They're Expensive, Scout's Honor
Would you believe us if we told you that Girl Scout cookies have been a household indulgence for over a hundred years? Juliette Gordon Low founded the Girl Scouts in 1912 and a few years later the concept of selling cookies as a way to fund the troop started. The very first Girl Scout cookies were sold in the high school cafeteria of the Mistletoe Troop in Muskogee, Oklahoma back in 1917 and the fundraising efforts quickly caught on.
The cookies weren’t exactly the ones we’ve come to love these days. Girl Scouts were expected to bake and sell their own homemade cookies up until the late 1930s when the national Girl Scout organization began streamlining cookie production and outsourcing the efforts to officially licensed bakeries, eventually becoming our favorite Tagalongs and Samoas.
Unfortunately for us cookie fiends, Girl Scout cookies didn’t go the way of, say, Costco hot dogs or Arizona iced tea. Almost everything has gotten more expensive in the last few years, including our beloved Girl Scout cookies. Here’s a look at the cost since Girl Scout cookies were created—and where the price of Girl Scout cookies might be headed in the future.