Align your campaigns with the right holiday windows in every market
Introduction
For consumer brands, the holiday marketing calendar is the highest-stakes planning document of the year. The difference between a campaign that launches at the right moment relative to the relevant Public Holiday and one that launches a week too late — or targets the wrong holiday entirely for a given market — can represent significant revenue impact.
This guide maps the major global holiday marketing windows and provides a framework for campaign timing across markets.
The Western Calendar: Q4 Dominance
In North America and Western Europe, the Q4 holiday cluster — anchored by Halloween, Thanksgiving, Christmas, and New Year — represents the largest consumer spending period of the year in most retail categories. Campaign timelines for this period should begin creative development in August, media planning in September, campaign launch in late October, and peak spend in the three weeks before December 25th.
Black Friday and Cyber Monday
The Black Friday–Cyber Monday weekend (the Friday and Monday after US Thanksgiving) has become a global retail event, extending into markets where Thanksgiving itself is not a National Day or Public Holiday. Plan dedicated campaign creative for this window that is distinct from Christmas messaging.
Lunar New Year: The World's Largest Annual Holiday
Lunar New Year is the most significant marketing window in East and Southeast Asia. It falls in January or February (date shifts each year) and drives massive consumer spending in China, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Vietnam, Singapore, Malaysia, and among diaspora communities worldwide.
Campaign development should begin at least eight weeks before the holiday date. The thematic vocabulary — family reunion, renewal, prosperity, red envelopes — is distinct from any Western holiday framing and requires culturally specific creative work rather than adapted Western assets.
Diwali: The Festival of Lights
Diwali (typically October or November) is the premier shopping festival in India and among the world's 1.4 billion people of Indian heritage. Gift-giving, new clothing, home decoration, and electronics purchases all peak around Diwali. For brands with significant Indian market presence, Diwali deserves dedicated campaign investment comparable to Christmas in Western markets.
Eid al-Fitr and Eid al-Adha
The two Eid celebrations are the premier gift-giving and celebration occasions across Muslim-majority markets — the Gulf states, Southeast Asia, Pakistan, and North Africa. Eid dates follow the Islamic lunar calendar and shift approximately 11 days earlier each Gregorian year. Marketers must calculate the specific dates each year rather than applying a fixed calendar template. The Observance requires culturally sensitive campaign creative that reflects Eid themes rather than generic holiday imagery.
Beyond the global holiday clusters, many markets have national holiday-driven shopping peaks: Singles' Day (November 11) in China, Golden Week in Japan, Independence Day sales in the US. Build a market-by-market holiday marketing calendar that maps these regional peaks and assigns dedicated campaign resources to each market's primary shopping holiday.
Conclusion
Global holiday marketing rewards the discipline of treating each market's primary Public Holiday with the same strategic investment that most Western brands reserve for Christmas. The campaigns that win are the ones built around the specific cultural meanings of each holiday — not repurposed assets from a different cultural context.