Godiva Celebrates 100 Years With Two New Spring Chocolate Gift Sets
Godiva marked its 100th anniversary with two limited-time spring sets: an 18-piece Egg Gift Box at ~$50 and a collectible Masterpiece Bunny Tin.

Godiva's 100th anniversary called for something more than a cake. The Belgian chocolatier marked the milestone with two limited-time spring collections: an 18-piece Egg Gift Box packaged in a turquoise box with a pink ribbon, and a collectible Masterpiece Bunny Tin holding 15 pieces of its Masterpiece assortment.
The Egg Gift Box is the more elaborate of the two. Its 18 pieces span five distinct flavor profiles: three Dark Ganache Eggs made with 85% cacao dark chocolate ganache in a dark chocolate shell, three Dark Chocolate Raspberry Ganache Eggs filled with raspberry ganache in a dark chocolate shell, four solid Milk Chocolate Eggs, four Milk Chocolate Speculoos Mousse Eggs, and four Milk Chocolate Hazelnut Praliné Eggs with hazelnut praliné encased in a milk chocolate shell. At roughly $50, the price is competitive with comparable premium chocolate gift sets from brands like Neuhaus or La Maison du Chocolat, where similarly sized assortments typically run $55 to $75. The Egg Gift Box is available through the Godiva website, Macy's, Bloomingdale's, and Dillard's.
The Bunny Tin takes a more collectible approach. Godiva recreated its Easter mascot as the tin itself, making the packaging as much a part of the gift as what's inside. The 15-piece Masterpiece assortment inside splits evenly across three varieties: five Decadent Dark Chocolate with Ganache, five Heavenly Milk Chocolate with Ganache, and five Dark Chocolate with Smooth Caramel. Pricing for the Bunny Tin had not been confirmed at the time of publication, and retailer availability beyond what's listed for the Egg Gift Box should be verified directly with Godiva.

As an anniversary gift, the Egg Gift Box works particularly well for couples who share a preference for dark chocolate, since the 85% cacao ganache eggs anchor the set with genuine intensity rather than the sweet-forward profile typical of spring seasonal assortments. The collectible Bunny Tin, by contrast, is better suited to a recipient who will appreciate the packaging long after the chocolates are gone. A centennial release from a brand with Godiva's history carries more weight than a standard seasonal offering, and that context, presented with the gift, is part of what makes it land.
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