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Easter Magic

Easter Bunny Letter for Baby's First Easter: A Keepsake Parents Will Treasure

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The Magic Letter Box
14 min read
A baby in a yellow Easter outfit nestled in a wicker basket beside a sealed letter from the Easter Bunny, surrounded by pastel eggs and spring flowers
🐣 Easter Magic

Baby's first Easter is one of those milestones parents want to mark — but here's the truth no one quite says out loud: the baby won't remember it. They won't remember the soft yellow outfit, the pastel basket, the first taste of a strawberry tucked inside a plastic egg. You will. And that changes everything about how you approach this day.

A letter from the Easter Bunny isn't really for the baby in front of you right now. It's for the child they'll become — and for you, years from now, when you read it aloud on a Sunday morning and your seven-year-old dissolves into giggles hearing what the Bunny said about their first wobbly attempts to sit up. It's a time capsule. A love letter to this exact, unrepeatable moment in your family's story.

This guide will walk you through what to include in a first Easter letter, how to find the right tone, and how to turn it into something your family will pull out every spring for decades.

✨ Create Your Baby's First Easter Letter in Minutes

The Magic Letter Box lets you generate a beautiful, personalized letter from the Easter Bunny in under a minute — just enter your baby's name, age, a few sweet details, and the magic does the rest. You get 5 free letters to start, or unlock unlimited letters for a full year for just $15. Hundreds of customization options, gorgeous designs, and a keepsake you'll treasure forever. No blank-page paralysis required.

Why a Letter Makes Baby's First Easter Different

Most first Easter traditions revolve around things the baby can't fully experience yet — egg hunts they're too young to participate in, candy they can't eat, baskets they'll immediately try to chew. The celebration, sweet as it is, is really designed for everyone else in the room.

A letter quietly reframes all of that. Instead of trying to stage an experience the baby isn't developmentally ready for, you're doing something entirely different: you're documenting who they are right now, at this precise age, on this specific spring morning. The Easter Bunny becomes a gentle narrator, noticing all the small, remarkable things about this particular baby — the way their eyes track the sunlight, the sound of their laugh, the people gathered around them.

What parents often discover is that the letter grows more meaningful with every passing year. When your child is three, you read it to them and they giggle. When they're seven, they ask you to read it again after dinner. When they're sixteen, they find it in a drawer and read it alone, quietly. The letter doesn't just mark a single Easter — it anchors the memory of who they were before they could remember themselves.

A first Easter letter does what a photograph can't: it captures the feeling of the moment, not just the image. While photos show what your baby looked like, a letter from the Easter Bunny records who they were — their newest milestones, their personality, the family gathered around them, and the hopes you held for their future.

There's also something quietly profound about establishing this as a ritual from the very beginning. Families who start Easter Bunny letters in infancy often find that the tradition becomes one their children actively anticipate — the basket is lovely, but the letter is the thing they want read aloud first. Starting at baby's first Easter means you'll have a growing collection of letters, each one a snapshot of a different chapter, by the time your child is old enough to truly appreciate them.

What to Include in a Baby's First Easter Letter

This is the heart of the whole exercise — and it's worth slowing down here, because the details you capture now are the ones you'll be grateful you recorded in five years, when the memory of this particular stage has softened and blurred. Babies change so fast that even parents sometimes forget what their child was like at four months versus eight months. A good first Easter letter freezes that.

Here's what to gather before you write (or before you use a letter generator):

The Basics

  • Baby's full name — including any nickname they've already acquired
  • Exact age — "three months and two weeks old" is more evocative than "almost four months"
  • Birth date — the Easter Bunny can reference how recently they arrived in the world

Their Newest Milestones

  • What have they just learned to do? (Rolling over, sitting with support, first babbles, first tooth breaking through, recognizing their name)
  • What are they reaching for, staring at, or responding to lately?
  • Have they discovered their hands? Their feet? The dog?

Their Personality — Already On Display

  • Are they serious and observant, or do they grin at every stranger?
  • What makes them laugh? (Being tossed gently in the air, peek-a-boo, a particular silly voice)
  • Do they have a strong opinion about bathtime, or do they splash with reckless joy?
  • What's their favorite comfort — a specific blanket, a song, being held in a particular way?

