Best and Worst Halloween Candies, According to CR Staffers - Consumer Reports (2024)

Hershey announced there will likely be a candy shortage this Halloween due to global supply chain disruptions and the Russia-Ukraine War, which has strapped supplies of cocoa, edible oil, and other ingredients that go into making your favorite holiday candies. And the candies that will be available will be more expensive. That means when you’re shopping for your trick-or-treat goodies this year, make it count!

To find out which Halloween candies are worthy of being handed out and which ones should just go away, we polled nearly 160 of our staffers, most of whom reside in the northeast region. We asked them to pick three of their personal favorites and three that are the absolute worst. While some staffers made selections with their kids in mind, many let nostalgia guide them.

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“Nostalgia within consumer behavior and marketing is really, really strong,” says Jorge Barraza, PhD, program director and assistant professor in the online master of science in the applied psychology program at the University of Southern California. “People are willing to pay more for products that elicit nostalgia. It amplifies people’s pure, hedonic experience when they’re consuming something that has nostalgia tied to it because it’s not just about the flavor; it’s also the emotions and memories that it’s connected to.”

Here are all the Halloween candies we included in the survey. Keep scrolling to see which ones CR staff called the best and worst—and why.

All the Candies in Our Survey

100 Grand


3 Musketeers


Airheads


Almond Joy


Baby Ruth


Blow Pop


Butterfinger


Candy Corn


Crunch


Dots


Dum-Dums


Gobstopper


Good & Plenty


Haribo Gummies


Heath


Hershey’s Chocolate


Hershey’s Kisses


Hot Tamales

Jelly Belly


Jolly Rancher


Junior Mints


Kit Kat


Krackel


Laffy Taffy


Life Savers


M&M’s


Milk Duds


Milky Way


Mounds


Mr. Goodbar


Nerds


PayDay


Pop Rocks


Raisinets


Reese’s Peanut Butter Cups


Reese’s Pieces


Rolo


Runts


Skittles


Smarties


Snickers


Sour Patch Kids


Starburst


Sugar Babies


Swedish Fish


SweeTARTS


Take 5


Tootsie Pops


Tootsie Roll


Twix


Twizzlers


WarHeads


Whoppers


York Peppermint Patties

Best Halloween Candies

The common factor in all the top candies? Chocolate. But never chocolate on its own. It’s the perfect pairing of chocolate with something else that sets them apart.

“Halloween is a chocolate holiday. I like chocolate with texture—chewy goodness, crunchy nuts or cookie, peanut butter, caramel, and nougat. That’s Reese’s Peanut Butter Cups, Snickers, and Twix. Anything else is a trick, not a treat.”—Keith Flamer, home and appliance writer

Best and Worst Halloween Candies, According to CR Staffers - Consumer Reports (1)

1. Reese's Peanut Butter Cups (33%)

Whether your Halloween haul includes mini Reese’s Peanut Butter Cups (love those jagged edges!), full-sized cups (one bite or two bites?), or the pumpkin that packs an extra dose of sugary peanut butter, there’s no way to go wrong eating a Reese’s. Unless you’re allergic to peanuts, in which case, trade away, baby! These puppies have the highest value in the bunch.

“Everybody loves Reese’s, right? ‘Two great tastes that taste great together.’ I didn’t always do my homework in the ’70s, but I was valedictorian when it came to memorizing advertising tag lines.”—Mike Quincy, auto writer

“The peanut butter in a Reese’s cup is unparalleled. Salty, sweet, gritty. It’s perfect.”—Jen Saravay, senior human resources business partner

“Everyone knows Reese’s pumpkins have the best chocolate-to-peanut butter ratio.”—Alex Knizek, automotive engineer

“Excellent form factor, easy to devour cleanly.”—James McQueen, senior communications specialist

“I voted for Reese’s even though I’m allergic to nuts and can’t eat them. That’s because as a kid, my cousins, my sister, and I always had a huge candy trading session after trick-or-treating. Reese’s and Snickers were in high demand by everyone else, so I could command a high price for them in our trades. This meant I always ended up with way more Kit Kats and other favorites than I started with.”—Catherine Roberts, health writer

2. Snickers (16%)

According to the brand’s slogan, “Snickers satisfies,” and CR staffers could not agree more. This hearty candy bar is filled with nougat, caramel, nuts, and chocolate, practically making it a meal—albeit a very unhealthy one.

