Basket Raffle Software — The One Feature That Separates Them
Most raffle platforms are built for single-prize drawings. When you run a basket raffle on them, you lose the mechanism that makes basket raffles work — per-basket independent ticket pools with buyer allocation. This guide explains the architectural difference, the checkout abandonment problem that silently costs 30–40% of revenue, and what to look for when evaluating platforms.
Most raffle software was built for single-prize lotteries. To run a basket raffle, you need a platform with per-basket independent ticket pools — where each basket has its own drawing and supporters allocate their tickets to specific baskets they want to enter. Without this, you have a generic sweepstakes, not a basket raffle. The second requirement is disclosed-fee checkout: platforms that surprise buyers with a tip prompt at the payment screen lose 30–40% of buyers who were ready to complete the purchase. These two features are the split between platforms that work for basket raffles and platforms that don't.
Per-Basket Pools vs. Shared Pool — Why It Changes the Math
Here is what makes basket raffles work at in-person events: a supporter walks the table, looks at fifteen baskets, and makes a series of small, independent decisions. They put tickets in the spa basket because their wife would love it. They add a couple to the game night basket because they have kids. They throw one at the dinner basket on the way out. Three separate purchase decisions. Multiple reasons to participate. Each one psychologically independent.
That architecture — multiple prizes, multiple independent pools, per-basket allocation — is what produces the per-person revenue numbers that make basket raffles the most consistent fundraising format for community organizations. It is also what most raffle software does not replicate.
The allocation decision itself is an engagement mechanism. A supporter who buys 10 tickets and decides how to distribute them across five baskets has invested cognitive and emotional energy in multiple outcomes. They will check the drawing results five times. They may return to buy more tickets to strengthen their position in the basket they most want to win. None of that engagement is possible without per-basket allocation.
This is why the same community, the same donated items, and the same pricing structure produces dramatically different revenue on a purpose-built basket raffle platform versus a generic raffle or donation tool. The online guide has the specific story: a soccer league that raised $180 from a Google Form and $3,800 from a platform with per-basket allocation, same families, same two-week window.
“We tried the online thing last year. Posted it on Facebook, sent one email. Raised maybe $340 from people outside our event. The whole thing felt like a lot of work for nothing. I think our community just isn’t online-raffle people.”
Checkout Abandonment — The 30–40% You Never Know You Lost
A supporter has browsed your baskets. They have selected their bundle. They have made their allocation decisions. They are at the payment screen. They are a converted buyer. And then the platform shows them a tip prompt.
“Support the platform with a tip? Suggested: 20%”
That supporter was going to give you $25. They are now being asked to give the platform $5 on top of that, framed as a suggestion they should feel bad declining. 30–40% of them abandon the transaction entirely. Not because they don't want to support your organization. Because the surprise charge created distrust at the worst possible moment. And your committee never knows it happened, because you only see the completed sales, not the abandoned ones.
This is not a theoretical concern. Baymard Institute research on e-commerce checkout abandonment consistently identifies unexpected extra costs as the single most common cause of cart abandonment — across all product categories and all types of buyers. Raffle buyers are not different. The mechanism is the same: a buyer who completed the psychological commitment to purchase and then encounters an unexpected charge experiences the surprise as a betrayal, not as a reasonable request. The abandonment is a rational response to a broken trust signal.
At 30% abandonment on a raffle that would otherwise raise $8,000: approximately $2,400 in committed revenue that was never collected. The committee sees $5,600 and believes that is what the community was willing to give. The actual number, with disclosed-fee checkout, would have been $8,000. The platform that appeared free cost $2,400 in uncaptured revenue — compared to perhaps $150 in fees from a transparent paid platform.
The True Cost of a “Free” Platform — Why $0 Often Costs More Than $199
The logic of choosing a free platform is understandable: keeping platform costs at zero maximizes net revenue for the organization. This math is correct in isolation and wrong in practice. Free platforms do not generate revenue from organizations — they generate it from buyers, through tip prompts or processing markups that appear at checkout. The organization perceives zero cost. The buyer experiences a surprise charge. Revenue leaks through abandonment.
“We used a free platform. Kept our costs at zero. But something felt off — our per-person average was around $9, which seemed low given our pricing.”
