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Christmas in Spain: What to Expect as a British Expat

Christmas in Spain: What to Expect as a British Expat

From the Three Kings on 6th January to the 12 grapes at midnight on New Year's Eve — a guide to Spanish Christmas traditions, where to find British festive supplies, and what the holiday season is really like on the Costa del Sol.

Last updated: February 2026

M

MUNDO Research Team · Vetted by Costa del Sol property professionals

Published June 2025 · Updated February 2026 · 11 min read

Christmas in Spain Is Not What You Expect

If your idea of Christmas is a white-knuckle dash through Tesco on December 23rd, a turkey roast in a heated dining room while it rains sideways outside, and the King's speech at 3 PM on December 25th, prepare for a very different experience in Spain. The Spanish festive season is longer, warmer, louder, and in many ways more joyous than the British version — but it revolves around completely different dates and traditions.

The most important thing for UK expats to understand is this: the big day in Spain is not December 25th — it is January 6th, the Feast of the Three Kings (Dia de Reyes). December 25th is celebrated as a family day (Navidad), but it is not the gift-giving bonanza that it is in the UK. That role belongs to the Reyes Magos. This means the Spanish festive season starts in early December and does not end until January 7th — over a month of celebrations.

The Spanish Christmas Calendar

December 8th: Inmaculada Concepcion

A national public holiday that marks the unofficial start of the Christmas season. Christmas lights are switched on in towns and cities, nativity scenes go up, and shops begin their festive displays. Many towns hold their Christmas light switch-on ceremonies on or around this date.

December 22nd: El Gordo (The Christmas Lottery)

The Sorteo Extraordinario de Navidad, known as El Gordo (The Fat One), is the biggest lottery draw in the world by total prize money. The draw is broadcast live on TV and radio, and virtually the entire country watches or listens. It is a national event comparable in cultural importance to the FA Cup Final or the Grand National — but bigger.

Spaniards buy lottery tickets (called decimos) individually or in shares with friends, family, and colleagues. A single decimo costs €20 and carries a number. If your number is drawn as the top prize, you win €400,000 per decimo. There are thousands of smaller prizes too.

For expats, participating in El Gordo is a wonderful way to feel part of Spanish culture. Buy a decimo from a local lottery shop (administracion de loterias) in your town. Many people believe certain shops are "lucky" and queue for hours to buy from them. The most famous is Dona Manolita in Madrid, but every town has its favoured shop.

The draw takes place at the Teatro Real in Madrid. Numbers and prizes are sung out by children from the San Ildefonso school in a distinctive singing style that has remained unchanged for over a century. If you hear screaming and cheering in your neighbourhood on December 22nd, someone nearby has won.

December 24th: Nochebuena (Christmas Eve)

This is the main family event of Spanish Christmas — far more important than December 25th. Nochebuena is when the extended family gathers for a large dinner that typically starts at 9 PM or later and goes on until well after midnight.

The traditional Nochebuena menu varies by region but typically includes:

  • Starter: Seafood — prawns (gambas), langoustines (cigalas), lobster (bogavante), or percebes (goose barnacles). The Spanish spend extravagant amounts on seafood for Nochebuena
  • Main: Roast lamb (cordero asado), roast suckling pig (cochinillo), or sea bream (besugo) depending on the region
  • Desserts: Turron (nougat — the hard Alicante style and the soft Jijona style), polvorones (crumbly almond biscuits), mantecados (lard cakes), and marzipan figures. These sweets are ubiquitous from early December and are gifted in decorated boxes
  • Drinks: Cava (Spanish sparkling wine), wine, and spirits. Cava flows freely at Spanish Christmas

After dinner, many families attend Misa del Gallo (Midnight Mass), though this tradition has declined among younger generations. Others simply stay up talking, playing games, and celebrating.

December 25th: Navidad (Christmas Day)

Christmas Day in Spain is a public holiday and a family day, but it is much quieter than in the UK. Some families exchange gifts on December 25th (this has become more common under the influence of global consumer culture), but traditionally, gifts are reserved for January 6th. The day is typically spent having a large lunch with family, then relaxing. There is no equivalent of the Queen's (now King's) Speech.

