Christmas in Italy 2026: The Presepe, the Befana, the Feast of the Seven Fishes, and the Traditions That Run From December 8 to January 6
Autore: La Redazione di www.tourleaderpro.com
Last updated: April 2026.
The Italian Christmas season runs from December 8 (the Feast of the Immaculate Conception — the official ecclesiastical start of the Advent season in Catholic Italy and the day when Christmas decorations traditionally go up) to January 6 (the Epiphany — the Befana's arrival, which is the more important children's gift day in Italian tradition than December 25 itself). This 30-day arc has a specific internal structure — the eight days of the Novena di Natale before December 25 (the prayers at the presepe, the zampognari bagpipe players in the streets of southern cities), the specific Christmas Eve dinner of the vigilia, Christmas Day itself, and then the building anticipation toward the Epiphany — that is entirely different from the single-peak December 25 holiday culture of northern Europe and North America.
Understanding this structure does not merely satisfy cultural curiosity; it directly affects how you experience an Italy visit in December. The specific atmospheric peaks of Italian Christmas are not December 25 (when most of Italy is at home eating with the family, the streets are empty, and the visitor encounters a lovely but quiet city) but the pre-Christmas period (the markets, the Novena, the presepe visits) and the Epiphany (the Befana fairs, the Three Kings processions in certain Italian cities, the specific festivity of the "last day of Christmas").
The Italian Christmas: Traditions in Detail
The Presepe: Italy's Defining Christmas Tradition
The presepe (nativity scene) is the central Italian Christmas tradition — invented, according to Catholic tradition, by Saint Francis of Assisi at Greccio in Umbria on Christmas Eve 1223 (when he organized a live-animal, real-person nativity scene in a cave above the village — the first "living nativity" in Christian history). The Italian presepe tradition is unbroken from this origin: every Italian family sets up a presepe in the home; the most elaborate are the Neapolitan presepi of the Via San Gregorio Armeno (the street in the Spaccanapoli quarter of Naples, where artisan workshops produce the terracotta presepe figures year-round — the most celebrated and most technically elaborate nativity scene tradition in the world). The Neapolitan presepe includes not just the Holy Family but the entire 18th-century Neapolitan marketplace — fishmongers, wine sellers, washerwomen — surrounding the central sacred scene. The Via San Gregorio Armeno in December: every workshop is lit, every figure available for purchase, and the street is perpetually crowded.
The Feast of the Seven Fishes (Vigilia di Natale)
The Christmas Eve dinner (la cena della Vigilia) is in Italian Catholic tradition a meatless meal — the abstinence before the Christmas Day feast. In practice, the Italian vigilia is an elaborate fish dinner of seven courses (the number seven has symbolic significance; the specific dishes vary by region but always include: the baccalà, the salt cod; the anguilla, the eel; some form of shellfish; the spaghetti alle vongole or similar pasta; and additional fish dishes to reach seven). The Neapolitan tradition is the most elaborate and the most historically specific; the southern Italian immigrant communities in the United States carried this tradition to America, where the "Feast of the Seven Fishes" has become an Italian-American Christmas tradition with its own specific American elaborations. In Italy: every coastal city has its specific version; in landlocked cities, the vigilia fish dishes are still prepared but sourced from the daily market rather than the local sea.
The Befana and the Epiphany (January 6)
The Epiphany (January 6) is in Italian tradition the culmination of the Christmas season — the day when the Magi arrived at Bethlehem, and the day when Italian children receive their gifts from the Befana, a folkloric figure of an old woman who travels on a broomstick to fill stockings hung by the fireplace. The Befana gives candy and gifts to good children, coal (or the confectionery version, the "carbone della Befana") to bad ones. The Epiphany is a national public holiday in Italy; the Befana fairs (the Piazza Navona market peaks on January 5-6; the Three Kings procession in Milan on January 6 is one of the largest in Italy) mark the end of the Italian Christmas season. The Italian saying: "L'Epifania tutte le feste porta via" (the Epiphany takes all the holidays away) — on January 7, Italy returns to normal working life.
Q&A: Christmas in Italy
Is Italy good to visit at Christmas?
For specific Italian Christmas experiences (the presepe, the Befana markets, the specific atmosphere) — yes, uniquely so. For general sightseeing — yes, with reduced crowds at museums and monuments in the periods between December 26-29 and January 2-5. For the Christmas atmosphere of open shops and daily Italian life — partially: the December 24-26 and January 1 closure of most non-tourist services requires planning. The specific recommendation: arrive before December 23 to experience the pre-Christmas atmosphere at its peak; stay through January 6 if possible to experience the Epiphany; avoid the December 27-30 period only if you specifically dislike hotel prices 2-3× above the seasonal norm.