Platform Feature Checklist — Six Non-Negotiables
Per-Basket Independent Ticket Pools
Each basket has its own drawing. Supporters allocate their tickets to specific baskets, not into a shared pool. This is the defining feature of basket raffle architecture.
Disclosed-Fee Checkout — No Tip Prompt
All fees shown at the start of the process, before the buyer makes any decisions. No surprise charges at the payment screen. No suggested tip percentage at checkout.
Bundle Pricing Built Into Checkout
$5 / $10 for 3 / $25 for 10 / $50 for 25 — or your custom tiers. The bundle structure must be selectable in the checkout flow, not a workaround.
Mobile-Optimized Basket Browsing
Every basket is readable without zooming. Photos load quickly. The allocation interface works by tap, not by precise click. 70%+ of buyers are on phones.
Variable Entry Costs
Different baskets can require different ticket quantities per entry — 1 ticket for a $150 basket, 3 tickets for a $500 basket. One ticket price, multiple effective entry tiers.
Seller Tracking for Leaderboards
Track ticket sales by individual seller. Export or display the leaderboard. The 2–3× activation multiplier from competitive selling requires visibility into individual performance.
Platform Comparison — Basket Raffle Features
This comparison evaluates platforms on the features that specifically determine basket raffle revenue. General-purpose payment tools and donation platforms are included because they are frequently used as raffle substitutes — and because understanding why they fall short of basket raffle architecture is useful before committing to a platform.
| Feature | Chance2Win | General Raffle Tools | Donation Platforms | Eventbrite / DIY |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Per-basket independent pools | ✓ | Varies — many shared pool only | ✗ | ✗ |
| Buyer-side ticket allocation per basket | ✓ | Rarely | ✗ | ✗ |
| Bundle pricing in checkout | ✓ | Sometimes | ✗ | Manual workaround |
| Variable entry costs per basket | ✓ | ✗ Rarely | ✗ | ✗ |
| Disclosed-fee checkout (no tip prompt) | ✓ | Varies — many use tip prompts | Often tip-prompt | Depends on payment processor |
| Multiple photos per basket | ✓ | Sometimes | ✗ | ✗ |
| Mobile-optimized allocation interface | ✓ | Varies | Checkout only | ✗ |
| Hybrid in-person + online | ✓ | Sometimes | ✗ | Manual |
| Seller tracking / leaderboard | ✓ | ✗ Rarely | ✗ | ✗ |
| Built for nonprofit basket fundraising | ✓ | Partially | ✗ | ✗ |
"General raffle tools" refers to platforms marketed for raffle or sweepstakes use but not specifically built for basket raffle architecture. Features vary significantly by product — always verify with a test transaction before committing.
Chance2Win — What It Was Built to Do
Chance2Win was built because the methodology in the guides on this site — per-basket pools, bundle pricing, variable entry costs, seller activation — requires a platform that specifically supports each of those mechanisms. Generic raffle tools and donation platforms create workarounds that break the architecture. Chance2Win removes the workarounds.
The demo at basketraffle.org shows exactly what a supporter sees: multiple baskets with photos, experience names, and stated values; the bundle pricing selection; the per-basket ticket allocation; and the disclosed-fee checkout. Browse it on your phone. Complete the allocation. See how the ticket assignment works. That is what your supporters will experience.
- Per-basket independent pools — each basket its own drawing
- Buyer-side allocation — drag-and-drop ticket assignment
- Four-tier bundle pricing built into checkout
- Variable entry costs — premium baskets require more tickets per entry
- Mobile-first — designed for phone browsing and tap-based allocation
- Disclosed fees — no tip prompt, no surprise at checkout
- Seller tracking for leaderboard activation
- Hybrid in-person + online in a single event
Frequently Asked Questions
The Guides Behind the Platform Decision
Ready to see what per-basket pools look like in practice?
“Chance2Win was built because the system described across every guide on this site requires a platform that supports it. Per-basket allocation, bundle pricing, disclosed fees, variable entry costs, seller tracking. Try the demo. Walk through it as a buyer. That experience is what your supporters will have.” — The Chance2Win Team
