Why Your Raffle Isn’t Making Money — Diagnose and Fix Your Specific Problem

Per-person diagnostic · Five specific constraints · One number tells you where to look

Why Your Raffle Isn’t Making Money — Diagnose It in One Calculation

If your raffle raised less than you expected, the problem is almost never your community, your cause, or your prizes. It is one of five structural variables that was either missing or weak. This guide tells you how to identify which one is your constraint — using a single calculation — and gives you the specific fix for each. Not a general strategy overview. A diagnostic tool.

The Per-Person Revenue Diagnostic — Run This First

Before you read any further: calculate this number. It will tell you immediately which section of this guide to focus on and which fix will have the largest impact on your next event.

The calculation
Total Ticket Revenue ÷ Total Number of Buyers = Per-Person Average
Example: $1,800 total revenue ÷ 210 buyers = $8.57 per-person average → Pricing constraint. Fix: switch to bundle pricing.

Example: $3,200 total revenue ÷ 195 buyers = $16.41 per-person average → Reach and activation constraint. Fix: 7-touchpoint campaign + seller leaderboard.

Example: $5,800 total revenue ÷ 230 buyers = $25.21 per-person average → System is working. Fix: grow the audience.
Per-Person Avg
Primary Constraint
First Fix
Under $8
PRICING — $1 tickets in place
Switch to $5/$25/$50 bundle structure immediately. This single change produces 4–6× per-person revenue from the same buyers. Everything else is secondary until pricing is fixed.
$8–$15
STRUCTURE — Basket naming or display
Experience-name every basket. Clip gift card front-center, visible from arm's length. Add "Est. Value $___" to every label. Pricing is working; the physical presentation is limiting desire formation.
$15–$25
REACH / ACTIVATION — Promotion or selling
Run a 7-touchpoint campaign with basket spotlights. Activate sellers with individual goals and a visible leaderboard. The system works for buyers who engage — not enough buyers are engaging.
$25–$35
System working — grow the audience
Per-person revenue is healthy. Total revenue grows by expanding reach: add online tickets, extend the selling window to 10–14 days, build seller network to reach family and friends outside direct audience.
Over $35
Strong system — optimize premium tier
Consider variable entry costs for high-value baskets. Evaluate whether a premium prize (couples spa, experience event) anchors the lineup. Expand online reach. Consider leaderboard refinements.
Under $8
/ person
Pricing constraint
The Fix: Switch from $1 Tickets to Bundle Pricing

A per-person average under $8 almost universally indicates $1 ticket pricing. This is the most common single cause of raffle underperformance and the most fixable. The problem is not that buyers are unwilling to spend more — it is that $1 tickets create an arithmetic decision (“how many should I buy?”) that most people resolve conservatively at $4–$7.

Bundle pricing creates an expressive decision (“which level matches how much I care about this?”) that most people resolve at $25 when a volunteer says “most people are doing the 10 for $25.” Same buyers, same cause, same event — 4–6× the per-person revenue from a single structural change.

The specific bundle structure: $5 for 1 ticket (accessible floor), $10 for 3 tickets (impulse upgrade), $25 for 10 tickets (the recommended tier — most buyers choose this), $50 for 25 tickets (for supporters who want to compete seriously).

Full pricing guide with the math →
From the Raffle Hotline · PTA Treasurer · “We Keep Getting $1,200 Every Year”
“We’ve been doing this raffle for five years. We always raise about $1,200. We have great prizes, parents love the event, but we can’t seem to break through that ceiling.”
Us: “What is your ticket pricing?”
Caller: “$1 per ticket. Or 10 for $8.”
Us: “That $1,200 is your pricing ceiling, not your community ceiling. With 200 families at $6 average, you hit $1,200. With $5/$25/$50 bundle pricing and the $25 bundle as the volunteer recommendation, 200 families at $25 average produces $5,000. Your prizes, your audience, your community enthusiasm — all of that is already there. The $1,200 ceiling is the arithmetic decision architecture of $1 tickets.”
Caller: “But won’t some parents think $25 is too expensive?”
Us: “Some will choose the $5 single. That is what the accessible floor is for. But most parents who are already attending and already want to support the school will look at the $25 bundle and think ‘that’s reasonable’ — especially when a volunteer mentions that most people are choosing it. The $5 floor never goes away. The $25 becomes the natural anchor.”
Following year: $5/$10/$25/$50 bundle pricing. Same 190 families. Result: $5,800. The $1,200 ceiling was entirely a pricing artifact — five years of capped revenue from the same families who were willing to give more.
A revenue ceiling that holds year after year despite strong audience engagement is almost always a pricing problem. The community is not the ceiling. The decision architecture of $1 tickets is the ceiling. Remove it.
$8–$15
/ person
Structure constraint
The Fix: Experience Names + Gift Card Front-Center + Estimated Value Labels

A per-person average in the $8–$15 range tells you that bundle pricing is working (per-person is above $8) but something in the physical presentation is limiting desire formation. Buyers are entering, but not competing. They’re participating at a low-engagement level, not at the “I really want that basket” level that drives higher allocation.

