25 Free & Inexpensive Ways To Have The Best Christmas Ever
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Christmas times a comin!
Today I’m sharing some of the things we do around Christmas time that are free or inexpensive and bring unending joy to our lives. The absolute best parts of Christmas don’t have to cost money to be amazing and memorable.
In fact, Prepare yourself because if you do everything on this list, you just may end up having one of the best Christmases Ever!
Ready? Get your jingle bells on and let’s go!
1. Countdown- Make it an event!
2. Decorate!
Sure, I look at the tree and sometimes think of those who are no longer with us to enjoy it with, sure it was a lot of work and may not be as appreciated by others, but that isn’t why I did it.
My daughter and I spent all this past weekend decorating this tree and our house while my husband and son were away on a retreat (we’ve long ago learned that they don’t really care about decorating like we do) and while we were doing it I told her “Now Katy, when you grow up, you put up a tree every year. You see how much work this was to do? Even if it was just me, I’d still do it.”
My grandmother lived alone after Grandaddy passed away and even though anyone seldom went into her house (she lived across the road from my mother and spent her days at Mama’s house so that is where she always was when we came to visit) she still put her tree up every year.
She said “Someone told me once there wasn’t no sense in putting it up if there wasn’t anyone there to enjoy it. But I’m here and I sure do enjoy it“.
Even if it is just you, you are worth it. Decorate.
And stop with the excuses – it doesn’t have to be expensive. A package of construction paper can be bought for a few dollars and will provide a house full of decorations. Add a bottle of glue and $2 of glitter and you’ve expanded even more.
Also, don’t worry about when you put your tree up. Put your tree up whenever you feel like putting your tree up. For us that is often November 1st! The ironic thing about people who complain about folks putting a tree up before Thanksgiving is that they themselves are choosing to avoid being thankful and instead spend their time complaining about something that does not even take place in their home.
I’ve never once found my gratitude dampened when sitting in a room with Christmas lights. If you feel inclined to put a Christmas tree up in July, don’t take a poll of opinions first, just do it.
Fun Ideas:
- My sister in law’s family had a tradition when they were little that the first night the tree was up the kids slept in sleeping bags in the living room around it. I can only imagine how magical that was!
- Mama’s favorite new thing that she has started doing is putting a timer on her tree so that when she wakes up the tree is all lit up. She even does that on a small tabletop tree in her bedroom so that the tree goes off after she goes to sleep and comes on before she wakes up.
3. Give Crazy Gifts
4. Make a Christmas ornament with your child’s picture on it and the date
5. Give a Little Christmas
6. Host a Dirty Santa!
7. Read a special Christmas story to a child
8. Make as many gifts as possible
There are all kinds of ways to make a gift, the options are endless. Embroidered handkerchiefs, stitch tote bags, bake cookies and bread. Want bigger gifts? My sister in law makes up baskets of bread, spiced nuts, jams, and jellies she has made throughout the year. You could even can barbecue sauce to include. Round it out with some dish towels and wooden spoons from the dollar store.
Dealing with a “money” person? Many of us have people in our lives who don’t consider “made” gifts to be gifts but make it clear to us that they expect a store bought gift instead. We’ve all been there! Here is a thought: Maybe if we quit trying to live up to their expectations we’d be happier and less stressed and they’d learn not to have those expectations when it comes to us :).
A family recipe cookbook would make an excellent gift. Print off some of your family’s favorite recipes and assemble them in a small book. It doesn’t have to be a grand production, 10 recipes stapled together with a cover page works just fine. Be sure and include notes with each recipe stating who it is from, the recipe origins, or any funny stories that might relate to the recipe. Here is a link to a post I wrote about some family cookbooks I’ve made over the years.
9. Make Christmas Ornaments
When we were little we made all manner of homemade ornaments. We’d color pictures and cut them out to be ornaments. We’d save pot pie tins and glue cut outs of christmas cards we’d received in the center, then surround them with cotton balls to make a snow scene ornament. We traced our hands onto construction paper and cut that out. We made paper chains and tied bows onto candy canes and did little pipe cleaner bead crafts. Anything we could think of was made into an ornament and put on our tree – and they were beautiful. Here is a link to a post on how to make these cute Mice with Candy Cane Tales, complete with printable tracing template for the mice.