“Peanuts and caramel and chocolate, oh my! Sometimes too much of a good thing is even better. Snickers have it all: crunch, chew, and smoothness.”—Sarah Goralski, senior editorial researcher

“Snickers is simply the best candy bar. It has taste, texture, and substance. You get the gooey goodness of the caramel, but you break it up with peanuts, which also give you protein. Then you get the light, airy nougat to fancy the whole thing up because Snickers bars are not basic.”—Genea Bell, chief people officer

“Snickers feel almost like food because of the nuts, so I don’t feel as guilty.”—Leslie Monthan, copy chief

3. Almond Joy and Twix (14%)

The chewy crunch, whether from a caramel-topped cookie or an almond-studded coconut, brings both Almond Joy and Twix onto the podium for third place. Both are enrobed in silky chocolate and somehow taste even better in fun and snack sizes. Almond Joy also landed on our list of the worst Halloween candies. Sometimes you feel like a nut, sometimes you really don’t.

“I love coconut and chocolate. My mom likes coconut, too, and introduced me to Almond Joy, so it always makes me think of her.”—Tess Yanisch, senior research associate

“Twix is part cookie, part caramel, and a perfect combo.”—Rich Browne, senior marketing administrator

“Growing up, not many liked Almond Joy, so I was able to swap easily for them. They are just the right combo of coconut, chocolate, and nut.”—Rosemary McGuire, marketing associate

4. 100 Grand and Kit Kat (13%)

Another tie for fourth place: between 100 Grand, with its caramel and crisped rice, and Kit Kat, which brings the delicate wafer into the chocolatey mix. Many colleagues waxed nostalgic about 100 Grand and loved the variety of Kit Kat flavors these days. While one wrote a dissertation about both, which we thought worthy of publishing in full.

“In my perfect grown-up Halloween world, Kit Kats and 100 Grand bars would come in a hybrid dark-milk chocolate variety with some sort of sea salt component, and every home on my trick-or-treating route would be required to give full-sized bars. Still, the humble Kit Kat and 100 Grand bars, full or fun size, milk or dark chocolate (or one of the endless Kit Kat flavors offered in Japan!), have long been my favorite Halloween candies and the ones I’d always look for in a grab bag and still scan for at the grocery checkout line. Kit Kats have long been my #1 favorite candy. I know they were probably just created in a Hershey corporate office by a bunch of execs, but original Kit Kats are so wonderfully simple and balanced that I kind of feel like they may have been developed by a seasoned French pâtissier. The sweet layer of milk chocolate coating is pretty light, considering this is a candy produced in an American factory. The wafers are the perfect amount of crunchy, with not much additional sweetness. Overall, I don’t feel like Kit Kats are as cloyingly sweet as they could be. That’s not to say that they’re not extremely sweet and also artificial tasting, but I think things could have (and definitely have) gone worse. Kit Kats are also hearty if you can call a chocolate hearty. Did your Kit Kat bar melt? No worries, throw it in the freezer for a few hours and you still have a delicious, albeit misshapen, chocolate wafer treat. The perforated wafer pieces make it easy to share (if you’re so inclined) or ration out to save for later. The construction also makes it so much easier to eat politely; you can break it up into small bites and you’re less likely to get your hands and face covered in chocolate. I think 100 Grand bars got unfairly looped in with ‘old people candies’ during my childhood, but this reputation made them very easy to scoop up during Halloween trick-or-treating. However, if it truly is ‘old people candy,’ it is the Jeff Goldblum of old—classic but approachable, fun, and flavorful—unlike some of its contemporaries. I don’t know if we’ve seen much innovation with the 100 Grand bar since its creation, but I’m honestly okay with it. Crisped rice, chocolate, and caramel; how could you go wrong? It’s essentially an elevated Crunch bar, but so much better. There is too much uniformity in the crisped rice of the Crunch bar; I like the sort of haphazard bunches (mounds?) of crisped rice in the 100 Grand bar that give it a rustic, granola-esque texture. It’s essentially a health food, right?”—Alexis Priester, social media program manager

5. Butterfinger (12%)

Coming in fifth place but still very much adored is Bart Simpson’s favorite candy bar. Butterfinger makes a mess and half of it gets stuck in your teeth for hours, but that’s part of its charm.