Three structural fixes apply here: (1) Experience names. “Spa Day for One” creates an immediate vivid picture. “Spa Basket” does not. “Dinner for Two at Marco’s” triggers specific desire. “Restaurant Gift Card Basket” does not. Name every basket as the experience it promises. (2) Gift card at eye level, front-center. The gift card confirms specific value from arm’s length. Buried at the back under tissue paper, it might as well not be there. (3) Estimated value on the label. “Est. Value $145” printed on a label tells buyers what they are competing for. Without it, buyers underestimate value and underallocate tickets.

Basket assembly guide — the 9-step build → Display guide →
$15–$25
/ person
Reach & activation constraint
The Fix: 7-Touchpoint Campaign + Seller Leaderboard

Per-person in the $15–$25 range means the system is working for buyers who engage. The problem is that not enough people are engaging. Either the promotion is not reaching the full audience (1–2 posts vs. a 7-touchpoint campaign), or the sellers are passive (sharing a post vs. actively pitching specific baskets to their networks).

A 7-touchpoint campaign requires more effort but produces 3–4× more buyers from the same audience because it finds supporters at multiple moments over the campaign window — when they actually have time to act, not just when the first post went out. Basket spotlight posts are the key format: one basket per post, with a hero photo, experience name, estimated value, and direct entry link. These posts are genuinely shareable — a supporter who sees the spa basket spotlight can forward it to a friend who would love it, reaching entirely new buyers.

Active sellers with a visible leaderboard convert those new buyers into buyers at 2–3× the rate of passive promotion because they are making the personal pitch with the 15-word script: “Have you seen the [basket]? It has a [anchor item]. Most people are doing the 10 for $25.”

Full promotion calendar → Seller activation guide →
Any tier
Urgency constraint — often invisible until you measure it
The Fix: Send the 48-Hour Push with an Exact Closing Time

If your total campaign revenue feels flat despite good per-person averages and reasonable buyer counts, urgency is often the missing variable. 40–60% of total raffle campaign revenue arrives in the final 48 hours when a specific closing deadline is announced and the urgency push is sent. Organizations that skip this communication forfeit the largest single revenue block of the campaign.

The diagnostic: look at your campaign’s first-day and last-day revenue if you have it. If last-day revenue was not significantly higher than mid-campaign daily averages, urgency was absent. “Drawing closes Friday at 8pm” is the sentence that activates anticipated regret in supporters who have been intending to participate. “Closing soon” does not produce this effect because it has no specific, imaginable deadline.

Any tier
Friction constraint — entirely invisible to the committee
The Fix: Test Your Checkout as a Buyer Before the Next Campaign

Checkout friction is the most invisible constraint because the abandoned transactions are never visible to the committee. You see the completed sales. You see a per-person average that seems reasonable. You do not see the 30–40% of buyers who reached the payment screen on your tip-prompt platform and backed out.

The test: complete a full test purchase on your own phone before the next campaign. Browse the baskets. Select a bundle. Proceed through checkout all the way to the payment screen. If a tip suggestion, a service fee, or any unexpected charge appears, that is what every buyer is seeing — and a meaningful portion are abandoning at that screen.

The fix is changing to a platform with disclosed-fee checkout. See the platform comparison guide for specific evaluation criteria.

The Invisible Raffle — When “It Was Fine” Is the Problem

The most dangerous raffle outcome is not a disaster. It is a modest but acceptable result that feels okay relative to nothing in particular. No specific goal was set, so the result cannot be evaluated against a target. The committee celebrates, nothing changes, and the same constraints produce the same result next year.

A raffle that raised $1,400 from 200 families produced $7/person. With bundle pricing, that same audience can produce $25/person — $5,000 instead of $1,400. But if the committee does not know that $5,000 was structurally available, there is no impetus to change anything. The gap between what happened and what was possible remains invisible. The following year: $1,400 again.

The question that reveals the gap

The post-event question that matters is not “did we hit our goal?” It is: what was our per-person average, and what would it be if all five structural variables were optimized? A $7/person average means $25/person is structurally available from the same audience. The gap between $7 and $25, multiplied by your buyer count, is what your current structure is costing you every year. Make it visible and it becomes impossible to ignore.

