Christmas While Travelling

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We have had 9 Christmases overseas while we were travelling. During our almost 7 years of full-time family travel, there were 6 holiday seasons in diverse places. This post is about experiences of Christmas, around the world, how we celebrated, then and now (2025), and how Christmas is celebrated in various countries. This year, we aren’t celebrating for various reasons. We’ll tell you why.

Christmas day travelling Asia
Celebrating Christmas while travelling in Asia, Singapore! We went to a theme park on Christmas Day to make it special for the kids. A few days in a nice family hotel on Sentosa Island was also a Christmas treat.

We “came home” to a bricks and mortar base, just before the pandemic, although we still travel extensively, we haven’t had another Christmas abroad. Our Christmases now are in Australia, but for 3 of us, that’s not our home country; we are from Europe, the UK. Christmas in the tropical heat of summer is also a very different experience.

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Celebrating Christmas While Travelling

Maybe this post will help you decide where to spend Christmas as you travel, or give you some ideas on how to make Christmas special if you’re on a trip or vacation. I’ll also tell you why in 2025, we’re hardly acknowledging Christmas at all.

I was excited to celebrate Christmas “at home” for the first time after many years of travel. Returning to an empty house just days before Christmas, fresh off the plane with only the contents of our backpacks, we were reunited with our decorations, safely stashed in the attic.

It was great to see them again.

We hoped to continue our digital nomad family lifestyle after a short stay at home. We had planned to sell the house and then get back on the road or maybe fully move back to the UK. But the universe had other plans.

We came home just before the pandemic, and our borders were closed for almost 3 years. It was a tough time, but we were OK.

We have spent Christmas with the kids, in Singapore, London England, Wales, Romania and Australia. Pre-kids, we had Christmas in Vietnam, India, Thailand and Cambodia, I’ll mention those below briefly, but it was a long time ago.

How We Feel About Christmas Today

My family, when I was a child, celebrated Christmas with importance placed on gifts, decorations, a real tree, and a traditional British Christmas lunch.

We tucked into roast turkey, multiple side dishes (from scratch, of course) and a flaming Christmas pudding that my mother and I would make in October. British food at its finest.

This is the sort of Christmas that I wanted to give my kids, wherever we were in the world.

Of course, it wasn’t always possible, but we did our best to make Christmas special.

For the last few years, we’ve spent Christmas in Australia. Each year, I’ve cooked a turkey or turducken and made Christmas pudding, but in Australia, we also make a pavlova and a trifle, because nobody really likes Christmas pudding.

This year, 2025, I’ve woken up. No pudding this year. No, or very few gifts, nobody needs anything, it’s a waste of money, and we’re opting out of the consumerist world.

You may know that we’ve already left social media. That has been liberating and we all have more time to do the things that we love.

On Christmas Day, we’ll be together, we’ll have a lovely meal and lay the table properly. I’ll dig out a tablecloth.

At this point, I don’t even think I’ll put up the tree. Artificial trees kind of depress me anyway, and all of us are pretty disinterested in the whole charade.

We certainly won’t be shopping on Amazon, we stopped doing that 9 months ago. Maybe there will be small gifts to buy in local markets and stores.

We won’t be shopping at the supermarket, we stopped doing that about 8 weeks ago. It’s been easy, and we’ve saved a lot of money.

We’re over commercialism, advertising and hype. Can you relate? Is it just us, or is this a mass awakening? I’d love to know.

I may, at some point, take the ads off this site. It will be a big financial hit for us, but ads annoy me today. Not because they are ads, but because the products they want us to buy are toxic, fake or bad for us. We don’t need all the crap they’re pushing us to purchase.

Tips For Surviving Christmas While Travelling With Kids

Christmas Market in London
London has loads of amazing Christmas Markets and fairs. We highly recommend Christmas in London or most places in Europe.

If you don’t want to read the whole post, here’s a condensed version, our top tips for enjoying your Christmas on the road. This is how we managed to celebrate and mark the day while travelling with kids.

