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“Raspberry Rally” Girl Scout cookies are a hot item — if you can find them

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New Girl Scout cookie “Raspberry Rally” debuts in 2023


New Girl Scout cookie “Raspberry Rally” debuts in 2023

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A new Girl Scout cookie favor has proved to be so popular that resellers are hawking the treats online for a premium. 

The “Raspberry Rally” cookie is a thin, crispy chocolate-covered, raspberry flavor-filled cookie that the Girl Scouts call a “sister” cookie to the popular Thin Mints variety. 

Although it’s sold out online from the Girl Scouts, consumers who secured boxes are listing them for sale on sites like eBay for as much as five times their usual price. For example, one Girl Scouts troop in New York City sells them for $5, while single boxes of the cookies are listed for sale on eBay for between $20 and $30.

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One reseller priced a package of cookies at $29.99

Screenshot/eBay listing


The Girl Scouts introduced the “Raspberry Rally” cookies during their latest selling season, with the product only available for purchase online, rather than at troops’ in-person booths. That was by design to enhance “girls’ e-commerce sales and entrepreneurial skills,” the Girl Scouts said last year in announcing the new flavor.

The new cookie is sold out online, while other flavors remain in stock. 

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Raspberry Rally cookies are currently only available for purchase through resellers.

Girl Scouts


The Girl Scouts have staged an annual cookie sale for more than a century. Originally, actual Girl Scouts baked and sold the cookies for 25 cents to 30 cents per dozen to finance troop activities. Selling cookies helps members learn skills like goal-setting, decision making, money management, business ethics and marketing, according to the organization.

All of the net revenue raised through the annual cookie sales stays with local council and troops. One troop used the proceeds from its sale to help rebuild homes destroyed by the Almeda Fire in the Rogue Valley area near Medford, Oregon, in partnership with Habitat for Humanity. Cookie proceeds also funded a trip to Paris for troop members. 

The Girl Scouts did not immediately reply to CBS MoneyWatch’s request for comment. It has told other news outlets that unauthorized cookie sales in the secondary market hurt troops’ fundraising efforts.


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