24 Great Christmas TV Episodes You Can Stream Right Now

Spend the holidays with the best friends and family members TV has to offer.

24 Great Christmas TV Episodes You Can Stream Right Now
Photo-Illustration: Vulture; Photos: Max, Chuck Hodes/FX, Nicole Rivelli/NBCUniversal via Getty Images, Amanda Searle/HBO

This list was originally published on December 21, 2018. Ahead of the holidays, it’s been updated to include new episodes.

A break over the holidays is the perfect time for a lot of things: seeing your family, catching up with friends, eating a ton, reflecting. But most important of all, it’s a great time to watch a lot of TV, including the episodes made specifically for this time of year.

Christmas episodes are a timeless tradition; they enable us to spend holidays with the characters we’ve come to love and give us a chance to use the darker underpinnings of a season scored by family fights, fresh heartbreak, and rising tensions to create drama and tie up narrative threads. But the warm, fuzzy feelings are usually not far: Christmas episodes tend to finish with the characters united as one, ready to face another year of drama. We’ve compiled a list of some of the best, so sit back, relax, and let the holiday cheer take you.

“Ludachristmas,” 30 Rock (season two, episode 9)

30 Rock has a few Christmas episodes, but perhaps the most enjoyable, and relatable, is “Ludachristmas.” In it, Jack’s mother meets the Lemon family and instantly dislikes them because of their happiness, so she sets out to show that they maybe aren’t all that perfect. She orchestrates an argument between the family, which brings joy to both her and Jack. Tracy has been less than truthful, too, as he’s been drinking despite wearing an ankle monitor intended to prevent him from it. The real fun, though, comes when Kenneth cancels the cast and writers’ Ludachristmas party to teach them the true meaning of Christmas, and they tear down the giant Christmas tree outside 30 Rock. The message of the episode? Everyone’s family is fucked up in their own way.

Available to stream on Hulu and Peacock

“Afternoon Delight,” Arrested Development (season two, episode 6)

Christmas is a time for families to spend time together — of course, this often turns out more difficult than we expect. After the banana stand is vandalized by teenagers, Michael seeks George Michael’s help, but when he is busy, Michael panics that his son is pulling away from him. Maeby, lonely without her mom, helps Michael, and they sing “Afternoon Delight” on karaoke at the office Christmas party together, not realizing at first that it isn’t all that innocent. More misunderstandings ensue: Oscar believes that “Afternoon Delight” is a strain of weed, so he puts it in Lucille’s brownie, leading her to crash into the banana stand. Lindsay and George Michael decide to perform the song together but realize it’s a sexy song, too. Christmas episodes are a chance for shows to showcase their strengths, and these back-and-forth misunderstandings are peak Arrested Development.

Available to stream on Netflix

“Fishes,” The Bear (season two, episode 6)

The Bear’s Christmas episode “Fishes” is the biggest set piece of the second season. That’s in part down to the killer guest stars stepping in as Carmy’s family, Jamie Lee Curtis, Gillian Jacobs, John Mulaney, Sarah Paulson, and Bob Odenkirk among them. In the flashback episode, which takes place before the start of The Bear, Carmy returns from Copenhagen for Christmas. His mother Donna (Curtis) has decided to cook an elaborate meal based on the Feast of the Seven Fishes. Nobody asked for it, but she has burdened herself with the complexity of the cooking anyway, getting steadily drunker and more upset as the night goes on. We see moving interactions between Carmy and Michael (returning guest star Jon Bernthal), as well as the comedic interplay between the wider Berzatto family. The chaos of the family gathering all culminates in Donna crashing her car into the house.

Available to stream on Hulu

“Amends,” Buffy the Vampire Slayer (season three, episode 10)

Some Christmas episodes are wholesome and see the characters united. Some, not so much. In “Amends,” Angel is haunted by dreams of the people he murdered when he was Angelus. Visions of his victims, like Jenny Calendar, appear and try to get him to kill Buffy. Elsewhere, Oz, Willow, Cordelia, and Xander sort through their love … square … but the real drama is, naturally, between Angel and Buffy. Angel decides to kill himself to escape the First Evil’s torture by waiting for the sun to come up, but Buffy tries to stop him — in a Christmas miracle, the heatwave ends and snow starts to fall. Angel lives, and the pair take a Christmas Day stroll through Sunnydale.