For British expats, December 25th can feel strangely anticlimactic. Many expats create their own hybrid celebration — a traditional British Christmas dinner at home on December 25th (complete with turkey, crackers, and Christmas pudding) while also embracing the Spanish traditions.

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December 28th: Dia de los Santos Inocentes

Spain's equivalent of April Fools' Day. People play pranks on each other, and newspapers and TV shows run fake stories. If someone tricks you, they shout "Inocente!" (Innocent!). It is a lighthearted day amid the festivities.

December 31st: Nochevieja (New Year's Eve)

New Year's Eve is celebrated enthusiastically in Spain, and the centrepiece tradition is one that catches every expat off guard: las doce uvas de la suerte — the twelve grapes of luck.

At midnight, as the clock strikes twelve, you must eat one grape with each chime of the bell. Twelve grapes in twelve seconds. Each grape represents a month of the coming year, and eating them all is supposed to bring good luck. It sounds easy. It is not. Spanish grapes are larger than you expect, the clock chimes faster than you expect, and by grape number eight you will be choking and laughing simultaneously.

Practical tip: Buy seedless grapes (uvas sin pepitas), peel them, and cut them in half beforehand. Spanish supermarkets sell special packs of twelve pre-prepared grapes in late December. If you try to do it with full-size, seeded grapes straight from the bag, you will fail spectacularly — which is also perfectly acceptable and very entertaining for everyone watching.

The grapes are traditionally eaten while watching the clock at the Puerta del Sol in Madrid on TV, where tens of thousands of people gather in person. After the grapes, the celebration continues with cava, fireworks, and parties. Spanish New Year's parties start late and go until dawn — it is common to not get home until 7 or 8 AM on January 1st.

January 5th: Cabalgata de Reyes (Three Kings Parade)

The evening of January 5th is one of the most magical nights of the Spanish calendar. Every town and city holds a Cabalgata de Reyes — a parade of the Three Kings (Melchor, Gaspar, and Baltasar) through the streets. The Kings ride on elaborate floats, accompanied by music, dancers, and hundreds of pages who throw sweets to the crowd.

The cabalgatas in Malaga, Marbella, and Estepona are spectacular — enormous floats, thousands of participants, and entire streets lined with families. Children scream with excitement as sweets rain down on them. Adults join in too. It is an extraordinary atmosphere that has no equivalent in the UK.

After the parade, children leave their shoes by the door (or by the window, or by the Christmas tree) for the Three Kings to fill with presents overnight, along with a snack for the Kings and water for their camels. It is the Spanish equivalent of leaving mince pies and milk for Santa.

January 6th: Dia de Reyes (Three Kings Day)

This is the main gift-giving day in Spain. Children (and many adults) open their presents on the morning of January 6th. It is a public holiday and a major family day. The traditional breakfast is Roscon de Reyes — a ring-shaped sweet bread decorated with candied fruit and cream, with two hidden surprises inside: a small figurine (whoever finds it is "crowned" king or queen for the day) and a dried bean (whoever finds the bean has to pay for the roscon).

For UK expats with children, the Reyes tradition is a wonderful addition to Christmas — your children get two rounds of presents: one from Santa on December 25th (the British tradition) and one from the Three Kings on January 6th (the Spanish tradition). Some expats eventually adopt the Spanish calendar entirely and shift all gifts to January 6th.

Where to Find British Christmas Supplies on the Costa del Sol

If you want to cook a traditional British Christmas dinner, you can find most of what you need, though it takes some hunting:

  • Iceland (the shop, not the country): Iceland has stores across the Costa del Sol — in Fuengirola, Marbella, Estepona, Malaga, and more. They stock British Christmas essentials: turkeys, stuffing, pigs in blankets, Christmas pudding, mince pies, crackers, and all the trimmings. Stock up early in December as popular items sell out
  • British Corner Shop (online): Delivers to Spain. Order your Cadbury selection boxes, Bisto gravy, Colman's mustard, and other essentials online and have them shipped
  • Supersol / Coviran / Mercadona: Local Spanish supermarkets will not have British-specific items, but they stock excellent turkeys (pavo), quality vegetables, and of course all the cava and wine you need
  • El Corte Ingles: The food hall (Supermercado El Corte Ingles) stocks premium imported items including some British brands. Their Christmas food selection is extensive and high quality
  • La Casa del Bacalao and specialist delis: For Spanish Christmas ingredients like turron, polvorones, and quality jambon
  • Christmas crackers: These are a uniquely British tradition and not widely sold in Spain. Order from Iceland, British Corner Shop, or Amazon.es in advance