I wrote this list a long time ago. We were far from “normal” and had opted out of much of the system, but we still had the “normal” urge to make Christmas a special event for the kids. Today, we are past that stage, we’re done with commercialism and over-consumption. But here’ s the list almost as I originally wrote it.

  • Arrange your travels with Christmas in mind – to an extent. Budget for a Christmas splurge somewhere nice.
  • If you want to cook, book an apartment or hotel apartment with a kitchen and decent kitchen equipment.
  • If you don’t want to cook, book into a nice hotel with a huge Christmas buffet.
  • Become very good at hiding presents in your backpack or suitcase.
  • Buy Lego. They’ll build it, then you can post it back home. My kids never play with Lego once it’s been built – weird, I know.
  • Buy the kids plenty of chocolate, you don’t need to carry chocolate after Christmas Day.
  • Always buy your husband or wife at least one nice thing. You’ll feel terrible if they buy you a gift and you don’t get a present for them.
  • Buy nice toiletries, they’re necessary, useful, and not a permanent “thing” to carry.
  • Buy other useful travel items if they are needed.
  • Feel good and environmentally sound about not sending or receiving Christmas cards. It’s better for the planet. We just send cards to a very few very elderly relatives. Also, buy cards from local artists, support the ordinary people, not big corporations.
  • Avoid plastic junk.
  • Gifts of experiences are great, but on Christmas day I’d rather have a present to open and so would my kids.
  • Likewise gifts of charitable donations, I personally wouldn’t do that unless I knew the recipient was absolutely passionate about that charity.
  • It’s pretty easy to find Christmas celebrations wherever you are in the world, see below.
  • Save your “treat” travel experiences (theme parks, shows etc.) for the Christmas period to make it extra special for the kids.

Is Christmas Celebrated Overseas?

Christmas is celebrated overseas in the most unexpected places, often spectacularly. Not many countries will want to miss out of a consumer fiesta this big and in some countries, the religious aspect is massively important.

Christmas traditions in Romania
Christmas traditions in Romania are fascinating and the Christmas period is filled with events.

Still, I want to be in Romania for Christmas and this year I’m already missing it. Of course, they celebrate. Christianity is strong here be it Orthodox or Catholic, but they celebrate differently.

Ancient pre-Christian and local traditions intertwine with Biblical festive celebrations. Expect bizarre costumes, goats, bears, giant cow-bells, and whip-cracking alongside Midnight Mass.

The characters above are part of a nativity play with roots in Christian and pre-Christian heritage. We have a post on Christmas in Romania.

The photo below was taken in Kuala Lumpur Malaysia, just before Christmas. Malaysia is a country with many religions and traditions, you’ll find all the festivals here.

We enjoyed the malls and Christmas movies enormously, they’re unusual after months in country Thailand or Vietnam.

The Christmas blockbuster Star Wars movie and The Rock in Jumanji were in English in the huge sparkling malls. A good time was had by all, and we caught up with old friends at Back Home Kuala Lumpur.

Christmas in Singapore
Christmas in Kuala Lumpur is sparkling. One of the many glitzy malls in the city. We’d take the kids here to watch movies in beautiful cinemas, in English. Tickets are much cheaper than back home.

This photo was taken in Sukhothai, Thailand, just before Christmas. Sukhothai is a quiet, sleepy town in a fairly remote part of Thailand. It’s home to Sukhothai Ancient City, the beautiful ruins of one of Thailand’s old capitals, you should go. But you can’t even escape Christmas here!

Christmas in Sukhothai Thailand
One of the most creative Christmas trees we’ve seen at a little restaurant in Sukhothai, Thailand. Ho Ho Ho !

Then there is Chiang Mai, Thailand, home to the wonderful Maia Mall and my favourite co-working space. The lights and decorations are spectacular and markets and Christmas fairs happen regularly.

This town in Northern Thailand is home to huge numbers of expats and digital nomads, they’re well catered for.

Christmas in Chiang Mai
Chiang Mai, Thailand, Christmas decorations and markets outside the wonderful Mai Mall. Plenty of Christmas movies here for the kids, in English.