Available to stream on Hulu and Tubi

“The Lonely Island Wear Holiday Sweaters & White Pants,” Comedy Bang! Bang! (season three, episode 20)

It was always Comedy Bang! Bang!’s MO to take a theme and just run wild with it, but with this holiday special, Scott Aukerman took it even further than usual. With the Lonely Island as guests, the air-conditioning in the studio breaks and the show is taken over by terrorists requesting a highly sought after type of doll to give their kids for Christmas. What follows is a Die Hard–style jape that, spoiler, ends in the entire Lonely Island being shot and killed. Still, it’s a happy ending for some, as the terrorists get their dolls, and the “fixing” of the AC ends in a ton of fake snow falling on the studio.

Available to stream on Plex and Roku Channel

“Boom Crunch,” Desperate Housewives (season six, episode 10)

If holiday episodes are a chance to take the drama of a show to the next level and tie up loose ends, Desperate Housewives really went there. Everyone’s various infidelities and fights reach boiling point, with Karl and Orson coming to blows at the Christmas block party, Dylan discovering her mother has been lying to her, and Lynette attempting to apologize to Gaby and Carlos for suing them. Of course, that isn’t enough: a plane crashes into Wisteria Lane, which Lynette saves Gaby’s child from the path of, fixing their feud. It also hits Mona, who has been blackmailing the Bolens. It then crashes into Santa’s workshop, with Bree, Karl, and Orson inside, as we learn later, killing Karl and disabling Orson. Merry Christmas?

Available to stream on Hulu and Prime Video

“Merry Christmas, Mrs. Moskowitz,” Frasier (season six, episode 10)

Some of the best holiday episodes are the ones that remember other cultures and traditions exist — and maybe even clash with Christmas sometimes. Frasier has a ton of great holiday episodes, but “Merry Christmas, Mrs. Moskowitz” is a masterclass in the show’s signature deception, confusion, and slapstick. When shopping for a menorah for his son, Frasier runs into a woman who, through a complicated chain of events, sets him up with her daughter, Faye. They get along, but Faye learns that he isn’t actually Jewish, something her mother would never approve of. When Faye and her mother come over, Frasier enlists Martin and Niles for help to appear Jewish, hiding the Christmas decorations and saying all the right things. Until, of course, everything devolves by way of Eddie and Niles dressed as Santa Claus and Jesus, respectively. It’s fun, it’s silly, and it should be the wake-up call that the Crane family needs to just stop lying (luckily for fans, it’s a lesson they’ll never learn).

Available to stream on Hulu and Paramount+

“The Real Santa,” Fresh Off the Boat (season two, episode 10)

While Jessica loves the holidays, she, naturally, can’t leave well enough alone and feels like Santa needs some improvements. She convinces Evan that Santa Claus is a Chinese man and a scientist in an attempt to make him embrace his cultural heritage, so Evan decides he wants to ask Santa physics questions. Panicking, Jessica attempts to find a suitable Santa. In the end, Jessica dresses up as Lǎo Bǎn Santa to deliver their presents, convincing Evan that Santa is Chinese after all, and a woman because “you think a man is thoughtful enough to give presents to everyone in the world?” It’s a funny, original take on an old story, and ends up as a heartwarming insight into just how far Jessica will go for her kids.

Available to stream on Hulu

“Santa’s Secret Stuff,” Gilmore Girls (season seven, episode 11)

What’s Christmas without a few family secrets coming to the surface? In “Santa’s Secret Stuff,” Luke asks Lorelai to write a character recommendation letter to help in his custody battle over April, which she does after remembering how pivotal he has been in Rory’s life. She keeps it a secret from Christopher, and elsewhere, Rory is atoning for her own secrets by writing a letter to her friend explaining why she kept her friendship with her boyfriend quiet. But all that doesn’t put a damper on the celebrations — Rory and Lorelai still manage to go all-out to decorate trees, do all their shopping, and bake Christmas cookies. If we can learn anything from the Gilmore girls this Christmas, it’s to make all occasions as extra as possible, no matter what.

Available to stream on Netflix

“Roman Holiday,” Gossip Girl (season one, episode 11)

In this season-one episode of Gossip Girl, Blair has a difficult holiday when her father comes home with his boyfriend, and she hatches a plan to get rid of him. Meanwhile, she panics that Chuck is going to tell Nate about their hookup. It’s not all trouble, though, as Blair accepts Roman into her life, and when her father’s flight is canceled, they have a whole Waldorf Christmas. Meanwhile, Dan sneaks a tree into Serena’s suite, she creates a Winter Wonderland for him and gives him a love letter, and everyone is pretty happy … until Chuck teases that he’s going to tell Nate about the hookup right at the end, because what Gossip Girl episode is truly complete without life-ruining drama?

