30 Holiday Trivia Questions and Answers That Will Start Arguments at the Dinner Table
Thirty holiday trivia questions and answers that have genuinely divided rooms. The one about Rudolph's origin story alone has caused three near-friendships to end.
I once watched a table of six adults nearly come to blows over whether a tomato is a fruit or a vegetable. Not because they didn’t know the botanical answer. Because they couldn’t agree on whether the botanical answer was the right answer in a pub trivia context. That’s the thing about pub trivia questions that nobody warns you about: the question is just the fuse. The explosion is whatever happens at the table after you read it out loud.
I’ve been writing and hosting pub trivia for years now. I’ve seen questions that looked bulletproof on paper fall completely flat in a room, and throwaway questions I almost cut become the ones people talk about in the parking lot. What follows are 50 questions that have survived contact with real humans holding real drinks. Some are gentle. Some are traps. A few are the kind where the wrong answer feels so right that people will argue with the answer sheet.
If you’re running a quiz night, steal freely. If you’re just testing yourself, keep score honestly. Nobody’s watching. Probably.
1. What country has the most pub trivia nights per capita in the world?
This feels like it should be the UK or Ireland, and most tables commit to one of those two instantly. But the answer catches people off guard because they forget how seriously certain countries take their weekly quiz culture.
2. How many dots are there on a standard pair of dice?
Everyone reaches for mental math here, and about half the room gets it right away while the other half starts counting on their fingers. It’s a perfect opener because it rewards the people who just know and gives the counters something to do.
3. What is the only letter that doesn’t appear in any U.S. state name?
I love this question because you can see people silently mouthing the alphabet at their tables. Some teams try to brute-force it by listing states. Others just guess and move on. The letter that trips people up is the one they think they’ve seen somewhere but haven’t.
4. In a standard deck of playing cards, which king doesn’t have a mustache?
This one sorts the room into people who play cards and people who look at cards. Most people have held thousands of these things and never noticed.
5. What’s the most commonly spoken language in the world by total number of speakers?
This question starts fights because it depends on whether you mean native speakers or total speakers, and I always let tables argue for a second before clarifying: total speakers, including second language.
6. What color are aircraft black boxes?
The fastest question I’ve ever seen a room answer wrong. The name does all the work for the wrong answer.
7. What animal is on the Porsche logo?
Car people get this instantly. Everyone else pictures a Porsche in their mind and realizes they’ve never actually looked at the badge.
8. What is the smallest country in the world by land area?
Most people get this one. It’s here because after a few tricky questions, a table needs a win. Confidence management is half of hosting.
9. What was the first toy advertised on television?
People guess Barbie, GI Joe, Slinky. The actual answer predates all of them and tells you something about what America looked like in the early days of TV advertising.
10. How many bones does a shark have?
I’ve watched biology teachers get this wrong because they overthink it. Everyone else just guesses a number.
11. What planet in our solar system has the most moons?
This answer has actually changed in recent years, which makes it a sneaky question for people running on outdated knowledge. Jupiter held the title for a long time. It doesn’t anymore.
12. What’s the only food that doesn’t spoil?
People always say honey, and they’re right, but they say it with a weird amount of confidence that suggests they heard it on the same podcast episode.
13. What country gifted the Statue of Liberty to the United States?
Another breather. But I include it because about once every four events, someone confidently says England, and the table’s reaction is worth everything.
14. What’s the national animal of Scotland?
This is the question that makes people think I’m messing with them. I’ve had teams refuse to write down the answer because they thought it was a trick.
15. What does the “D.C.” in Washington, D.C. stand for?
People know this. They just sometimes can’t recall it under pressure, which is the entire point of pub trivia.
16. What year did the first iPhone come out?
This question is secretly an age test. People who were adults in 2007 nail it. People who were kids think it was earlier because they can’t remember life without it.
17. What’s the longest-running animated TV show in American history?
The Simpsons feels automatic here, and for once, the obvious answer is actually right. But I’ve watched teams talk themselves out of it because they think it’s too easy.
18. What letter is worth the most points in Scrabble?
Scrabble players answer before I finish the question. Everyone else takes a guess that reveals whether they’ve ever opened the box.
19. What is the driest continent on Earth?
Africa feels right. Australia feels clever. The actual answer feels like a trick, but it isn’t.
20. In what year did the Titanic sink?
Most people know this, but a surprising number are off by a decade in either direction. The James Cameron movie came out in 1997, and some people’s mental timeline starts there.
21. What’s the only continent with no active volcanoes?
People immediately eliminate Antarctica because they assume it’s frozen and therefore safe. It isn’t.
22. What’s the most stolen food in the world?
This one gets laughs no matter what. People guess bread, candy, meat. The answer is weirdly specific and says something about humanity.
23. What company was originally called “Backrub”?
This sounds made up. I’ve had teams write “BS” on their answer sheet. The truth is just wonderfully terrible.