Their World

  • Who are the people in their life? Include parents' names, siblings, grandparents, and even family pets
  • Where do they live? A city, a small town, a house with a garden they'll grow up in?
  • What's happening in the world this spring — something gentle and timeless (the cherry blossoms are blooming, the mornings are getting warmer)

One Hope for Their Future

  • The Easter Bunny can carry a single wish for who this baby might grow into — keep it warm and open-ended, not prescriptive
  • Examples: that they'll always find reasons to laugh, that they'll grow up knowing how deeply they are loved, that spring will always feel like magic to them
Pro Tip: Before writing the letter, spend five minutes making a voice memo on your phone — just talk about your baby right now. What are they doing these days? What surprised you this week? What does their laugh sound like? That unscripted narration will give you the specific, true details that make a letter feel real rather than generic. Transcribe the best bits and hand them to your letter generator or use them directly.
A personalized Easter Bunny letter on cream cardstock beside a baby bunny onesie and soft plush chick toy, surrounded by spring flower petals

First Easter Letter Tone — What the Easter Bunny Should Sound Like for a Baby

The biggest mistake people make with a first Easter letter is defaulting to the generic hippity-hop rhyming verse that works fine for a five-year-old egg hunter, but feels hollow when addressed to an infant. A baby's first Easter letter needs a different register entirely — quieter, more wonder-filled, speaking as much to the parents as to the child.

Think of it this way: the Easter Bunny, in this letter, has been watching. They noticed. They were there in that room on a spring morning when your family was just beginning to be what it would become. The letter should feel like the Bunny truly witnessed something remarkable — because they did.

Avoid the generic. "I left you a basket filled with treats!" rings hollow for a baby who can't have treats. Instead, the Bunny notices the baby specifically: the exact color of the morning light where they slept, the way their whole family gathered around them, the look on a grandparent's face when they held them for the first time that day.

Three Sample Opening Lines — Choose Your Style

Warm and whimsical:

"Dear little one — I've been delivering Easter baskets for a very long time, and I have to tell you: I've never paused quite as long as I did at your door. Something about this first Easter of yours made me want to sit quietly in the morning hush and just take it all in."

Classic and storybook:

"On the morning of your very first Easter, the world was just waking up — the birds had only just begun, the dew was still on the clover — when I arrived at your home to leave a few small things and found I couldn't quite bring myself to leave without writing this down."

Heartfelt and simple:

"You are [age] old, and it is Easter morning, and you are everything. I wanted you to know that someone noticed."

The best first Easter letters address both the baby and the parents. Phrases like "I watched your mama hold you in the early light" or "your family stood around you like you were something remarkable — because you are" acknowledge that this milestone belongs to everyone in the room, not just the child who won't remember it.

Pro Tip: Read your draft aloud before finalizing it. If it moves you — even a little — it's working. If it feels flat or generic, add one more specific, true detail about your baby. Specificity is the whole secret. "You love being held facing outward so you can see everything" hits harder than "you are a curious baby."

How to Make the Letter a Lasting Keepsake

The writing is only half of it. How you preserve and present the letter determines whether it becomes a treasured artifact or a PDF that lives forgotten in a downloads folder.

An illustrated timeline showing a family reading an Easter Bunny letter together across four different ages — baby, toddler, child, and tween — capturing the keepsake tradition over the years

Print It Well

Print on cardstock (at minimum 65lb weight) rather than regular printer paper. The weight and feel of the paper matters more than you'd think — thin paper communicates "temporary," while a heavier stock signals "this is worth keeping." If your letter includes a beautiful design, consider a local print shop for higher resolution and archival ink.

Store It Thoughtfully

A clear archival sleeve in the baby book is the easiest solution — it keeps the letter visible without exposing it to handling. Some families keep all their Easter letters in a single keepsake envelope or a small decorated box that lives on a shelf, pulled out each spring. The ritual of retrieval is part of the magic.

Make the Reading a Ritual

Starting from toddlerhood, read the baby's first Easter letter aloud as part of your Easter morning. You don't need to read every letter every year — but the first Easter letter is the anchor. Hearing what the Easter Bunny said when they were just weeks or months old becomes, for many children, their favorite part of the holiday.

Build the Collection Year by Year

The power of a first Easter letter multiplies when it becomes the beginning of a series. A letter each year — even a short one — builds an extraordinary record of your child growing up. By the time they're ten, they have ten letters. By the time they leave home, the collection is something that belongs to them in a way no basket filler ever could.