We checked out the Christmas blockbuster movies at a fraction of western prices before moving on to Singapore for Christmas day.

Spending Christmas in Singapore

Christmas in Singapore Santa at Gardens by the Bay
Christmas in Singapore Santa at Gardens by the Bay. There was bribery involved to get this photo. Inside the  flower dome there was a big Christmas display of trees and figures, but it cost a lot, as does everything in Singapore.

This was our flashiest Christmas to date and probably my least favourite. We planned this 2 week Christmas break as a treat for the kids but spending Christmas in a hotel, all be it a good one on Sentosa Island, didn’t feel right.

We visited Universal Studios Singapore on Christmas Day itself. It was packed, it seems plenty of people had the same idea as us!

Spending Christmas in London, Wales and the UK

Cardiff Wales at Christmas
Cardiff, Wales at Christmas. One of my home towns and I love this city with a passion. Christmas lights, Doctor Who and the Winter Wonderland Christmas Fair.

This is home for us.

I know I say we have many homes and are most at home on the road, but Christmas in the UK is what we’re all most familiar with. That even goes for Chef, he’s Australian but has spent more of his life out of Australia than in it.

Christmas in the UK involves lights, candles, decorations, Christmas markets and food fairs. It’s cold, but I’ve never seen a white Christmas in Britain.

We ice skate, watch Christmas shows and eat mince pies and turkey. It feels right despite the crowds and frantic shopping frenzy.

Christmas in London
Christmas in London is fabulous- but we could use some snow.

Both of our Christmases while travelling in the UK have been spent while we were stationary for a few weeks or months. It gave us time and space to have a relatively traditional Christmas while being nomads.

We catch up with friends and family and have a great time, our way. This year we had planned to be home in the UK for Christmas, but given the current state of the world, I didn’t think that booking flights was the best idea. Maybe next year.

Spending Christmas in Romania

Christmas Day in Romania
A very, very white Christmas Day in Romania. Chef and I went for a walk in the snow after enjoying lunch, toasty in front a roaring fire. We visited friends, ate Stilton and drank wine. Our traditions and Romanian combined, made these our best Christmases ever.

Our best Christmases!

Simplicity, family, togetherness, friends and lots and lots of snow.

We heated our 100-year-old farm house with a wood burning stove. Pots would bubble away on the top while our turkey cooked inside. Our little kitchen was the only room we heated when winter really got a grip so it meant we were all together, all the time, other than when one of us went out to chop or fetch wood.

We’d ski, toboggan and observe the amazing winter traditions around us. Christmas here was like nothing else. We have loads of content on Breb, our little village in the snow, a century or more in the past.

Christmas in Breb
Happy memories of our Christmases in Breb, Romania. Our little tree in a pot came from the local market. We planned to plant it outside, but it died in January. Skiing almost daily, snowmen, snowballs, tobogganing and carol singers, it was a Christmas dream to be there. A few simple decorations, a warm fire, cooking and good friends, along with all the crazy happenings that made village life so interesting. Some of these decorations came with us to Australia.

Spending Christmas in Australia

Port Douglas Christmas
Christmas in Port Douglas, the heat builds and Stinger Season starts, so locals and tourists take to fresh water swimming holes – crocodile-free. This is Mossman Gorge, it’s beautiful and icy cold.

I think we’ve spent maybe 10 Christmases in Australia and Chef worked every Christmas Day before he quit to travel.

It’s very normal for people to book into hotels over Christmas in Australia, and the Christmas period coincides with summer heat and the long school holidays. Christmas was when Chef’s hotel made the most money with huge lunch and dinner buffets. There was no way he was getting the day off.

Christmas at Sea Temple Port Douglas
One of the best hotels in Far North Queensland and a great place to spend Christmas. See below.

A perk of being Chef’s family was that we got to spend a few days at his hotel- this one. (opens in new tab) It’s a 5-star and one of the best in Far North Queensland, so we had lovely accommodation, good food, and that incredible pool, but without dad, it wasn’t right.