Available to stream on Max and Netflix

The Deborah Vance Christmas Spectacular,Hacks (season three, episode 7)

What is Christmas if not a time for painful family relationships to resurface and wreak havoc on our best-laid plans? In Hacks’s Christmas episode, we get plenty of that. Comedian Deborah Vance has pulled out all the stops, including fake snow in the middle of Vegas, for a massive Christmas party. The biggest deal of all: She’s invited her estranged sister, the one who ran off with her husband. Meanwhile, her agents Jimmy and Kayla do everything they can to ensure Deborah gets the gig hosting Late Night. Ava’s mom is also in town, and there is a lot of awkward back-and-forth between Ava, her mom, and her mom’s new roommate/surrogate daughter. Deborah’s sister Kathy (J. Smith Cameron) is nervous, which is wild to see if you’re a Succession fan. Deborah does little to soothe her, and through Kathy’s appearance, we get a whole new side of their relationship breakdown — turns out it’s a little less sympathetic to Deborah. Despite it all, everything turns out okay, and isn’t that what the Christmas spirit is all about?

Available to stream on Max

“Nutcracker,” Industry (season one, episode 6)

The first season of Industry is an exercise in handling extreme stress — as a viewer, that is. Even if you don’t know what they’re talking about in this finance drama, you’re on the edge of your seat, waiting to find out what legally dubious and morally bankrupt money move will happen next on the shop floor. In “Nutcracker,” nobody is spending that much time with their family. Instead, Eric presents Harper with a huge bonus, despite Pierpoint usually giving bonuses in January. It’s possibly a way of keeping her quiet about his sketchy behavior, but she keeps it. Meanwhile, Robert presents Yasmin with a much seedier gift, raising questions about their relationship. The Christmas party is the setting for all kinds of thorny, messy questions about the nature of the relationships between men and women, which, on this show, are never healthy.

Available to stream on Max

“A Very Sunny Christmas,” It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia (season six, episode 13)

It just wouldn’t be a Sunny Christmas without blood, swearing, and so much screaming. In this hour-long two-part Christmas special, our friends at Paddy’s Pub go through a roller coaster of emotions and revelations: Frank buys Dee’s and Dennis’s dream gifts for himself, so they embark on a Christmas Carol scheme to get him back, Mac discovers that he used to rob innocent families on Christmas Day, and Charlie bites a Santa and screams, “Did you fuck my mom, Santa Claus?” after discovering his mom used to sleep with men dressed as Santa. After making up, Frank buys them all gifts, but they all get stolen. It’s a happy ending, though, as the gang make up and throw rocks at trains. This episode showcases the best and worst of the Sunny gang, as all holiday episodes should do.

Available to stream on Hulu

“Christmas Waltz,” Mad Men (season five, episode 10)

Subterfuge! Drinking! Divorce! Well, it could be literally any episode of Mad Men, but it’s not — it’s a Christmas one. This episode captures some of the less enjoyable Christmassy feelings: loneliness, disappointment, and family arguments, namely. Joan is brought a surprise Christmas gift in the form of divorce papers, so Don, down on inspiration, takes her to the Jaguar showroom to test drive a car. They go to a bar and Joan, lamenting her lack of suitors these days, asks why Don never took interest in her. They flirt a little, and she admits that her mother raised her to “be admired”; when a man shows interest in her, Don encourages it. The next day Joan receives flowers that say her mother did a good job, and the episode ends with Don, reinvigorated by his conversation with Joan, standing in front of the office decorations and promising everyone they’ll be working on Jaguar over Christmas. It’s perhaps not a traditional Christmas, but it sure is a Mad Men one.

