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Thanksgiving Family Questions To Liven Up Your Group Chat

Thanksgiving Family Questions for Group Chats

At some point on Thanksgiving, the living room goes quiet. Half the room is watching football, the other half is scrolling, and the group chat is full of turkey photos. If you’re looking for an easy way to spark conversation without starting a family argument, these fun Thanksgiving questions and polls can bring some laughter to your family group chat—whether you’re in Northeast Ohio or scattered across the country.

Copy, paste, or screenshot these into your chats and see what your people say.

Classic Thanksgiving Food Debates

Send these as simple polls or “reply with your answer” messages:

  1. Stuffing vs. mashed potatoes—if you could only have one, which wins?
  2. Is it called stuffing or dressing where you live?
  3. What’s the superior pie: pumpkin, apple, pecan, or “none, give me cheesecake”?
  4. Canned cranberry sauce vs. homemade—team ridges or team real berries?
  5. Turkey: actually delicious or just a vehicle for gravy and sides?
  6. Best leftover: turkey sandwich, turkey soup, reheated plate, or “I’m done, give me pizza”?

These questions are low-stakes but surprisingly passionate—perfect for cousins, siblings, or coworkers.

Thanksgiving Traditions and Nostalgia Questions

These can lead to sweet stories and memories:

  1. What’s one Thanksgiving tradition from your childhood you still love?
  2. What dish instantly reminds you of a grandparent or older relative?
  3. Did you grow up having a “kids’ table” or all one big table? Which did you prefer?
  4. What’s the funniest Thanksgiving disaster our family has ever had?
  5. If you could bring back one person for one Thanksgiving dinner, who would you choose? (No pressure to answer publicly.)
  6. What’s the earliest Thanksgiving you remember, and what stands out?

These are great for bridging generations—especially if older family members are in the chat.

Thanksgiving in Northeast Ohio: Local-Flavor Polls

Add a hometown flair with questions tailored to Northeast Ohio:

  1. On Thanksgiving, should the TV be on the Browns game, a movie, or turned off during dinner?
  2. Post-dinner plan: nap, go for a walk in the cold, or start decorating for Christmas?
  3. Is the day after Thanksgiving for Black Friday shopping, local small business shopping, or staying home in pajamas?
  4. Best Thanksgiving walk: neighborhood loop, local park, or no thanks, couch only?
  5. Pumpkin roll, buckeyes, or “just give me leftovers”—what’s the top Ohio dessert this weekend?

You can tweak these to name your specific town, local parks, or favorite neighborhood spots.

Light, Silly “Would You Rather” Questions

Perfect for younger family members and friends:

  1. Would you rather do all the cooking or all the dishwashing?
  2. Would you rather have Thanksgiving dinner at 10 a.m. or 10 p.m.?
  3. Would you rather only eat sides or only eat desserts?
  4. Would you rather have a second Thanksgiving in July or a second Halloween in March?
  5. Would you rather host 5 people you love or 25 people you barely know?

These can be answered fast with emojis or single-letter replies.

Conversation Starters That Aren’t About Politics or Drama

If your family tends to drift into stressful topics, redirect with questions that are more about reflection and fun:

  1. What’s one small thing from this year you’re grateful for that might surprise people?
  2. What’s a new tradition you’d like to start next year?
  3. If you could invite any fictional character to Thanksgiving, who would it be and why?
  4. What song or movie feels like “the holidays are here” to you?
  5. What’s one thing you learned this year that you’re glad you know now?

These keep conversation deeper without getting too heavy.

How To Use These Questions

You don’t have to send them all at once. Try:

  • Posting one poll every hour in the family chat.
  • Dropping a question in your Friendsgiving group text.
  • Using them as icebreakers at the table so quieter people have an easy way to join in.

If someone is spending Thanksgiving mostly on their phone this year—whether they’re working, traveling, or alone—these prompts can be a simple way to help them feel included from anywhere.

And if you’re that person quietly scrolling in a corner, starting a fun Thanksgiving question thread just might pull a few more people into your orbit today.


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