Weather at Christmas: Sunshine and 15-20 Degrees

Forget everything you know about Christmas weather. On the Costa del Sol, a typical Christmas Day looks like this: sunny skies, 15-18 degrees Celsius, light breeze. Some years it reaches 20 degrees. Rain is possible but not common. You will not need a heavy coat — a light jacket is sufficient for evenings.

This means Christmas activities look very different. Instead of huddling indoors, many families eat their Christmas lunch on the terrace, go for walks along the seafront, or even sit on the beach (swimming is only for the brave — the sea temperature is around 15-16 degrees in December). Children play outside with their new toys. Expats regularly post photos of themselves having Christmas dinner al fresco, which causes jealousy and disbelief among their UK friends and family.

The flip side: some expats miss the cozy, dark, cold atmosphere of a British Christmas. There is something about fairy lights in the rain, a real fire, and dark evenings that feels quintessentially "Christmas-y." In Spain, the bright sunshine can make December 25th feel like any other pleasant winter day. You may find yourself creating indoor Christmas atmosphere with candles, fairy lights, and heating turned up unnecessarily — just for the feeling.

Markets and Festivities

The Costa del Sol has embraced the Christmas market concept, though they are smaller and different in character from German-style markets:

  • Malaga: The city has spectacular Christmas lights (among the most famous in Spain), a large nativity scene in the town hall, and a Christmas market in the Parque de Malaga. The Christmas lights on Calle Larios are a major tourist attraction, with thousands of people visiting nightly to see the light and music show
  • Marbella: The old town (casco antiguo) is beautifully decorated, with a Christmas market in the Plaza de los Naranjos, ice skating rink, and nativity scene. The Puerto Banus area has upscale Christmas events
  • Estepona: Known for its charming flower streets, Estepona does Christmas beautifully. A market in the town centre, nativity scene trail, and an intimate, less commercialised atmosphere than the larger towns
  • Fuengirola: Popular with expats, Fuengirola has a Christmas market, nativity scene, and regular events in the Plaza de la Constitucion. The Bioparc sometimes has special Christmas activities

Beyond the Costa del Sol, cities like Seville, Granada, and Cordoba have extraordinary Christmas celebrations. A day trip to see the Christmas lights and nativity scenes in Seville is a magical experience that is easily doable from the Costa del Sol.

Adapting to Spanish Christmas as a Brit

Most British expats find that after a year or two, they embrace a hybrid Christmas that takes the best of both traditions. A typical expat Christmas on the Costa del Sol might look like this:

  • Early December: Participate in the El Gordo lottery and attend the local Christmas light switch-on
  • December 24th: Join Spanish friends or neighbours for Nochebuena dinner, or host your own with a mix of British and Spanish dishes
  • December 25th: British Christmas morning with presents and stockings, followed by a traditional roast turkey dinner on the terrace in the sunshine
  • December 31st: Eat the twelve grapes at midnight (you will get better at it each year), then celebrate New Year's Spanish-style until dawn
  • January 5th: Watch the Cabalgata de Reyes parade with the whole family
  • January 6th: A second round of presents for the children and Roscon de Reyes for breakfast

Christmas in Spain is not better or worse than Christmas in the UK — it is wonderfully, fundamentally different. The sunshine, the extended season, the emphasis on family gatherings and communal celebrations, and the joy of the Three Kings tradition create a festive season that, once experienced, most expats would never trade back. And if you really miss a grey, rainy December 25th, you can always fly back to the UK for a visit. The contrast will make you appreciate your sunny Spanish Christmas all the more.

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Disclaimer

This guide is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, tax, or financial advice. Property laws and tax regulations change frequently — always consult a qualified Spanish lawyer and tax advisor before making any property purchase decisions. Data sourced from Spanish Land Registry, Idealista, and MUNDO partner network. Last verified: March 2026.

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