From the Raffle Hotline · Annual Fundraiser · “We’ve Always Done About This”
“We raise about $3,200 every year. Some years $3,000, some years $3,500. We have a good event. Parents enjoy it. We’ve just kind of accepted that this is what it raises.”
Us: “How many buyers do you typically have?”
Caller: “Maybe 150, 160 families.”
Us: “So your per-person average is about $20. Bundle pricing working, which is good. Tell me about your promotion — how many times do you communicate about the raffle before the event?”
Caller: “We send a flyer home, post it on Facebook maybe twice, and make an announcement at the previous month’s meeting.”
Us: “You have about 300 families in the school. You’re reaching 150 to 160 buyers. Your total addressable audience is double what you’re converting. The $3,200 is not what your school raises — it is what 150 families participating produces. If you reach all 300 with a proper 7-touchpoint campaign and basket spotlight posts that reach their extended networks, your ceiling is $7,500, not $3,500.”
They ran a full 7-touchpoint campaign and added online presales. 287 buyers. Revenue: $7,100. The same event that had “always raised $3,200” was capable of $7,100. The only thing that changed was how many people were reached and how many times.
A stable year-over-year result is not evidence that you have reached your ceiling. It is evidence that the structural variables have not changed. Change the structure and the ceiling moves. Measure per-person average and total addressable audience separately, and the gap between what happened and what is available becomes visible — and fixable.
Free Download
Raffle Planning Kit

The per-person revenue diagnostic worksheet, year-over-year tracker, pre-launch checklist, and all five structural fixes in one 13-page printable PDF.

Download Free →

What’s inside

✓ Revenue diagnostic worksheet
✓ Year-over-year tracker
✓ Pre-launch checklist
✓ Bundle pricing guide
✓ Promo calendar template

Frequently Asked Questions

Why isn’t my raffle making money?
Calculate your per-person average first: total ticket revenue ÷ total buyers. Under $8 = pricing constraint, switch to bundle pricing. $8–$15 = structure constraint, name baskets as experiences and clip gift cards front-center. $15–$25 = reach constraint, run a 7-touchpoint campaign and activate sellers with a leaderboard. Any tier: check whether you sent a 48-hour urgency push with a specific closing time, and whether your checkout has a tip prompt (test it as a buyer). The constraint is almost never your community or your prizes.
Why does our raffle raise the same amount every year?
Flat year-over-year results mean no structural variable changed. The same pricing produces the same per-person average. The same promotion approach reaches the same percentage of the same audience. The same event produces the same result. Identify your per-person average, compare it to the $25 potential with optimized structure, and the gap tells you what needs to change. A $6/person average means the same audience can produce 4× the revenue with bundle pricing alone — no other changes required.
Should I add better prizes to increase raffle revenue?
Only if your per-person average is already over $25. At that point, the structural variables are working and the growth lever is audience expansion and premium prize positioning. For the vast majority of organizations with per-person averages under $20, adding better prizes to a $1-ticket or structurally weak raffle produces minimal improvement — you are solving the wrong problem. Fix the pricing, naming, promotion, and urgency first. The same donated items produce dramatically better results with better structure.
What does a successful raffle look like by the numbers?
At a 150–200 person community event with all five structural variables working: per-person average $25–$35, total revenue $5,000–$10,000. Online/hybrid component adds 30–50% additional revenue from buyers outside the room. Final 48-hour urgency push accounts for 40–60% of total revenue. Checkout abandonment under 3%. Year-over-year growth of 15–25% as near-miss participants return with stronger buying intention. These are achievable numbers — they are the outputs of the structural system, not of exceptional fundraising talent or special community generosity.
Is it worth running a raffle if our audience is small?
Yes — with one important calibration. Set a realistic goal based on your actual audience size rather than comparing to events with larger audiences. 50 buyers × $25 average = $1,250 in a properly structured raffle. 50 buyers × $6 average = $300 in a $1-ticket raffle. The structural fixes in this guide apply at any scale. Additionally, a well-structured online raffle extends your audience well beyond in-person attendance — supporters who live out of town, extended family networks of sellers, and people who care about your cause but can’t attend can all participate online. See the online raffle guide for how the hybrid model works.

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“Every constraint in this diagnostic has a platform-level solution: bundle pricing in checkout, seller tracking for leaderboard activation, per-basket allocation, disclosed-fee checkout, and a 14-day window for the urgency push to work. Try the demo.” — The Chance2Win Team