10. Bake cookies together
When I was little, we always made special cookies for Christmas (pictured above and recipe here). This was the first thing I did with my own family. Brady was only 6 months old on his first Christmas but I rolled out that dough and had Ricky hold him up on the counter. I’d put a cookie cutter on it and use his little hand to gently press down to cut it out. He had no idea what he was doing but he laughed every time we removed the cookie cutter to reveal a new shape!
Over the years, after seeing how much my in laws enjoy decorating cookies with us, we now have a tradition of making these cookies on Christmas Eve and the whole family sits down to a table filled with cookies, icings of all colors, and sprinkles. It’s one of our traditions we look forward to the most!
11. Drive around and look at lights
The lights! The lights! I love Christmas lights. Set aside a night each week to drive around looking for them. Many communities have an entire area that is absolutely awash in lights. Ask around and then go adventuring. Be sure and listen to Christmas music while you do. Your family will never forget these evenings!
12. Visit Family or Invite Family To Visit You!
Several years back my mother in law mentioned that Christmas morning was a little dreary for them. All of the family celebrations had been had and it was just the two of them waking up with not a lot to do. We started having them come over (they live in another state) a day or so before Christmas to visit for a spell and it’s a win win! Now my kids get to have grandparents here Christmas morning to watch them open presents, we all decorate cookies together Christmas Eve, and just have a fun and relaxed house full of family to celebrate the season.
13. Go To A Christmas Parade!
There are several towns near us who host wonderful Christmas parades, some of them are even held at night with all of the floats lit up with lights! There are so many free events to help put you in the Christmas spirit that I’ve mentioned and this is another one to add to your “not to miss” list!
14. String the lights in your own yard
One of our greatest joys is putting lights up in our yard! It is always so magical to come home to find everything all lit up, especially after an evening of driving around to see other Christmas lights and then to turn in and see one of our favorite displays :). We buy our lights after the season on sale and stick with LED’s to save on electrical costs. We don’t do as many now as we used to due to difficulty of putting them up where we live (our older, smaller house was so easy!) but back in the old days (before LED) we had so many lights that our bill was $100 more a month!
15. Print out Christmas coloring pages for your kids and hang the finished ones up around your house
I’ve found some fantastic Christmas coloring pages online. Your kids will be so proud when you hang up their artwork I’ve posted some beautiful vintage coloring pages to my Great Big Christmas Board on Pinterest and they are free to print. Click here to visit that board and be sure you follow me if you do!
16. Decorate a doorway with cards you’ve received, or even a small tree
Mama used to tape the cards we received around a door frame in our home for a beautiful decoration. A lot of folks aren’t sending Christmas cards anymore (see below) but I have a doorframe complete with a Poinsettia and Pine swag up at the top just waiting for Christmas Cards to arrive!
17. Send Christmas Cards
I know this is one that has fallen to the wayside due to the expense but there is something so special about getting Christmas cards in the mail. They don’t have to be expensive. You can buy a box at a discount or even dollar store. Each year cutting this expense is tempting but so far I have managed to keep it up, but I am going with cheaper cards this year. I purchased some beautiful Dayspring ones with a glitter embellished snow scene on the front for just $5 for 18. Of course, adding the stamp adds nearly 50 cents so I hand deliver all of them that I can and mail the rest.
18. Go To Church
Many churches have special Christmas programs that are amazing! Check the ones in your area now and put the events on your calendar! Our church has the most beautiful Christmas Eve service.
If you are a Christian and celebrate Christmas as the birth of Jesus, act like it. Go to church. Have a nativity in your home. Celebrate Advent. If these are new holidays to you as a Christian, there is no shame in that! This is our first year celebrating Advent and I am grateful for all of the inspiration and research available online as I incorporate this new (to us) tradition.
19. Go Simpler
I saw a wonderful idea in doing my research for this post from a blogger who keeps Christmas simple by giving her children three gifts, to represent the three gifts the wise men brought baby Jesus.
20. Have a party!
A Christmas party doesn’t have to be expensive. Invite friends, have everyone bring a dish, and don’t even worry about the house. Clean it up a bit and then just fill it with people. No one will be able to see the mess for the crowds.