24. What element does the chemical symbol “Au” represent?
This is a pub trivia staple for a reason. About 70% of rooms get it right, and the 30% who don’t always ask “Why isn’t it Go?” which leads to a nice little moment about Latin.
25. What’s the hardest natural substance on Earth?
Quick, clean, satisfying. Sometimes a pub trivia question just needs to be a layup that keeps the energy up.
26. How many time zones does Russia span?
People know Russia is big. They don’t know how big until they try to put a number on it.
27. What organ is the largest in the human body?
The internal organ crowd says liver. The people who paid attention in biology class know the trick.
28. What is the capital of Canada?
I put this in every quiz because watching Americans guess Toronto or Montreal never gets old. Canadians in the room get to feel superior for exactly one question.
29. What famous novel begins with the line “Call me Ishmael”?
Even people who haven’t read it know this one. It’s one of those pieces of cultural furniture that’s just always been in the room.
30. How many hearts does an octopus have?
The number sounds fake. I’ve had people argue with me after I read the answer, which is my favorite kind of question.
31. What is the only letter that doesn’t appear on the periodic table?
People start mentally running through elements, and you can see their lips moving. It’s chemistry via process of elimination, which is the least efficient way to do chemistry.
32. What country has won the most FIFA World Cups?
Soccer fans answer instantly. Everyone else guesses a European country and is usually wrong.
33. What does “HTTP” stand for?
People type it or see it hundreds of times a week and have never once thought about what the letters mean. This question exploits that blind spot perfectly.
34. What city is known as the “Pearl of the Orient”?
Multiple cities have claimed this nickname at various points, which makes it a question that can generate genuine debate. I go with the most historically recognized answer.
35. What is the fear of long words called?
This is the question that makes the whole room laugh, because whoever named this condition had a cruel sense of humor.
36. What U.S. state has the longest coastline?
Florida, California, Hawaii. Those are the three guesses I hear every single time. None of them are right, and it’s not even close.
37. What band holds the record for the most Grammy Awards?
People guess The Beatles, U2, Beyoncé (not a band, but they try). The actual answer surprises almost everyone.
38. What percentage of the Earth’s water is freshwater?
People know it’s low. They don’t know how low. The number lands differently when you’re holding a glass of water.
39. What was the first feature-length animated film ever released?
Snow White is the answer everyone’s been trained to give. And it’s wrong, unless you add a very specific qualifier.
40. What country consumes the most coffee per capita?
Americans think it’s them. Italians think it’s them. Both are wrong by a wide margin, and the actual answer is a country most people don’t associate with coffee culture at all.
41. What’s the only mammal that can truly fly?
Bats. Everyone says bats. And for once, the obvious answer is the right one. But I include it here because after a string of trick questions, people start doubting the obvious ones, and watching someone talk themselves out of “bat” is genuinely entertaining.
42. In what country would you find the world’s oldest known restaurant, operating continuously since 725 AD?
People guess Italy or France. The answer is older than both of those countries’ identities as restaurant cultures.
43. What color was Coca-Cola originally?
Green is the popular myth. People say it with absolute certainty. They’re wrong, and the real answer is boring, which somehow makes it more satisfying.
44. What is the most visited country in the world by international tourists?
Americans guess the United States. The British guess the UK. The answer is the same almost every year, and it makes complete sense once you think about it.
45. What does the “E” in Chuck E. Cheese stand for?
This question hits different for anyone who had birthday parties there. The answer is absurd in the best way.
46. What’s the shortest war in recorded history?
People guess something involving a small country. They’re right about the small country part. They’re not prepared for how short it actually was.
47. What’s the only food that is made without killing or harming the thing that produces it, and never spoils?
This is a rephrasing of an earlier concept, but the added constraint catches people who already used their honey answer and now second-guess themselves.
48. What country has the most natural lakes?
Finland comes up again for some people, but most guess Canada. And for once, the big obvious country is the right call.
49. What was the first message sent over the internet?
People guess “Hello” or “Hello World” because that’s what programmers always type first. The real answer is better because it’s an accident.
50. What is the most frequently asked pub trivia question of all time, according to multiple quiz databases and host surveys?
This is the one I save for the end of every set, because it turns the whole night back on itself. You’ve just answered 49 pub trivia questions. Now I’m asking you to think about the genre itself. What question shows up more than any other, across thousands of quiz nights in hundreds of cities? People guess capitals, flags, presidents. But the answer is simpler than that, and when you hear it, you’ll realize you’ve probably answered it tonight.
Thirty holiday trivia questions and answers that have genuinely divided rooms. The one about Rudolph's origin story alone has caused three near-friendships to end.
The best funny trivia questions aren't the ones with silly answers. They're the ones where someone says their answer with total confidence, then watches their whole table turn on them.
These random trivia questions have been tested in real rooms on real people. Some of them will make you feel brilliant. Most of them won't.
These aren't the questions you learned in vacation Bible school. They're the ones that make people who've read the whole Bible twice suddenly go very quiet.