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Mother's Day

Celebrating mom is going to cost you more this year. Here's why

April 29, 2026Updated April 30, 2026, 5:34 p.m. ET

Celebrating mom this Mother’s Day is going to cost you more, thanks to inflation.

Treating Mom to a meal out is expected to cost 4% more, according to a Wells Fargo Agri-Food Institute analysis.

And going the nine yards with a Mother’s Day gift package of flowers, jewelry, chocolates, a spa treatment, perfume and a card will cost 6% more than last year – or $543 versus $514 – according to CouponFollow.

Taking Mom out to eat will cost more

The Wells Fargo Agri-Food Institute expects diners to spend about 4% more for a total Mother's Day restaurant meal bill of $67, up from $64 last year. Wells Fargo credit card data from last year's Mother's Day spending at non-quick-service restaurants was used.

The biggest reason for the increase is labor costs for the restaurant industry.

"The restaurants need to compete to maintain those workers," Michael Swanson, chief agricultural economist at the Wells Fargo institute, told USA TODAY. 

The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported in March that wages have increased 3.8% for the leisure and hospitality category over the past 12 months.

As far as the meal goes, two popular foods for Mother's Day – eggs and beef – have seen some dramatic price changes in the last year.

Fortunately, Swanson said, the price of eggs has dropped from last year's highs after nationwide outbreaks of bird flu.

"Maybe this is the year to do a Mother’s Day brunch since egg costs are down significantly from a year ago," Swanson said. "A year ago in March, the cost of dozen of eggs was $6.23, and this year in March they were $2.35."

But if beef is on the Mother's Day menu, the meal might cost more. Beef prices are high as the market has struggled to rebuild supply while there is record demand.

The retail price of beef is up 17% in the most recent USDA Retail Meat Price, according to the Wells Fargo report. By comparison, retail pork prices are up 1.3% in the same period and the composite price of broiler chickens is down 1.9%.

For more extravagant Mother’s Day spenders, a gift package of flowers, jewelry, chocolates, a spa treatment, perfume and a card will cost 6% more this year, an analysis shows.

What parts of a Mother's Day gift package increased?

If gifts are more up your alley for your mom, those costs are also increasing.

Flowers, jewelry and chocolates saw the steepest increases, each climbing more than 7% year over year, according to CouponFollow. The organization looked at BLS Consumer Price Index data and an analysis of retail pricing.

"A key takeaway from our study is just how quickly costs are adding up across various categories," Clay Cary, senior trends analyst at CouponFollow, told USA TODAY. "While inflation is always anticipated, these hidden costs can catch consumers off guard. Planning ahead and using discounts where possible can make a meaningful impact on budgets this year."

Here's a look at how costs went up:

A flower bouquet rose 7.3% from $54.53 in 2025 to $58.50 in 2026.

Jewelry, priced under $500, also increased 7.3% from $213.82 to $229.34

Chocolate and candy went up 7.2% from $37.97 to $40.71.

The most inflationary-resistant categories were perfume and greeting cards.

Perfume rose only 1.1% from $66.87 to $67.57; greeting cards also rose 1.1% from $6.83 to $6.90.

But the most expensive parts of the Mother’s Day gift package remain jewelry at $229 and spa services, which cost an average $140. The two make up 68% of the total gift package price tag, CouponFollow said.

Mother and daughter shop together at the mall.

Procrastination will cost you, too

If you wait too long to buy your Mother's Day gifts, that's going to cost you more, too.

Last-minute shoppers pay anywhere from $5 to $20 more per gift in rush shipping fees, CouponFollow said. That can range from an extra $5 for the same-day delivery of flowers to $20 for overnight chocolates.

Betty Lin-Fisher is a consumer reporter for USA TODAY. Reach her at [email protected] or follow her on X, Facebook or Instagram @blinfisher and @blinfisher.bsky.social on Bluesky. Sign up for our free The Daily Money newsletter, which breaks down complex consumer and financial news. Subscribe here.

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