“There’s something about the combination of flavors in Butterfinger bars (especially those little fun-size treats) that always had me ransacking my kids’ Halloween bags.”—Diane Umansky, deputy editor of print products

“I was torn between making Butterfinger or Reese’s Peanut Butter Cups my #1, but I’ll eat a Reese’s any time of year whereas Butterfinger is exclusively a Halloween-time treat for me. I both love and hate how it gets stuck to your teeth for way too long.”—Alisa O’Connor, photo editor

“I love a Butterfinger in large part because it’s not pure sweetness—it’s salty and savory, too—and it has a delightful crunchy texture that sets it apart from other candies.”—Angela Lashbrook, writer

“It’s hard to beat the combination of peanut butter and chocolate, but for me, Butterfinger outranks Reese’s Peanut Butter Cups because of the crunchy toffee-like quality of the filling.”—Dana Keester, senior test project leader

Honorable Mentions:
Gummies and Take 5

While these two candies didn’t make it into our “best” list, the people who love them really love them and make a convincing case for second-guessing any other candy choice. While the people who hate them make us hope never to encounter these candies again.

Best and Worst Halloween Candies, According to CR Staffers - Consumer Reports (2)

Take 5

“Take 5 is the best candy. No other mainstream candy dares to invite the humble pretzel into its fold. Sweet, salty, crunchy, peanut buttery, chocolatey. All y’all are sleeping on Take 5s.”

—Margaret Oates, privacy research lead

Best and Worst Halloween Candies, According to CR Staffers - Consumer Reports (3)

Gummies

“If you are a gummies fan, Haribo is royalty! When you get a pack of Haribo gummies for Halloween, you know the person did not skimp on buying the best in its class. And you can tell a lot about a person based on which Haribo gummies they eat first from a pack.”

—Amira Dhalla, director of security and privacy programs and partnerships

Worst Halloween Candies

For most CR staffers, it’s chocolate or bust when it comes to Halloween. But there’s definitely a love-hate relationship going on with their #1 worst candy choice: the infamous Candy Corn.

“If there’s not at least some chocolate, what’s the point?”—Terri Kazin, senior associate for content production

Best and Worst Halloween Candies, According to CR Staffers - Consumer Reports (4)

1. Candy Corn (32%)

“Candy Corn is both the best and the worst Halloween treat. Halloween would not feel like Halloween without Candy Corn, and there’s nothing better than a bit or lots of bits of Candy Corn when you start. But the next day, it feels like you have a bad Candy Corn hangover.”—Odalys Grieco, senior market analyst

“There are two types of people: those who like Candy Corn and those who don’t understand why people like Candy Corn. I am of the latter.”—Amira Dhalla, director of impact partnership

“Candy Corn and Good & Plenty (below) remind me of being car sick.”—Samantha Ostrander, assistant test project leader

“They taste like what I thought crayons or candles would taste like when I was a child. Unfortunately, crayons and candles tasted like crayons and candles, so I am thrilled to have candy corn as a superior alternative.”—Alexis Priester, social media program manager

“Candy Corn pulls out dental work!”—Jim Rogers, director of food safety research and testing

“Candy Corn is a classic and it looks nice as a decoration, but sorry, I’m not a big fan.”—Glen Rockford, privacy product testing program manager

“Candy corn is a bad excuse for candy.”—Daniela Nuñez, associate director of social media

