A complete Christmas email marketing sequence from early November through New Year. Six emails with full copy, subject lines, send dates, and the strategy behind each one. Built for ecommerce, retail, and service businesses.
Last updated: March 2026 · Reading time: 16 min
Holiday email campaigns with 3+ emails generate 2.5x more revenue than single sends.
The numbers back this up. According to Salesmate’s 2025 holiday marketing data, consumers expected to spend an average of $1,595 during the holiday season. NRF data shows 57% of shoppers start before Thanksgiving. If you wait until December to start emailing, you’ve missed over half your audience’s buying window.Christmas email sequence: A planned series of 4-8 emails sent between early November and early January, timed to match key holiday shopping milestones: early planning, gift discovery, shipping deadlines, last-minute purchases, and post-holiday engagement.
| Holiday Shopping Timeline | % of Shoppers Active | Email Strategy |
|---|---|---|
| Before November | 27% | Tease upcoming deals, build anticipation |
| Early November | 30% | Early bird offers, gift guides |
| Black Friday week | 55% | Peak promotional window |
| December 1-15 | 65% | Shipping deadlines, urgency |
| December 16-24 | 40% | Gift cards, digital gifts, last-minute |
| December 26-31 | 35% | Post-Christmas sales, year-end |
Sources: NRF (2025), Klaviyo (2025), Salesmate (2025)
“Most brands spray promotional emails in December and wonder why they’re competing with 200 other brands in the inbox. The brands that win at holiday email start in early November, build momentum through a gift guide, create urgency with shipping deadlines, and capture the post-Christmas buyer who’s spending gift cards. It’s a six-act play, not a one-time blast.”
Hardik Shah, Founder of ScaleGrowth.Digital
Six emails across 8 weeks. Each has a different job.
| Send Date | Purpose | Tone | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Early Bird | Nov 1-5 | Announce holiday offers before the noise starts | Excited, exclusive |
| 2. Gift Guide | Nov 15-20 | Help buyers find the right gift (reduce decision paralysis) | Helpful, curated |
| 3. Shipping Deadline | Dec 8-12 | Create real urgency around delivery cutoffs | Urgent, direct |
| 4. Christmas Eve | Dec 24 | Warm brand moment (not promotional) | Warm, personal |
| 5. Boxing Day | Dec 26 | Post-Christmas sale / year-end clearance | Energetic, deal-driven |
| 6. New Year | Dec 31 / Jan 1 | Year-in-review, set up Q1 engagement | Reflective, forward-looking |
Send the first week of November, before Black Friday chaos fills inboxes.
Organized by recipient, not product category. “Gifts for Dad” beats “Men’s Products.”
This is the highest-converting email in the Christmas sequence.
Yes, but make it warm, not promotional. Build brand affinity, not revenue.
December 26-31 captures gift card spending, self-purchasing, and year-end budgets.
Close the year, preview what’s coming, and reset the relationship for Q1.
The structure stays. The content shifts by industry.
| Ecommerce / Retail | Service Business | B2B / SaaS | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Early Bird | Early access pricing, product drops | Holiday scheduling (book before slots fill) | Year-end contract pricing, annual plan discounts |
| Gift Guide | Products by recipient type | Gift card packages, experience bundles | Resource round-up (“Best of 2026” content) |
| Shipping Deadline | Order-by dates for delivery tiers | Last-appointment dates before holiday break | Fiscal year-end deadline for procurement |
| Christmas Eve | Brand warmth, support links | Holiday hours, emergency contact | Support availability, holiday hours |
| Boxing Day | Year-end clearance sale | January booking incentive | Q1 planning resources, early renewal offers |
| New Year | Year-in-review, loyalty stats | Year-in-review, Q1 availability | Product roadmap preview, customer impact stats |
50+ proven subject lines including holiday-specific formulas for open rates above 30%. View Examples →
Cart recovery emails are essential during the holidays when abandonment spikes to 70%+. Get Templates →
We build full-lifecycle email strategies from holiday campaigns to year-round automation. Learn More →
Start in the first week of November. NRF data shows 57% of holiday shoppers begin before Thanksgiving. The first week of November lets you reach early planners before the Black Friday email flood begins. Your early bird email should go out November 1-5.
Six to eight emails across the full November-January window is the standard for most brands. That’s roughly one email per week. More than 2 emails per week during the holidays risks fatigue and unsubscribes. The exception is the Black Friday-Cyber Monday weekend, where 2-3 emails in 4 days is accepted and expected.
No. A warm, non-promotional message on Christmas Eve works. A promotional email on December 25 feels tone-deaf and out of place. Wait until December 26 (Boxing Day) to resume promotional activity. Brands that send promotional emails on Christmas Day see higher unsubscribe rates compared to non-promotional messages, according to Litmus’s 2025 analysis.
The highest-performing holiday subject lines are specific and deadline-driven. “Order by Dec 15 for Christmas delivery” outperforms “Holiday Sale Inside.” Include specific dates, discount percentages, or recipient-oriented copy (“Gifts for Mom under $50”). Avoid overused phrases like “Ho Ho Ho” and “Tis the Season” unless your brand tone supports it.
Measure the full sequence, not individual emails. Track total sequence revenue (attributed revenue across all 6 emails), sequence engagement rate (% who opened 3+ emails), unsubscribe rate per email, and conversion rate per email. The shipping deadline email (#3) should be your highest converter. The Christmas Eve email (#4) should have the lowest unsubscribe rate.
We design seasonal email sequences that drive revenue from Black Friday through New Year. Full strategy, copy, and automation setup. Talk to Us About Email Strategy →