The countdown timer on this site is set to December 25 because that is the date most of the world recognises as Christmas Day. It is not the only date, and it is not even the only Christmas tradition. This page is a high-level guide to how the holiday is observed in different parts of the world — how the dates differ, where the centre of gravity falls inside the season, and how time zones affect the question "is it Christmas yet?"
Two main calendar dates
Two civil-calendar dates carry the bulk of Christmas observance worldwide:
| Date | Calendar | Where it is the main date |
|---|---|---|
| December 25 | Gregorian — used by Western Christianity and most civil calendars | Most of the world: the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, Ireland, Australia, New Zealand, the Philippines, the Catholic and Protestant majority countries of Europe and Latin America, and most of sub-Saharan Africa. |
| January 7 | Julian calendar (December 25 in the older reckoning) | Russia, Ukraine (some communities), Serbia, Georgia, Egypt's Coptic Christians, the Ethiopian and Eritrean Orthodox churches, Greek Old Calendarists, and several other Eastern Christian communities. |
Some Eastern Christian churches that historically used the Julian calendar — including the Greek and Romanian Orthodox churches — have adopted the revised Julian calendar, which currently aligns with the Gregorian for fixed feasts. They observe Christmas on December 25 along with the wider world.
Eve-celebrating versus day-celebrating countries
Even where everyone agrees on December 25 as the date, the moment the celebration peaks varies. Two broad patterns:
- Christmas Eve as the centre. Common across continental Europe — Germany, Austria, Switzerland, the Netherlands, France, Belgium, Italy, Poland, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Hungary, Norway, Sweden, Finland, Denmark, Iceland — and across most of Latin America. The main meal and the gift-opening happen on the evening of December 24. December 25 is a quieter day for visiting and resting.
- Christmas Day as the centre. Standard in the United Kingdom, Ireland, the United States, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and South Africa. Christmas Eve is preparation; the main meal and the gift-opening happen on the morning or afternoon of December 25.
The split mostly tracks Catholic and Protestant historical influence. Cultures shaped by the Catholic and Lutheran churches tend to centre the eve; those shaped by the Anglican and Reformed traditions tend to centre the day. There are exceptions in both directions, and within any country individual families do as they have always done.
The time-zone effect
December 25 begins at midnight, but midnight happens at different moments across the planet. The first inhabited place to enter Christmas each year is the islands of Kiribati and Samoa, which sit at UTC+13 and UTC+14. The last is American Samoa, at UTC−11. From the first midnight to the last, Christmas Day is "in progress" somewhere on Earth for about 50 hours.
This is why the live countdown on the home page is calculated in your local time zone rather than at a fixed offset like UTC. Two readers loading the page at the same moment will see different remaining times if they are in different time zones, because Christmas arrives at midnight where they are, not at midnight in London or New York.
Some patterns of celebration
Northern Europe and the Nordics
The dominant pattern is a full-evening celebration on the 24th, often built around a long meal — Wigilia in Poland, julbord in Sweden — followed by gift exchange. The 25th is calmer; the 26th is also a public holiday in many countries.
Southern Europe
In Italy and Spain, Christmas Eve dinner can run late into the night, with attendance at midnight Mass following the meal. In Spain and most of Latin America, gift-giving is also strongly tied to Epiphany on January 6 — the Three Kings' visit — and many children receive their presents that morning rather than on the 25th.
The English-speaking world
Christmas morning is the headline event, often with a turkey or roast at lunch. December 26, called Boxing Day, is itself a public holiday across the United Kingdom, Ireland, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and most Caribbean nations.
The Eastern Orthodox world
Where January 7 is the date, the lead-up is a long fast — the Nativity Fast — that ends with a festive evening meal and night-time church services. The week between January 7 and the eve of Epiphany on January 18 (the equivalent of Twelfth Night in the Julian reckoning) is observed as the continuing season.
The southern hemisphere
In Australia, New Zealand, southern Africa, and the southern parts of Latin America, Christmas falls in midsummer. The traditional cold-weather imagery — heavy meals, hot drinks, fires, snow — sits oddly against the actual weather, and many households swap the roast for a barbecue, the indoor table for an outdoor one, and the heavy pudding for something cold.
Places with significant non-Christian populations
In Japan, the Christmas season is widely observed in a secular form — illuminations, Christmas Eve as a romantic evening, fried-chicken dinners — without the religious framing. In the Gulf states and other parts of the Muslim world, Christmas is recognised by significant Christian minorities and is a season for inter-community visits even where it is not a public holiday. In India and across South-East Asia, Christmas is a public holiday in many states and is celebrated by Christian minorities alongside the rest of the population.
Worked example: a countdown for a family split across time zones
Imagine a family with members in Sydney (UTC+11 in December), London (UTC+0), and Los Angeles (UTC−8). When Sydney rings in midnight on December 25, the corresponding moments are 1:00 pm on December 24 in London and 5:00 am on December 24 in Los Angeles. Sixteen hours later, London joins. Eight hours after that, Los Angeles does. A countdown that runs in each person's local time will read differently for each at any given moment, but they will all hit zero exactly when their own local Christmas begins.
For shared video calls, the practical solution is to pick a single reference time zone for the call and convert from there — usually whichever country's morning the call happens in. The countdown stays a personal, local thing.
How the date came to spread so widely
December 25 became the standard Western date for celebrating the Nativity in the fourth century. From there it travelled with Christian missions, with European empires, and with global trade. Even in places where it is not a religious observance, it is now widely embedded in retail and civic calendars. The result is the largest synchronised date in the modern world — a single twenty-four-hour window during which a substantial fraction of the planet is, in some way, marking the same day.
Where to read more on this site
For the structure of the season after Christmas Day, see the Twelve Days of Christmas. For more on December 24 and the eve-celebrating traditions, see Christmas Eve. For a practical lead-up plan, see the planning timeline.
Last reviewed on April 27, 2026.
← Back to Countdown