Branding

Why KitKat’s ‘Have a Break’ Still Works

by Ashleigh Gibson
11 min read
Branding, Campaigns, Creative
5bacef05-4e0a-4164-8a9a-10ee356260d2.__CR0,0,970,600_PT0_SX970_V1___

KitKat has been telling us to ‘Have a break’ for decades – and it’s a message that rings even truer today. Stepping away from screens and snapping a chocolate bar cleanly in two offers a satisfying antidote to life in the fast lane.

But it only works if you do what the brand is really asking: actually stop. This is key. Without that pause, it’s just another snack to eat at your desk or on the go. And the effect isn’t the same.

Since 1957, KitKat has continually found new ways to bring its core idea to life, using smart, memorable storytelling to keep ‘Have a break’ feeling fresh. And that consistency is part of the lesson. While many brands chase change, KitKat has held its ground – proving the power of sticking with a single, clear message over time.

But there’s something else at play, too. KitKat didn’t just commit to a message – it landed on one we seem to need again and again. The pace of life may have evolved, but the need to pause hasn’t. If anything, it feels more urgent now than ever.

So why has the concept endured for nearly 70 years? And how has KitKat managed to keep it relevant across generations? Read on as we explore some of the brand’s most recent executions – and what they reveal about the lasting power of a message the world never quite stops needing to hear.

Breaking news

KitKat made headlines right before Easter after falling victim to a heist – 12 tonnes of its bars (or around 413,793 units) were stolen en route from Italy to Poland. 

Image: X

A chocolate theft on that scale, days before Easter, was always going to grab attention. But what KitKat did next brought it straight back to its deeper identity. Brand owner Nestlé responded with a perfectly on-brand line:

“We’ve always encouraged people to have a break with KitKat, but it seems thieves have taken the message too literally and made a break with more than 12 tonnes of our chocolate.”

Even in reactive PR, the brand stayed rooted in its message – proof that consistency isn’t limiting; it enables creativity. 

Read more about the KitKat steal in our April 1st Uncertain Times: Personalised AI, Big Tech on Trial & a 12-Tonne KitKat Heist.

The KitKat brand today

When a brand is as widely recognised as KitKat, it earns the freedom to play. And that’s exactly what its recent activations show. 

Each execution takes the same core idea – ‘Have a break’ – and reinterprets it in an unexpected way. Different contexts, different tones, but the same unmistakable message running through them all.

Read on for 4 recent examples that show just how far a single idea can stretch when you stick with it.

1. ‘Little Breaks’

    What is it? KitKat’s latest out-of-home campaign, ‘Little Breaks’, puts small moments of pause and relaxation right into the bar. How? Hand-drawn illustrations of people reading, strumming a guitar or simply putting their feet up are positioned on a giant KitKat logo as stills or short animations.

    Why it works? It’s quietly uplifting. We all take breaks in our own way. What’s the same is the KitKat. The result is a clear association: whatever your version of a break looks like, KitKat fits, naturally.

    2. ‘Break Better’

      What is it? An office worker tells his computer he’s taking a break. But as he stands, all his work – including post-it notes, pens, a laptop and a whiteboard – sticks to him. The message: work is still clinging to him, literally. Only with a KitKat and some time in fresh air can he truly disconnect.

      Why it works? It’s a sharp observation – you rarely stop thinking about work the exact moment you step back from it. So in order to ‘break better’ you need a little help. And maybe, just maybe, that comes in the form of a KitKat and a park bench.

      3. The world’s slowest vending machine forces a break

        What is it? A creative installation that flips ‘instant gratification’ on its head. KitKats were dispersed from an elaborate vending machine in a busy Hyderabad commercial hub… at snail’s pace. The idea was for takers to enjoy the pause moment – and the show. The KitKats 

        travelled along a miniature railway and around a tiny funfair, before they were plopped out for the passers by to collect.

        Why it works? The joy was in the wait – something that we’re notoriously bad at appreciating. And we’d bet the KitKats tasted all the better when people finally got their hands on them.

        4. The official ‘F1 Pit Stop Break’

          What is it? This ad plays on Formula One’s iconic pit stops – those ultra-fast, high-pressure moments where a racing car pulls in for tyre changes and adjustments in just a couple of seconds. KitKat draws a clever parallel between these and everyday breaks.

          In the ad, an office worker pauses for a routine break, only to be treated like an F1 driver pulling into the pits. A team of KitKat-branded ‘mechanics’ rush in, delivering a KitKat and comically ‘servicing’ him with the speed and precision of a real pit stop.

          Why it works? Whoever you are – race car driver, office worker – the core idea behind a break is to reset. We all need pit stops to stay on track. It’s a funny parody and sends the message home with haste.

          How it started

          First introduced in 1957, the ‘Have a break’ tagline appeared in the brand’s earliest TV spots just a year later and has remained a cornerstone ever since. Originally, it reflected a very specific moment in British daily life: the 11am tea break – ‘elevenses’ – common in factories across the UK.