Available to stream on AMC+

“Christmas,” Malcolm in the Middle (season three, episode 7)

Canceling Christmas: It’s a threat used by parents everywhere, but maybe not always followed through on. Lois, however, is the one parent out there who seems like she might just have the stones to do it. There are a lot of great Malcolm in the Middle Christmas episodes, but season three’s “Christmas” is a real treat. After the boys destroy the Christmas tree ornaments, we flash back to learn that they do something similar every year, ruining the holiday with antics like mugging Santa (Hal) and setting the tree on fire. Lois “cancels” the holiday, and while Hal is mad that Lois is holding Christmas hostage, you gotta hand it to her: Her plan works (at least for a little while). The boys panic that she could use the threat every holiday and start behaving like Christmas angels for a bit, using their manners and even offering to clean up. Eventually, the brothers crack and open all their presents only to learn Lois has bought them everything they wanted, and really, the only thing they ever really wanted was a nice Christmas. Lesson learned? Probably not, there’s a few seasons to go yet. Still, it’s a heartwarming watch, and Francis’s B story line bickering with Grandma Ida is pretty fun, too.

Available to stream on Hulu

“Santa,” New Girl (season two, episode 11)

This New Girl episode opens with the gang discussing how they first found out the truth about Santa Claus, with Schmidt revealing that he was on very strict instructions not to say a word “until the last Christian kid found out.” Throughout the episode the gang attend several Christmas (or as Schmidt calls it, White Anglo-Saxon Winter Privilege Night) parties and learn to reconcile, as is in the spirit of Christmas: Nick makes up with new girlfriend Angie, who he feels is too sexually adventurous; Schmidt and Cece reconcile, after being let off a traffic violation by a cop they dub “black Santa”; and Jess visits Sam in hospital and they kiss. New Girl can often turn in some schmaltz among the comedy, and what better time to do it than Christmas?

Available to stream on Hulu and Peacock

“Citizen Knope,” Parks and Recreation (season four, episode 10)

Leslie Knope is, of course, the hardest-working and most thoughtful person in the Parks department. But after being suspended and banned from working at home, she’s at a loose end and forms a Citizens Action Committee to keep busy, which thrives until she learns that her poll numbers have taken a hit due to her scandal and suspension. Feeling responsible, Chris lifts her suspension, but that isn’t the first Christmas miracle. After Leslie gives everyone a thoughtful Christmas gift, they pool together to make her a miniaturized City Hall out of gingerbread and, when that isn’t quite enough, reveal that they want to volunteer as her new campaign staff. Leslie is touched, and what follows is a very cute, very Parks and Rec ending, as Leslie is rewarded for her tireless efforts over the years as everybody’s colleague and friend.

Available to stream on Peacock

“The Chrismukk-huh?” The O.C. (season four, episode 7)

In the tradition of holiday episodes, Hanukkah specials are few and far between. But with Chrismukkah, The O.C.’s mash-up holiday of Christmas and Hanukkah, we have the next best thing. The holiday was a cultural sensation, and it all started with Seth Cohen waving a menorah and a candy cane in Ryan Atwood’s face and telling him he didn’t have to choose. There are four Chrismukkah episodes, but this one is special: It enters pretty wacky territory in the midst of a season full of self-referential, off-the-wall comedy, with Taylor and Ryan suffering head injuries in the middle of an argument and being thrown into a parallel universe, entering real soap-opera territory. Ryan sees a parallel universe where he never ended up in Orange County and Marissa dies in Tijuana, and in the real world, they’re in a coma while the families try to wake them and get Taylor’s insensitive mom to visit. Taylor awakes with a revelation that she needs to confront her mom, while Ryan awakes with the realization that there’s nothing he could have done to help Marissa. All is well, and some narrative difficulties are neatly wrapped up.

Watch on Hulu and Max

“Merry Christmas, Johnny Rose,” Schitt’s Creek (season four, episode 13)

What happened to the great tradition of Christmas episodes? Is it shorter seasons? Streaming dumping everything at once so that seasons don’t carry through over December? Whatever it is, they’re rarer than they used to be — a lost art. Ted Lasso did feature one in season two, but it aired in the summer, which throws things off a little. Schitt’s Creek, however, rose (heh) to the challenge in 2018. A holiday special and a whole extra episode released outside the regular season, it’s a Christmas gift all in itself. After having a dream about their old Christmas parties on the night before Christmas Eve, Johnny decides to throw a Rose party all over again. He gets the family onboard, but things don’t really go to plan, with messed-up guest lists, overpriced Christmas trees, and David refusing to give the family ornaments for free from his store. Johnny realizes that Christmas may never again be like it was in their past — but that maybe, just maybe, that isn’t such a bad thing. Maybe the family has grown, learning to have fun and love one another no matter how much money they have to show off — and isn’t that the most Christmassy thing of all?