21. Watch Christmas Movies
I have so many favorites and the holidays just aren’t the same without watching them again! My favorites are : Meet Me In St Louis and It’s A Wonderful Life along with White Christmas. As a family, we always have to watch The Toy That Saved Christmas (Oooh! A Buzzsaw Louie!) and all of the old claymation Christmas movies from my childhood.
- Take this up a notch by making a big bowl of popcorn and making popcorn garlands together as you watch.
22. Take your family to the nursing home and visit folks who don’t normally get visitors
You have no idea what a difference this will make in their lives. I’ve seen gifts as simple as a smile, a hug, and a Christmas card bring tears to someones eyes and help everyone understand the true meaning of Christmas.
23. Play Christmas Music
No matter what your musical tastes find some Christmas music and set it going in your home in the evenings and your car when you’re out and about. Christmas music energizes the elf in all of us :). Hint: You haven’t lived until you’ve heard “Sleigh Ride” sung by the Andrews Sisters!
24. Wear Christmas Sweaters
I know this has become a big fashion no no but I’ve found that the majority of people who sit around coming up with fashion no no’s should probably spend more time being thankful and decorating for Christmas ;). I love Christmas and I love wearing Christmas sweaters!!!! Bring on the sequins, embroidery, and beautiful colors. dontjust stick your toe in the water, dive in!
25. Bake a Cake …or Seven 🙂
Click here to read the story of how my great grandmother made Christmas special for her kids without any money or wrapped gifts. There is a little free surprise at the end of the post.
“The best of all gifts around any Christmas Tree : The presence of a happy family, all wrapped up in each other.”
~Unknown
Love your ideas, Christy! I’ll suggest another – make paper snowflakes! Just paper and scissors. We love to see how the designs look when we open up our creations. We do this at the beginning of winter and leave up until spring! Your “Dirty Santa” brought back a memory for me. My Gram used to do “The Silly Tree” every Christmas Eve. She couldn’t afford a lot, so she would make or buy inexpensive, silly things and have one on a little tree for each of us to open. I’ll never forget when she gave me a bottle of nail polish – I think I was 5 – coolest gift ever! We looked forward to it every year. (That, and her cookies)! She’s with Jesus now, and I miss her so. Think I’ll do a silly tree in her honor this year!
What a wonderful list. Like a recipe for a wonderful Christmas. But I would add one thing. Find someone to help. For example, take all your no longer used but loved toys (only those in excellent condition) and drop them off with a smile at your homeless shelter. Or call your local social services or minister or priest and ask if there is a family that could use some Christmas presents. Or pick an angel ornament or two from your mall or a local store and donate presents for whoever is on the ornament. So many need Christmas cheer. Make it special, and bring the children when you do it!
This is a wonderful list. Some things I already do and the rest I will definitely add to our family celebration this year. I love it! Thanks!
Love the idea of the children getting to sleep on the floor the first night after the tree has been put up! Mine will love it!! It’s all about the memories!!
Christy, great ideas! We do many of these as well. You have inspired me to get out my mother’s recipe box for a family cookbook gift. She is losing the ability to pass these along due to Alzheimer’s disease. I’ll be sitting with her next week, and this will make a great project.
We added a new tradition last year, and I can’t wait to get it started this year: a family puzzle. We picked up a puzzle as a vacation souvenir and wrapped it up. When the “let’s open just one” comment started, I pulled this gift out. We opened it at the beginning of the Christmas season. I can’t tell you the number of nights we worked on it together — and it was great for chatting with our teenage son. He actually spent time with us parents! Yay!
Christy, I just love all your beautiful ideas, they all just warm my heart, your family is so lucky to have you! Thank You for inspiring me!
It is funny that you mentioned looking at Christmas Lights. Every Thursday night (and sometimes more often) – between Thanksgiving and New Years as our children were little we would go to a cheap pizza place(like Little Ceasar’s where you used to could get 2 lg for $5) and bring drinks from home. All get loaded up in the van with our Christmas cassette’s (Cd’s) and go all over town looking at Christmas lights and singing Christmas carols and picnicking in the van the kids called it. They all still remember the fun times of doing that. They all still want to do it to this day – but we would need a bus. We still try to get a family together one week and another one on another. They always counted down til the time we could go! Memories!