          But as the campaign evolved, so did the meaning of the line. Its real strength lay in its flexibility. ‘Having a break’ could be applied to almost any situation – especially those filled with stress, frustration or everyday absurdity – opening the door to humour and creativity.

          A classic example came in a 1989 TV spot, where a photographer waits patiently to capture a pair of pandas at a zoo. Naturally, nothing happens – until he steps away for a break. Only then do the pandas appear, gliding into view on roller skates.

          It’s a simple gag, but it captures the essence of the idea: sometimes, the moment you stop going full throttle is the moment things finally happen.

          The last bite

          KitKat forever innovates, finding new ways to keep its message feeling current and true. But strip it all back, and its success comes down to something simpler. We’ve always been busy. Always a little stressed. And so, the idea of taking a break – of slowing things down – has never really gone out of date. That’s what KitKat understood early on, and why ‘Have a break’ has endured for so long. It isn’t just a tagline; it taps into something constant in human behaviour.

          Maybe, one day, we’ll take the hint. If not, KitKat will be ready – still reminding us, still reinventing the message – for another 70 years to come.

          You can’t knock KitKat. At its core, it’s just following smart Strategy executed well – exactly what the best marketing tends to be.

          Now… anyone need a break?

          References

          Why KitKat’s ‘Have a Break’ Still Works

          We don’t want briefs.
          We want problems.
          That’s where the magic happens.

          StrategiQ Full Awards List
          2025
          UK Search Awards
          Best low budget campaign (PPC): Large
          UK Search Awards
          Best use of search – B2B (PPC): Large
          The Drum Awards
          Brand / Design Nominee
          European Search Awards
          Best Low Budget Campaign (SEO)
          2024
          WP Engine APP
          Committed to Give Back
          UK Search Awards
          Best use of AI in Search
          UK Search Awards
          Best low budget campaign (SEO): Large
          UK Search Awards
          Best use of search – Travel / Leisure (PPC): Large
          Dotdigital Partner Awards
          Retail Service Partner of the Year
          DevelopHER Awards
          Inspiration Award
          UK Dev Awards
          Rising Star
          UK Dev Awards
          Fintech Website
          UK Dev Awards
          Third Sector Website
          Campaign Best Places to Work
          26/100
          UK Dev Awards
          Retail/Ecommerce Website
          UK Company Culture Awards
          Best HR Tool
          Sunday Times' 100 Best Places to Work
          Small Organisations Category
          2023
          DevelopHER Awards
          Digital Marketer of the Year
          UK Dev Awards
          Best Third Sector Website
          UK Dev Awards
          UX Award for StrategiQ
          UK Paid Media Awards
          Best Use of Linkedin Ads
          UK Paid Media Awards
          Paid Media Agency Led Campaign Of The Year
          European Paid Media Awards
          Best Use of Linkedin Ads
          UK Agency Awards
          Best Culture Transformation Initiative
          UK Search Awards
          Best Use of Search (Travel)
          Social Media Awards
          Best Use of Instagram
          Social Media Awards
          Best Use of Linkedin
          Social Media Awards
          Best Audience Engagement Campaign
          DevelopHER Awards
          Emerging Talent
          UK Search Awards
          Best Use of Search
          2022
          Dotties Awards
          Marketer of the Year
          Elite Agency
          Campaign Best Places to Work
          Winner Top 50
          UK Dev Awards
          Project of the Year
          UK Dev Awards
          Travel Website of the Year
          UK Dev Awards
          Best Site Migration
          UK Dev Awards
          B2B Website of the Year
          UK Paid Media Awards
          Local Campaign of the Year
          UK Paid Media Awards
          Best Use of Attribution
          UK Search Awards
          Best Local Campaign (PPC) (LARGE)
          UK Search Awards
          Travel / Leisure (PPC) (LARGE)
          UK Search Awards
          Retail / Ecommerce (SEO) (LARGE)
          The Drum Awards
          Best Business Development Initiative
          2021
          UK Dev Awards
          Best Migration
          Campaign Best Places to Work
          Winner Top 50
          UK Agency Awards
          Covid Response (Silver)
          UK Agency Awards
          Campaign Effectiveness Award (Silver)
          UK Search Awards
          Best Use of Search Third Sector (Silver)
          UK Search Awards
          Best Use of Content Marketing (Silver)
          UK Search Awards
          Best Large SEO Campaign
          2020
          Campaign Best Places to Work
          Winner Top 50
          Suffolk Business Awards
          Business of the Year
          Suffolk Business Awards
          Small & Medium Business of the Year
          2019
          DXA Awards
          Best PPC Strategy with Powertool World
          Suffolk Business Awards
          Best Employer
          2018
          Best Employers Eastern Region
          Best Digital & Technology Business
          UK Search Awards
          Best Small Integrated Search Agency
          2016
          EADT Business Awards
          One To Watch Award
          Read
          Play
          Hover