“It may be controversial, but I really like Candy Corn once a year. Within the small window of time around Halloween, I love to dig into that sugary, caramel-y goodness, but after that window closes I’m done with it.”—Alexander Susse, senior consumer experience insights specialist

2. Good & Plenty (20%)

“Good & Plenty looks like medication, and the only reason it doesn’t taste like it is that no one would try to cover up the taste of medicine with an even worse flavor: black licorice.”—Dana Keester, senior test project leader

“Good & Plenty tastes like black licorice, which is the worst! Almost all licorice should be melted down to fill in potholes. I’d rather drink castor oil. I’d rather be audited by the IRS I’d rather go through a root canal without anesthesia.”—Mike Quincy, auto writer

“My best friend (since pre-school) and I have pretty much everything in common except one thing: our favorite candies. She absolutely loves Good & Plenty, Hot Tamales (see below), and Red Hots. At first, I thought this was appalling. I don’t like licorice, and I barely like cinnamon spice. Both flavors are too powerful and overwhelming, with not an ounce of subtlety. But then I realized this was an extremely valuable thing to disagree on. Rather than begrudgingly split a Kit Kat or argue about who got the last 100 Grand (see above), we enjoyed our polar opposite favorites on our own. We also had extremely valuable currency to trade on Halloween.”—Alexis Priester, social media program manager

“Black licorice is an acquired taste I have still not obtained.”—Alex Knizek, automotive engineer

“The outside coating of Good & Plenty is pretty good, and I can handle a hint of the licorice flavor. But I draw the line at eating black licorice. When I was a kid, I’d suck all the coating off each piece and spit out the licorice.”—Trisha Calvo, deputy health and food editor

3. Almond Joy and Airheads (16%)

“Mounds? Almond Joy? Leftovers that even parents don’t want. 😉 Okay, I know there are coconut lovers out there. I prefer it in my overnight oats, but definitely not my Halloween candy.”—Ted Bongiovanni, senior director of new ventures

“Airheads were a cute prize for book reading challenges in primary school but don’t deserve a place in any reasonably curated candy bowl.”—Paul Ritchey, senior test project leader

“Airheads are too tart and hurt your teeth.”—Nancy Smith, fundraising program manager

“Coconut has no business in candies! I feel the same way about spice/heat, so Hot Tamales also belong on this list.”—Joseph Delfino, senior marketing associate

“Airheads are by far the worst candy ever made; they are too much work to eat and enjoy.”—Grace Prudente, director of consumer data and intelligence

4. Hot Tamales (15%)

“They’re just a less offensive cousin of the Good & Plenty.”—Michele Kern, senior administrative assistant

Honorable Mentions:
Tootsie Rolls and Twizzlers

While these two candies didn’t make it into our “worst” list, the people who hate them make us hope never to encounter these candies again.

Best and Worst Halloween Candies, According to CR Staffers - Consumer Reports (5)

Tootsie Rolls

“Who eats Tootsie Rolls? I've met one person my entire life who enjoys them. These went straight to the trash when I was a kid. And don't even get me started on Tootsie Pops.”

—Ginger Cowles, managing editor

Best and Worst Halloween Candies, According to CR Staffers - Consumer Reports (6)

Twizzlers

“Although I don't love every candy, I can't think of one that I wouldn't eat, except for Twizzlers. They taste like strawberry plastic, and the texture is a weird smooth-crumbly combo. Even the smell makes me want to gag. I can't sit next to someone eating one.”

—Trisha Calvo, deputy content editor of health and food

Best and Worst Halloween Candies, According to CR Staffers - Consumer Reports (7)

Perry Santanachote

As a multimedia content creator at Consumer Reports, Perry Santanachote covered a range of trends—from parasite cleanses to pickleball paddles. Perry was also a main producer of our Outside the Labs content, evaluating products in her tiny Manhattan apartment.

Greetings, candy connoisseurs! I'm here as your resident expert on all things sweet, backed by a wealth of knowledge and an insatiable passion for the world of confectionery. From the intricate processes of candy-making to the intricate interplay of flavors that tantalize our taste buds, I'm your go-to guide for all things sugary and delightful.