Since we came home, Chef has been with us for Christmas. He works casual jobs today, it’s a much better arrangement. A family meal, a swelteringly hot kitchen and usually a swim at the beach before the turkey goes in the oven.

Spending Christmas in India, Vietnam and Cambodia

These Christmases were a long time ago, when we were travelling RTW or taking extended holidays, pre-kids.

Back then, there was very little by way of Western Christmas celebrations in these countries, but in India, specifically Christian Goa, we almost made it to midnight mass.

The hotel staff invited us to go along with them but, unfortunately, we fell asleep.

On the backpacker circuit in Vietnam and Cambodia Christmas came with late-night Christmas-Eve celebrations in bars, some decorations and Santa hats. On the big day itself, we just carried on as normal. I suspect that today, Christmas will be a much bigger deal.

Christmas Gifts for Travelling Kids

We have a post with some gift ideas here.

Nobody with a travel lifestyle is going to gladly accept useless trinkets that have to be carried around the world. We can’t waste baggage space nor weight allowances and posting items home is hard.

However, buying gifts for our travelling kids has never been an issue and yes, we do like to buy gifts. To us that IS Christmas, lots of presents including plenty of chocolate, so we do indeed buy presents.

Buying gifts of experiences is something we tend to do for birthdays. I like the kids to have plenty of unwrapping to do on Christmas morning, so yes, they get “stuff”. But we keep their presents useful, necessary or short-term.

What do I mean by short-term gifts? Well, I like to buy things that they will use for a short period and then be done with. So, for example a kit to make something that once it’s done it’s finished with. A gift with a short shelf life that we don’t have to carry around the world.

My kids are well used to my loathing of plastic so they don’t expect that sort of item, short shelf life gifts don’t have to be junk.

If it’s something that can be re-used after my kids have used it we can leave it behind or pass it on to other people. We’re very good at not becoming too attached to items.

Useful items we’ve bought for the kids at Christmas include all sorts of electronics, from laptops to phones to music players, nice smelling toiletries (we love LUSH), fun clothes (nothing boring), Kindle books, games, and travel gear.

Virtual gifts too, gifts that aren’t physical like a subscription or a new computer game. These go down very well with my boys.

It’s really not so hard to find things that they need and will love to receive as a gift at Christmas.

Christmas Gifts for Travelling Adults

My husband and I aren’t really bothered about gifts, so this isn’t a big deal in our household. We tend to buy each other silly but useful things, chocolate, soap, socks, beer.

It’s pretty easy to make your partner smile on Christmas morning if the kids are happy.

Travel themed underwear was something Chef tried once, it was lovely, but just make sure you know your wife’s, or husband’s size!

Hiding Gifts and Wrapping Them With Kids and Backpacks

Santa always came for the kids while we were travelling and we continued thattradition until last year. This year I don’t think I’ll be secretly filling stockings.

We were very good at subterfuge and Dad’s backpack was capacious.

We were lucky in that Chef popped over to the UK a few times before Christmas when we were in Romania. He’d go with an empty backpack, come back with a full one. I’m saying no more, but it’s been fine.

I’m not a wrapper. I’m very aware of not using things that aren’t recyclable, but we do wrap a few gifts under the tree, and the wrapping paper (be it traditional or brown paper) helps us start our winter fires.

Christmas Trees and Decorations

Christmas decorations in Romania
Getting our craft on with what we had to hand in Romania. We would make some simple Christmas decorations every year. I’m sure that wherever you are at Christmas with your family you could do this.

We keep it minimal. I’ll put some very unconventional things on our Christmas trees from home-makes to any household item I have on hand.

In Romania, we were blessed by nature so it was easy to fashion Christmas wreaths and other decorations out of pine branches and mistletoe. In other places we’ve gone without or found a small tree and lights.

Christmas in Breb Romania
Our friends at the Village Hotel in our village, Breb, were a lot better at the whole rustic Christmas thing than us.