Available to stream on Hulu and Freevee

“My Own Personal Jesus,” Scrubs (season one, episode 11)

It really wouldn’t be Scrubs — especially a Scrubs holiday episode — without overwrought feelings, lessons learned, and the emotional J.D. monologue to go with it. “My Own Personal Jesus” sees Elliott, JD, and Turk experiencing a lack of both faith and holiday spirit. But seeing as how this episode is from the first season, these tropes were still new to viewers who don’t know these characters that well yet. Here, isolated from one another for most of the episode, it’s a chance to get to know the hospital interns better as they dig deep and wrestle with their own identities. When J.D. witnesses a dying patient waking up, Turk chooses to see it as a miracle before having a crisis about his faith. Elliott is tasked with looking after Meredith, an eight-month-pregnant patient from the free clinic who needs to deliver her baby immediately and experiences her own crisis of identity when Kelso makes a jab about her going into a “female specialty”. Everyone teams up to help Meredith deliver her baby, experiencing revelations about their own place in the world — and maybe even getting a little into the holiday spirit.

Available to stream on Hulu and Peacock

“The Strike,” Seinfeld (season nine, episode 10)

Made-up holidays that become a big deal didn’t start with The O.C.’s Chrismukkah. They possibly did start with Seinfeld’s infamous Festivus, which first appears in “The Strike.” The episode opens with a Hanukkah party and continues with all the usual Seinfeldisms — shallowness and selfishness, namely — but there’s no repentance to be seen here. Instead, George tries to get the day off for Festivus, a holiday his father invented and which they celebrate instead of Christmas, with traditions including a Festivus pole, an airing of grievances, and feats of strength. The gang all attend a Festivus dinner at the Costanzas, united at last, and the holiday became a cultural hit, being adopted at large as an alternative to the capitalism of Christmas.

Available to stream on Netflix

“To Save Us All From Satan’s Power,” The Sopranos (season three, episode 10)

You didn’t expect a Sopranos holiday episode to be joyful or even a little bit normal now, did you? This one, while not the most cheerful, is memorable and haunting thanks to a certain Big Mouth Billy Bass, sending that patented shiver down your spine. Most of the episode is the lead-up to Christmas Day — Tony reflects on Pussy’s betrayal, trying to pinpoint the moment when the FBI might have flipped him. He also gets a lot of beating up done on behalf of the women in his family — trying to wrap up work before the holidays, maybe. On Christmas morning, Jackie Jr. shows up with a gift for Meadow despite recently being battered by Tony for getting a lap dance. After Jackie leaves and Tony scares the shit out of him again, Meadow gives Tony a meaningful gift: a Big Mouth Billy Bass, just like the one that fuels his nightmares and reminds him of Pussy. Not a real feel-good family watch, but a key episode and the most Sopranos way of handling Christmas.

Available to stream on Max

“A Solstice Carol,” Xena: Warrior Princess (season two, episode 9)

In “A Solstice Carol,” Xena and Gabrielle work together to save an orphanage by drugging the king and impersonating the three fates in a spin on the Christmas Carol tale. They convince the king to change his ways, rescuing a donkey along the way, and the king reunites with his wife, who has been working on the orphanage after walking out on him. Victorious, Xena and Gabrielle leave the now-happy king and queen and donate the donkey to a man and woman walking with a baby. All of that is all good and Christmassy enough, but the best thing about Xena, of course, has always been the coded relationship between Xena and Gabrielle. This episode is no exception: Xena gives Gabrielle a carved sheep like the one she had as a child, and when Gabrielle apologises for not having a gift for Xena, Xena responds: “Gabrielle, you are a gift to me.” Merry Solstice, one and all.

Available to stream on Prime Video

“How the Ghosts Stole Christmas,” The X-Files (season six, episode 6)

When Scully gets a call from Mulder dragging her to investigate a house haunted by a couple who went through with a suicide pact at Christmas, she tries to get it over with quickly — until they find two corpses that look the same as them. After the agents are separated, the ghosts turn them against each other, tricking them into believing that they have shot one another. After Mulder realizes this isn’t possible, the illusion is broken, and the two manage to leave — the mystery is unsolved, but the ghosts sit by the fire, and Mulder and Scully go home to exchange presents, even though they said they would not. It has all the makings of a great X-Files episode — camaraderie and low-key flirting between the agents, unresolved mysteries, and genuine terror, all wrapped up with a nice Christmas bow.

Available to stream on Hulu and Amazon Prime

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