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PRESS RELEASE: Girl Scouts of Historic Georgia Kicks Off 2025 Girl Scout Cookie Season, Helping Girls Across the Country Unbox Brighter Futures for Themselves

Girl Scouts of Historic Georgia Kicks Off 2025 Girl Scout Cookie Season, Helping Girls Across the Country Unbox Brighter Futures for Themselves

Consumers across Georgia can now support Girl Scouts in their local area as they say goodbye to the beloved cookie flavor, Girl Scout S’mores®.

MACON, GA (January 7, 2025)— Today, Girl Scouts of Historic Georgia kicked off the 2025 Girl Scout Cookie® season, a time when Girl Scouts everywhere hone their entrepreneurial skills as they find new and inventive ways to sell cookies, unboxing brighter futures for themselves. With the much-anticipated cookie season back in full swing, cookie lovers can rejoice as they indulge in the classic cookie lineup.

The 2025 cookie lineup is jam-packed with the full spread of highly sought after cookie flavors, including Thin Mints®, Samoas®, Tagalongs®, and more. At the close of the 2025 cookie season, the beloved Girl Scout S’mores® cookie flavor will be retired. Girl Scout S’mores® enthusiasts can get their hands on the last of these favorite sweet treats by reaching out to a Girl Scout they know for their Digital Cookie® online sales link.

When girls participate in the Girl Scout Cookie Program, the largest entrepreneurial program in the world, they acquire a host of invaluable entrepreneurial skills, including goal setting, money management, decision-making, people skills and business ethics. Each box of cookies sold allows Girl Scouts to develop an inextinguishable entrepreneurial spirit, gaining courage, confidence and character as they conquer new feats and embark on new adventures. Girl Scouts obtain transferable life skills as they earn a variety of badges and awards, including Cookie Business badges, Financial Literacy badges, Cookie Entrepreneur Family pins and Entrepreneur badges.

This season, Girl Scouts of Historic Georgia calls on community members to support their favorite cookies—and the girls behind each box. All proceeds from cookie sales stay with Girl Scouts of Historic Georgia troops to fuel inspiring experiences throughout the year including camp, amazing trips, service projects and much more. Girl Scout Cookie season is recognized nationally from January through April, but local timing varies; please support your local Girl Scouts by ordering from a girl you know or by visiting www.girlscoutcookies.org to find a booth near you. Be sure to visit www.girlscoutcookies.org again on February 21 to have cookies shipped directly to your home.

How to Purchase Girl Scout Cookies This Year

  • If you know a registered Girl Scout, reach out to learn how they’re selling cookies. If you don’t know a Girl Scout, check with your local council or use the Girl Scout Cookie Finder to find a booth and purchase cookies. Girl Scouts of Historic Georgia cookie booths open on February 14 and run through March 9.
  • Beginning February 21, customers who do not already know a Girl Scout will also be able to purchase cookies to be shipped directly to their homes by entering their zip code into the Girl Scout Cookie Finder. This link can also be used to find a local booth, purchase cookies, and/or to donate cookies for local community causes.
  • You can also text COOKIES to 59618 to stay informed about how to purchase Girl Scout Cookies and other exciting Girl Scout news. Learn more about the Terms and Conditions and the SMS Privacy Policy.

For more information, to join or to donate, visit www.gshg.org. ❧

ABOUT GIRL SCOUTS OF HISTORIC GEORGIA: Girl Scouts of Historic Georgia is rich in heritage and purpose. The council extends from the North Georgia mountains to the Okefenokee and from the Atlantic coast to the Chattahoochee Valley. Girl Scouts of Historic Georgia serves more than 7,000 girls and 3,000 adults in 122 counties in Georgia, two counties in South Carolina and one county in Alabama. The council is also the home of our organization’s founder, Juliette Gordon Low, who founded Girl Scouts on March 12, 1912 in Savannah, Georgia, where her birthplace and the historic First Headquarters still welcome thousands of Girl Scouts every year. Girl Scouting gives girls a wide range of experiences to define leadership their way. To join, donate, or learn more, visit www.gshg.org.

Graphic courtesy of cottonbro studio
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