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Wear a UDDERly fantastic COWstume Tuesday and get a free meal!

Posted at 9:16 AM, Jul 10, 2017
and last updated 2017-07-10 16:29:18-04

Are you in the MOOOOOOd for Chick-fil-A? Break out the spots and cow bells, and you'll get free food!

Chick-fil-A's 13th Annual Cow Appreciation Day event is on Tuesday, July 11. On that day, customers who show their spots will receive a free entrée at Chick-fil-A locations all across Arizona and nationwide. 

Since we are still months away from Halloween, do you need some COWstume inspiration? Make a shirt, or a mask, or add spots to your outfit so you're covered "head-to-hoof"! A Chick-fil-A entrée includes items like an Original Chicken Sandwich, new Smokehouse BBQ Bacon Sandwich or breakfast favorite, the Egg White Grill, to name a few. 

Children will receive a free Kid's Meal for dressing up as well!

Items that won't be redeemed as an entrée:

  • Salad
  • Soda
  • French Fries

IF YOU GO:

All Chick-fil-A locations from open until 7p.m.

Fans also can share pictures of their costumes on social media by using the hashtag #CowAppreciationDay. Additionally, all free-standing Chick-fil-A restaurants will have an active Cow Appreciation Day Snapchat filter that will allow guests to share their experience with friends and family.

Chick-fil-A began celebrating Cow Appreciation Day in 2005 and participation has grown each year, as Chick-fil-A has expanded across the country. Last year, nearly 1.6 million free entrees were given to cow-dressed customers.

Cow Appreciation Day is Chick-fil-A’s largest, single-day customer appreciation event and celebrates the quick service chain’s iconic “Eat Mor Chikin”™ Cows. Chick-fil-A first introduced the Cow campaign in 1995 as a three-dimensional billboard concept depicting a black-and-white cow sitting atop the back of another cow painting the words “Eat Mor Chikin” on the billboard. Since the first billboard more than two decades ago, the “Eat Mor Chikin” Cows have reached millions on television, radio, the internet and the occasional water tower to become one of America’s most popular advertising icons and a member of New York’s Madison Avenue Advertising Walk of Fame.