Basket Raffle Pricing Strategy — The $11 vs $64 Analysis
The single most consequential decision in basket raffle fundraising isn’t the prizes, the promotion, or the platform. It’s the pricing structure. $1 tickets produce an average order of $11 per buyer. Four-tier bundle pricing produces an average order of $64 from the same buyer at the same event. Not a different community. Not a different cause. The same person deciding how much to spend on tickets — with a different decision structure in front of them.
Set $5 / $10 for 3 / $25 for 10 / $50 for 25 as your bundle tiers. Use variable entry costs (1/2/5 tickets per entry) to signal basket tiers without a second ticket price. Have volunteers pitch “most people are doing the 10 for $25” at every interaction. And confirm before launch that your platform does not use tip-prompt checkout. Those four things together are the entire pricing system.
The $11 vs $64 Analysis — Same Person, Different Decision Architecture
Here is what happens with $1 tickets: a supporter walks up to the table, asks how much tickets cost, hears “$1 each,” and begins calculating. How many should I buy? Five dollars of tickets feels reasonable. Ten feels generous. They arrive at a number between 5 and 15 and hand over $5–$15. Average: $11.
Here is what happens with bundle pricing: a supporter walks up to the table, asks how much tickets cost, and hears: “$5 for one, $10 for three, or $25 for 10 — most people are doing the 10 for $25.” The decision is no longer arithmetic. It is expressive: which level matches how much I care about this? The supporter who wanted that spa basket has been given a clear, socially-validated level to commit to. Average: $64.
Same event. Same supporter. Same prizes. Same cause. Different decision structure. Six times the revenue.
“We’ve run this raffle for five years. Great baskets. Parents love it. We always raise about $1,200. I’m starting to think $1,200 is just what our school raises.”
The Bundle Tiers — Why Each Level Exists
When volunteers say this, they provide social proof (most people = this is the normal choice), remove the calculation burden (the decision is made for the buyer), and anchor the spending at a level that most event attendees have already mentally committed to. The $25 bill in a wallet at a fundraiser event is waiting for permission to be spent. The bundle recommendation is that permission.
Variable Entry Costs — One Price, Three Tiers
Variable entry costs solve a specific problem: how do you signal that some baskets are more valuable than others without creating a confusing multi-price ticket system? The answer is requiring different numbers of tickets per entry, not different ticket prices.
With one ticket price ($5 base, $25 for 10) and variable entry costs, buyers see the tier hierarchy immediately: the budget basket they can try four times per bundle, the mid-range basket they can try five times, and the premium anchor they can try twice. The natural allocation decision follows: put most tickets toward the basket you most want, sprinkle a few into others.
| Basket Tier | Est. Value | Tickets / Entry | $25 Bundle Gives | Effective Entry Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Budget | $40–$65 | 1 ticket | 10 entries | $2.50 |
| Mid-Range ★ (most baskets) | $100–$160 | 2 tickets | 5 entries | $5.00 |
| Premium | $160–$250 | 3 tickets | 3 entries | $8.33 |
| Luxury Anchor | $250–$450 | 5 tickets | 2 entries | $12.50 |
One ticket price throughout. Variable entry costs signal the tier. Buyers who buy additional bundles for premium entry access spend $50+ per session, which drives the $64 average order figure.
Checkout Abandonment — The 30–40% Your Pricing Never Captures
You set perfect bundle pricing. You trained volunteers on the $25 recommendation. A supporter selected the 10-for-$25 bundle, made their basket allocation decisions, and reached the payment screen. And then the platform showed them a 20% tip prompt. 30–40% of those buyers abandoned the transaction.
This is the pricing leak that no amount of bundle structure optimization can fix — because it happens after the buyer has already committed. The fix is not a pricing fix. It is a platform fix. Test your platform as a buyer before launch. Complete a full checkout on your own phone. If anything unexpected appears at the payment screen, that is what your buyers are seeing, and a third of them are leaving.
The $25 Pitch — 15 Words That Anchor Every Sale
Bundle pricing guide with all four tiers, variable entry cost table, and the volunteer script — plus the full basket assembly checklist and promotion calendar.
Download Free →What’s inside
✓ Bundle pricing guide
✓ Variable entry table
✓ Volunteer script card
✓ Pre-launch checklist
✓ Revenue diagnostic
Frequently Asked Questions
Related Guides
$5 / $10 / $25 / $50. In checkout. No tip-prompt.
“Chance2Win has bundle pricing built into the checkout flow, variable entry costs per basket, and disclosed fees — no tip-prompt abandonment. The pricing system described on this page works as described on Chance2Win.” — The Chance2Win Team
