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Friday, December 25, 2026 · 244 days away
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Christmas 2026
Event overview
Christian feast celebrating the birth of Jesus Christ, observed on December 25 by Western and most Eastern Catholic churches. Falls on Friday December 25, 2026. Midnight Mass, Christmas tree, gift exchange, family meals, nativity scenes, carols.
Christmas 2026 – the Christian feast celebrating the birth of Jesus Christ – falls on Friday December 25, 2026. Observed worldwide and a public holiday in over 160 countries, including many with non-Christian majorities, making it the most globally widespread holiday on the calendar.
Christmas commemorates the birth of Jesus of Nazareth in Bethlehem, as told in the Gospels of Matthew (chapter 1) and Luke (chapter 2). Mary and Joseph, having traveled to Bethlehem for the Roman census, found no room at the inn; Mary gave birth in a stable, and the newborn was laid in a manger. Shepherds in nearby fields were told of the birth by an angel; later, Magi from the East followed a star to find the child. The two narratives are usually combined into a single nativity scene that has become Christmas's universal visual icon.
December 25 was first formally fixed as the date of Christ's birth in Rome in the 4th century, possibly to christianize the Roman winter-solstice festivals of Sol Invictus and Saturnalia. The earliest extant attestation is the Chronograph of 354, a Roman calendar that lists December 25 as the natalis Christi. Eastern Christianity initially observed Christ's birth on January 6 (Epiphany), and many Eastern churches still combine the celebration of Christ's birth and his baptism on that date.
The familiar tableau of Christmas as it is celebrated today – the Christmas tree, the gift-giving, Santa Claus, Christmas carols, the family meal, the public holiday with retail closures – consolidated mostly in 19th-century Britain, Germany, and the United States. Charles Dickens's A Christmas Carol (1843) crystallized the festival as a time of family reunion, charity, and reconciliation; Clement Clarke Moore's "A Visit from St. Nicholas" (1823) shaped Santa Claus as he is now known; the German Christmas tree, popularized in Britain by Prince Albert in the 1840s, became a global staple.
Christmas in most of the Christian world begins on Christmas Eve (December 24). The evening's central liturgy is Midnight Mass – the first Eucharist of Christmas, celebrated at midnight or in the late evening – which is the year's most-attended service in Catholic and many Protestant traditions. In Germany, Austria, Switzerland, Scandinavia, Poland, and the Czech Republic, Heiligabend / Wigilia / Štědrý den is the larger of the two days, with the family meal and gifts exchanged on Christmas Eve itself.
December 25 morning brings the opening of presents under the tree (in Anglosphere countries), the Christmas Day Mass or church service, and the family meal. The traditional centerpiece varies by region: turkey with stuffing in the UK, US, and Canada; goose or duck in Germany and Austria; ham in Scandinavia; bacalhau (salt cod) in Portugal; Christmas pudding and mince pies for dessert in the UK; panettone in Italy; bûche de Noël in France; lechón in the Philippines; rice porridge with butter in much of Scandinavia.
Music is central – carols (Silent Night, dating to 1818 in Austria; O Holy Night, 1847 in France; Adeste Fideles, 18th-century England; Hark the Herald Angels Sing) are sung in churches, on streets in carolling traditions, and in concert halls. The Royal Christmas Message from the British monarch, the Pope's Urbi et Orbi blessing from St. Peter's Square, and the Queen's/King's Lessons and Carols from King's College, Cambridge are watched globally.
December 25 is a fixed-date observance on the Gregorian calendar, with no astronomical or computational variability. In 2026, it falls on a Friday – making for a long Christmas weekend in much of the world (Christmas Eve, Christmas Day, Boxing Day, then a regular weekend). The day was fixed in Rome in the 4th century and has remained December 25 in Western Christianity ever since. Eastern Orthodox churches that follow the Julian calendar observe Christmas on Julian December 25, which is currently January 7 in the Gregorian calendar.
In 2026, Christmas closes a December calendar that includes Hanukkah 2026 (December 4–12) and Bodhi Day (December 8). Boxing Day follows on December 26; New Year's Eve closes the year. The full Christian calendar lives at the Christian festival hub. For comparable winter festivals of light, see Hanukkah in the Jewish festival hub and Diwali in the Hindu festival hub.
When is Christmas in 2026? Friday December 25, 2026 – a fixed-date holiday on the Gregorian calendar.
How is Christmas observed? Through Midnight Mass on Christmas Eve, gift-giving, Christmas trees, carols, and the family meal; Christmas Eve is the larger evening in much of central and northern Europe.
Is Christmas a public holiday? Yes, in over 160 countries – including many non-Christian-majority states.
What is the typical greeting? "Merry Christmas" in English; "Frohe Weihnachten" in German; "Joyeux Noël" in French; "Feliz Navidad" in Spanish; "Buon Natale" in Italian; "Wesołych Świąt" in Polish.
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