30 Difficult Trivia Questions That Have Silenced Entire Rooms
These aren't questions that reward lucky guesses. They're the ones that make the smartest person at the table put their pen down and stare at the ceiling.
The person searching for holiday trivia questions is almost always doing it the night before they need them. I know this because I’ve been that person, and I’ve also been the one writing questions at 2 a.m. for a Christmas party trivia round that I agreed to host three drinks into the previous party. Here’s what I’ve learned after years of running these rounds: everyone thinks they know holidays. They grew up with them. They’ve watched the movies, sung the songs, eaten the food. That confidence is the best material a trivia host can work with, because confident people commit to wrong answers with their whole chest.
These 25 holiday trivia questions are the ones I come back to. Some are easy enough to keep the table warm. Some will make someone quietly Google the answer under the table and then announce they “knew that.” A few will genuinely surprise you. Let’s get into it.
1. In the classic holiday song, how many reindeer pull Santa’s sleigh , not counting Rudolph?
I ask this one early because it splits rooms instantly. People start counting on their fingers, and someone always says nine. The song is very clear about this, but Rudolph has been grafted onto the team so completely that people forget he was a late addition.
2. What country is credited with starting the tradition of putting up a Christmas tree?
This one’s a confidence builder. Most people get it. But it’s worth asking because it sets up harder questions later about traditions people assume are American.
3. On which Jewish holiday do you light a menorah for eight nights?
Nobody gets this wrong, but it earns its place because it opens the door to the next question, which is where the fun starts.
4. A Hanukkah menorah actually holds nine candles, not eight. What’s the ninth one called?
This is where the table gets quiet. People who just confidently answered the last question suddenly realize they don’t know the follow-up. I’ve seen Jewish players miss this one too, not because they don’t know it, but because the word vanishes under pressure.
5. What’s the best-selling Christmas song of all time?
Every year someone tries to tell me it’s Mariah Carey. It isn’t. Not even close, if we’re talking all-time sales across every format.
6. What holiday is celebrated on January 6th in many Christian traditions, marking the arrival of the Magi?
Americans almost never get this. People from Latin America, Spain, or the Philippines usually light up because it’s a bigger deal than Christmas Day in some of those cultures.
7. The day after Christmas is known as Boxing Day in several countries. Which of these is NOT one of them: Canada, Australia, the United States, or the United Kingdom?
I include this because Americans are beautifully unsure whether they celebrate Boxing Day or not. They know they’ve heard of it. They suspect they might be wrong either way.
8. What plant, traditionally hung in doorways at Christmas, is actually a parasite?
People get the answer fast. What they don’t expect is the parasite part, and that’s the whole point. It reframes something romantic into something slightly unsettling, which is exactly the energy a good trivia question should have.
9. In Mexico, what is broken open during Christmas celebrations as a party game?
Easy enough. But I like asking it because it leads into a conversation about how piñatas were originally tied to Lent, not Christmas. That little fact changes the energy.
10. Kwanzaa is celebrated over seven days. What are the exact dates?
Most people know Kwanzaa exists. Far fewer can pin it to the calendar. And almost nobody in a mixed room wants to guess wrong, so this question creates a very specific kind of silence.
11. What U.S. holiday was the last to be declared a federal holiday?
This one hits differently depending on the room. Some people know it immediately. Some people guess wrong and then feel the weight of the answer.
12. In “A Charlie Brown Christmas,” what does Charlie Brown’s sad little tree need to become beautiful?
I’ve watched grown adults get emotional answering this one. Not because it’s hard, but because they can see it. They remember being a kid on the carpet watching it.
13. What Halloween tradition evolved from the ancient Celtic festival of Samhain?
This is a “how specific do you want to be” question. Some people say “trick-or-treating,” some say “wearing costumes,” some say “Halloween itself.” They’re all in the neighborhood, but only one is the cleanest answer.
14. What’s the most popular Halloween candy in the United States by sales?
Everyone has a strong opinion. Nobody agrees. This question has started more post-game arguments than any other one in my rotation.
15. What color are the berries on a holly plant?
A breather. Everyone needs one by now.
16. In what decade did the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade first take place?
People consistently guess later than the real answer. The parade is older than most people’s grandparents, and that surprises them.
17. What holiday movie was originally a box office flop and only became a classic through television reruns?
There are actually a few correct answers here, but one towers above the rest. I love this question because it forces people to reconsider something they thought was always beloved.
18. What country celebrates Christmas on January 7th?
There are several correct answers, but I’m looking for the one most people can name. This is a good team question because someone at the table usually has the connection.
19. The song “Jingle Bells” was originally written for what holiday?
This is the question that makes people put their drinks down. I’ve had entire tables refuse to believe the answer. It’s one of the best holiday trivia questions I’ve ever found because the wrong answer is so deeply embedded.
20. What is the name of the Grinch’s dog?
Quick, instinctive, and almost everyone gets it. But I put it here because after that Jingle Bells question, the room needs a win.
21. In Japan, what fast food restaurant is a wildly popular Christmas Eve dinner tradition?
This one always gets a laugh, and then people want to know why. The backstory is better than the answer.
22. What’s the name of the fear of Halloween?
This is a vocabulary question disguised as a holiday question. Nobody knows it off the top of their head, but some people can piece it together from the Greek roots if you give them a second.
23. How many times does the word “Christmas” appear in the lyrics of “The Twelve Days of Christmas”?
People start singing it in their heads immediately. That’s the whole point. Watch someone silently mouth “five golden rings” at a table and try not to smile.
24. What U.S. president made Thanksgiving a national holiday, and in what year?
Two-parters are cruel at the end of a round, I know. But this one rewards partial knowledge, and the year is harder than the name. People who get both parts deserve to feel good about it.
25. “Auld Lang Syne,” the song we sing every New Year’s Eve, was written by Robert Burns. What do the words “auld lang syne” actually translate to in English?
I save this one for last because of what happens in the room. Someone always guesses “old long ago” or “the good old days.” They’re close. But the real translation is more tender than that, and when you say it out loud, the whole mood shifts. People stop trying to win and start thinking about the year that just passed, or the one about to start. That’s the best thing a trivia question can do. Not just test what you know, but make you feel something you weren’t expecting to feel at a game night.
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