We’ve always bought stockings or Santa sacks, sometimes we use a sock, it depends. Those special stockings have been stashed around the world with various friends and family. Right now they are in a packing case on their way to Australia along with our rather huge Lego collection. We’ve never thrown away a Lego set and I don’t think we’ve ever lost a piece.

I see Lego as an investment, not plastic junk. That stuff will last a lifetime and I’m hoping my grandchildren will get to use our sets one day.

Making the Whole Christmas Period special. Without Family or Parties

I’ve always felt the pressure of obligation at Christmas.

I’m not a party person (I’m an introvert) so having to attend parties and get-togethers has always been pretty low on my want list. However, this doesn’t mean I don’t love fun! I just need fun on my terms.

Having just my husband and kids with me, and sometimes a few very good friends, has been just perfect and we try to fill the whole festive period with fun things and good times. It’s for the kids and for us.

So we’ll splurge on meals out, an extra ski or skating trip, visits to markets and malls and sometimes, like last year in Singapore at Christmas, a theme park, zoo and more.

We also made that Christmas special with a few days on a private island resort. I know this costs. We’re at that stage of our travel blogging career that we can do this, but as new travellers on a tight budget our Christmas fun came much cheaper.

Do we Miss Christmas “At Home”

Honestly, no.

I miss my parents and my brother’s family and it would be nice to spend Christmas with Great Grand Nanna, but we can’t so we don’t.

Christmas isn’t a big deal to us, maybe it is to you and you have Christmas-card-perfect family gatherings, but that’s not the case in our family and never has been. The sacrifice of ” missing:” Christmas is tiny in comparison to what we’ve gained, so we’re happy with the balance of our lives.

This Christmas the boys’ uncle will be with us. We’re looking forward to stuffing our faces with turkey and drinking too much with Uncle Toby because it will be something different. Next year I really hope we’re back on the road experiencing new things and new places.

In all honesty, Christmas just gets in the way for us. We’re too busy to have to slot Christmas into our lives, but we do, for the kids. We want them to have every experience and every memory of a childhood well spent and surrounded by love.

I think because (almost!) every day is fun for us we don’t look forward to the holidays as other people do. Sure, I work. I’ll probably work a bit on Christmas Day when I’m not busy with kids and cooking.  I love my job, so taking time off isn’t a focus.

Don’t forget that you will experience and be a part of so many more festivals and celebrations on the road. If we felt we’d missed out on Christmas there is much to be gained by immersing yourself in other traditions. Tet in Vietnam, Diwali in Nepal, Easter in Romania, Thaipusam in Kuala Lumpur, every country has new and amazing festivities to enjoy.

We hope you have a lovely Christmas wherever you are and I just hope we all get through our Christmas pleasantly and stress free. Then back to travel!

How do you feel about Christmas? Is it a big deal or would you rather it was cancelled?

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About the author
Alyson Long
Alyson Long is a British medical scientist who jumped ship to chase dreams. A former Chief Biomedical Scientist at London's West Middlesex Hospital she started in website creation and travel writing in 2011. Alyson is a full-time blogger and travel writer, a published author, and owns several websites. World Travel Family is the biggest. A lifetime of wanderlust and over 6 years of full-time travel, plus a separate 12 month gap year, has given Alyson and the family some travel expert smarts to share with you on this world travel site. Today Alyson still travels extensively to update this site and continue her mission to visit every country, but she's often at home on her farm in Australia.

2 thoughts on “Christmas While Travelling”

  1. We have just left Chiang Mai and I agree, it was magical! The maya mall had their HUGE tree up and everyone was getting inton the Christmas spirit.
    Last year we spent Christmas in New York – 10 foot in snow and picture perfect. This year – like you – we are back home down under.
    You and the boys will be able to relax and unwind for a while. Everyone knows that you will always continue to be the only family travel blog that we all turn to.
    Relax my friend and breathe for a while. This is all part of your beautiful journey xxx

    Reply
    • 10 foot , seriously?
      I shall come stalk you in New Zealand and family Deacle are always welcome in Queensland.
      Respect, from one travel mum to another xx

      Reply

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