after-service children’s ministry hour on Easter Sunday itself. Each card is randomized so no two kids share a board.
Easter bingo fits inside the wider Easter Sunday tradition — the egg hunt, the church service, the family lunch — as the after-the-hunt activity that keeps the kids occupied while the adults catch up.
Looking for a different theme? Browse the full bingo template hub for printables covering every major holiday and event. You might also like our Valentine’s Day bingo for the previous classroom party, birthday bingo for the spring birthday season, or back-to-school bingo for next fall.
