The countdown to one of candy's busiest days of the year is on as Halloween is rapidly approaching.

But if you've already started stockpiling your 'fun-sized' treats for a busy night of trick-or-treaters or you're still formulating your game plan, one thing is certain: it's going to cost more for those sweet treats this year.

To show how inflation has impacted the cost of Halloween in 2024, CouponFollow found the average prices of popular candies and calculated how much they had risen compared to last year.

The most expensive Halloween candy this year is 3 Musketeers, which costs an average of 79 cents per ounce — a price increase of 73 percent since 2023.

Another Halloween favorite, Milky Way, has seen it price nearly double in a year, going from 39 cents in 2023 to 77 cents now - an increase of 97 percent.

Two other Halloween stalwarts have seen price hikes of 50 percent or more in 2024:

Skittles are the cheapest sweets to hand out to trick-or-treaters, costing just 32 cents per ounce, on average.

Halloween Candy Prices
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Candy isn't the only Halloween staple that has seen prices skyrocket recently. Pumpkins cost considerably more than they did just a few years ago.

The average pumpkin sold for $3.89 in 2018. Five years later, we were paying nearly 35 percent more - an average of $5.24 in 2023, according to Statista.

SWEET: Here are the most popular Halloween candies

LOOK: Classic Halloween costumes from 1865 to today

Stacker scoured the archives to find 50 photos of Halloween costumes from 1865 to today.

Gallery Credit: Stacker

LOOK: How Halloween has changed in the past 100 years

Stacker compiled a list of ways that Halloween has changed over the last 100 years, from how we celebrate it on the day to the costumes we wear trick-or-treating. We’ve included events, inventions, and trends that changed the ways that Halloween was celebrated over time. Many of these traditions were phased out over time. But just like fake blood in a carpet, every bit of Halloween’s history left an impression we can see traces of today.

Gallery Credit: Brit McGinnis