Now, let's delve into the delectable details of the Halloween candy landscape discussed in the article. Hershey, a titan in the world of sweets, has forewarned of a potential Halloween candy shortage. This predicament is attributed to global supply chain disruptions exacerbated by the ongoing Russia-Ukraine War, affecting the availability of key ingredients like cocoa, edible oil, and more.

The survey conducted by Consumer Reports gathered insights from nearly 160 participants, primarily residing in the northeast region. The respondents were tasked with selecting three favorite and three least favorite Halloween candies. The results, guided by both parental considerations and nostalgic inclinations, paint a vivid picture of candy preferences in this festive season.

Jorge Barraza, PhD, a program director and assistant professor at the University of Southern California, highlights the powerful role of nostalgia in consumer behavior. This sentiment is echoed in the article, emphasizing that people are willing to pay more for candies that evoke nostalgic feelings, as it enhances the overall experience tied to emotions and memories.

Now, let's unwrap the list of Halloween candies that were part of the survey:

All the Candies in the Survey:

  • 100 Grand
  • 3 Musketeers
  • Airheads
  • Almond Joy
  • Baby Ruth
  • Blow Pop
  • Butterfinger
  • Candy Corn
  • Crunch
  • Dots
  • Dum-Dums
  • Gobstopper
  • Good & Plenty
  • Haribo Gummies
  • Heath
  • Hershey’s Chocolate
  • Hershey’s Kisses
  • Hot Tamales
  • Jelly Belly
  • Jolly Rancher
  • Junior Mints
  • Kit Kat
  • Krackel
  • Laffy Taffy
  • Life Savers
  • M&M’s
  • Milk Duds
  • Milky Way
  • Mounds
  • Mr. Goodbar
  • Nerds
  • PayDay
  • Pop Rocks
  • Raisinets
  • Reese’s Peanut Butter Cups
  • Reese’s Pieces
  • Rolo
  • Runts
  • Skittles
  • Smarties
  • Snickers
  • Sour Patch Kids
  • Starburst
  • Sugar Babies
  • Swedish Fish
  • SweeTARTS
  • Take 5
  • Tootsie Pops
  • Tootsie Roll
  • Twix
  • Twizzlers
  • WarHeads
  • Whoppers
  • York Peppermint Patties

Best Halloween Candies:

  1. Reese's Peanut Butter Cups (33%)

    • Praised for the unparalleled peanut butter taste and excellent form factor.
  2. Snickers (16%)

    • Known for its satisfying combination of peanuts, caramel, and chocolate.
  3. Almond Joy and Twix (14%)

    • Celebrated for their chewy crunch, silky chocolate coating, and enjoyable fun sizes.
  4. 100 Grand and Kit Kat (13%)

    • A tie between the caramel and crisped rice goodness of 100 Grand and the delicate wafer of Kit Kat.
  5. Butterfinger (12%)

    • Adored for its unique combination of salty, savory, and crunchy texture.

Honorable Mentions:

  • Gummies and Take 5
    • Take 5 praised for its diverse flavors, including sweet, salty, crunchy, peanut buttery, and chocolatey.
    • Haribo Gummies recognized for their status as candy royalty among gummy enthusiasts.

Worst Halloween Candies:

  1. Candy Corn (32%)

    • Acknowledged as a love-hate Halloween treat with a polarizing flavor profile.
  2. Good & Plenty (20%)

    • Criticized for resembling medication and featuring the divisive taste of black licorice.
  3. Almond Joy and Airheads (16%)

    • Mounds and Almond Joy labeled as leftovers, and Airheads criticized for being too tart and tooth-hurting.

Honorable Mentions:

  • Tootsie Rolls and Twizzlers
    • Tootsie Rolls disliked for their lack of popularity, and Twizzlers described as tasting like strawberry plastic.

As we navigate potential candy shortages this Halloween, armed with this comprehensive candy wisdom, make your trick-or-treating endeavors count and savor every nostalgic bite!

Best and Worst Halloween Candies, According to CR Staffers - Consumer Reports (2024)
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