The Magic Letter Box saves all your letters in one place under your family account, so you never lose them and can reprint any year with a click. It's the easiest way to maintain the tradition without reinventing it from scratch every spring.

First Easter Basket Ideas That Pair With the Letter

For a baby's first Easter, the letter works best as the centerpiece — and everything else in the basket should be chosen to complement it rather than compete. Skip the candy entirely (unnecessary for an infant, and the basket will photograph better without it).

A few first Easter basket ideas that feel intentional alongside the letter:

  • A soft board book — a springtime or animal-themed book they'll grow into reading themselves ("The Runaway Bunny" is a particularly resonant choice for this milestone)
  • An Easter-themed onesie or sleeper — something they'll actually wear, and you'll photograph them in for years to come
  • A teether or soft toy in pastel colors — developmentally appropriate and tactile
  • A small photo frame — with a note from the Easter Bunny that it's waiting for their first Easter photo
  • A plantable seed packet — a packet of flower seeds with a note that these will bloom just as they bloom, season after season

The letter IS the gift. Everything else in a baby's first Easter basket is supplementary. Parents who lean into this — who place the letter prominently, sealed with a ribbon or wax stamp, at the front of the basket — find that it becomes the first thing other family members want to hear. It reframes the whole morning around story and memory rather than stuff.

A baby's first Easter basket with a personalized letter tied in ribbon, a plush bunny, a board book, a seed packet, and a spring onesie, photographed in soft morning light

Frequently Asked Questions

Can you get a letter from the Easter Bunny for a newborn?

Absolutely — in fact, a letter for a newborn is one of the most meaningful versions, because it captures the world from their very first spring. The Easter Bunny simply adjusts the tone to speak about how new and extraordinary everything is for this baby, how much wonder is still ahead, and how the whole family gathered to welcome them into the season. Age is no barrier; if anything, the younger the baby, the more tender and timeless the letter becomes.

What do you write in a baby's first Easter basket?

Beyond the letter itself, a short handwritten note from you — separate from the Easter Bunny's letter — can be a lovely addition. Write it as yourself, to your child, on this specific morning: what the day looks like, what you're hoping for them, one small thing you want them to know about who they are right now. Tuck it inside the baby book alongside the Easter Bunny letter. Twenty years from now, they'll have both voices from this day.

How do I make my baby's first Easter special?

The most meaningful first Easters tend to be the ones built around slowness rather than spectacle. A morning at home, good light for photos, a letter read aloud with whoever is gathered around — these things last. You don't need an elaborate egg hunt or a pastel photo set. What creates memory is presence and documentation: being fully in the moment, and capturing it in a form the child can return to. The letter is the most durable version of that documentation.

Is a personalized Easter letter better than a generic printable for a first Easter?

Generic printables can be lovely for decorative purposes, but they can't do what a truly personalized letter does — and that difference matters most for a milestone like a first Easter. A form letter that says "Dear child" where your child's name should be, or that includes milestones that don't match your baby's actual stage, reads as costume rather than keepsake. The personalization is the point: the reason this letter will be read and reread for decades is because it's unmistakably, specifically about this child on this exact morning.

One Last Thing

The toys in a first Easter basket are gone within a year — outgrown, lost under a car seat, quietly donated to make room for the next stage. The candy is a memory before lunchtime. But a letter — a real one, written in the voice of someone who witnessed this baby's very first spring — is the thing that tends to survive. It gets folded and unfolded. It ends up in the baby book and then in a box the child takes with them when they move out. It gets read at family gatherings years later, and everyone laughs at details no one quite remembered, and your child learns something about who they were before they could remember being anyone.

That is the gift worth giving on a first Easter. Everything else is just wrapping paper.

🐰 Ready to Write the Letter?

Create a personalized Easter Bunny letter for baby's first Easter in under two minutes at The Magic Letter Box. Start with 5 free letters — no credit card needed — or unlock a full year of unlimited letters for just $15. Choose from hundreds of designs, personalize every detail, and download a keepsake-quality letter your family will treasure for years to come.

Start for free at ThemagicLetterBox.com →

Looking for more Easter inspiration? Explore our guide to Easter traditions for kids and personalized Easter Bunny letters for older children.

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Written by The Magic Letter Box

Creating magical moments for families through personalized letters and thoughtful parenting resources.

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