As snacking evolves from a quick craving into a complex intersection of health goals, childhood nostalgia, and economic frustration, it has become the ultimate lens through which brands can predict the shifting loyalties of the modern consumer. The motivations behind "grabbing a bite" aren’t universal. Instead, they are fractured by age-specific desires for functional health, parental convenience, or a rejection of modern delivery friction. This brief explores the distinct snacking behaviors of different generations, from Gen Alpha through Baby Boomers, using Infegy Starscape Social Data to highlight how each group navigates the balance between nutrition, emotion, and ease of access.
Younger generations have shown increasing interest in DIY snacking and homemade recipes compared to packaged goods and food purchased out. This busy, active age group is searching for easy, healthy snacks they can make on their own to help them eat more protein, successfully meal-prep, and track calories and weight (Figure 1). Cultural celebrations also play a role with trends such as homemade Chinese street food (Figure 2) and #girldinner.
Figure 1: Topics of Gen Alpha and Gen Z for Homemade Snacking Trends (August 2025-January 2026); Infegy Social Dataset.
However, it doesn’t always go to plan. The trends of “midnight snacking” and grabbing a “sweet treat” bring up several negative narratives. (Figure 2) While this ritual can feel comforting, many people associate it with unhealthy eating habits, restrictive dieting, and the emotional struggle that can be behind food choices.
Figure 2: Topics of Gen Alpha and Gen Z for Snacking Trends (August 2025-January 2026); Infegy Social Dataset.
For these generations, snacking is about both achieving health goals and providing an emotional outlet.
Healthy eating for kids and former popular snacks, like South African Chocolate Logs and Altoids Sours, have taken over as the most popular snacking discussions for this generation. While they share an interest in homemade, high-protein food with younger generations, millennials have different reasons to snack, such as seeking kid-friendly options and remembering their own childhoods.
This generation has a unique interest in snacks for children, since many people in this age group have younger kids. Female millennials dominate this conversation with easy, kid-friendly snack ideas often incorporating air fryer usage, fruits and vegetables, healthier dairy options, and more. (Figure 3)
Figure 3: Topics of Female Millennials for snacking trends (January 2026); Infegy Social Dataset.
A niche focus from the millennial generation is their own discontinued childhood snacks. They are sharing their favorite snacks from their own childhood that they would “pay any amount of money” to taste again, like Shock Tarts and SoBe drinks. For this generation, snacking is also nostalgic. (Figure 4)
Figure 4: Narratives of Millennials for Discontinued Snacks (January 2026); Infegy Social Dataset.
For this group, snack conversations mostly revolve around takeout/delivery as well as indulgent snacks.
This cohort tends to complain about food delivery services such as DoorDash and Grubhub, while the younger generations are quiet on the topic. While the convenience factor is there, most people from the Gen X/Boomer group feel that ordering takeout is an easier, cheaper, more reliable option when craving a snack. This frustration stems from late delivery drivers, tipping culture, and expensive orders. (Figure 5)
Figure 5: Topics of Gen X and Baby Boomers for Food Delivery Services (August 2025-January 2026); Infegy Social Dataset.
These generations also have a desire to eat snacks for the sole purpose of taste, compared to younger groups. While we noticed that Gen Alpha, Gen Z, and Millennials placed a focus on health-conscious snacking, the Gen X and Baby Boomer crowd are talking about foods such as cookies, tacos, and several desserts. (Figure 6)
Figure 6: Narratives of Gen X and Baby Boomers for Snacking Trends (August 2025-January 2026); Infegy Social Dataset.
To effectively capture these diverse markets, brands must move away from "one-size-fits-all" messaging.
For Gen Alpha and Gen Z, companies can position products for DIY recipes, emphasizing high protein and transparency to support their health-tracking habits while acknowledging the emotional "sweet treat" culture.
For Millennials, the opportunity lies in "Newstalgia,” reviving discontinued classics with updated, cleaner ingredients that parents feel good about sharing with their children.
Finally, to reach Gen X and Boomers, brands can prioritize direct-to-consumer reliability or retail-first availability to bypass their frustrations with delivery apps, focusing marketing efforts on flavor, indulgence, and value for money rather than strictly health-centric narratives.