Boxing Day is usually spent letting the children destroy the house with their new toys and gadgets, while adults head out to some of the biggest shopping sales of the year.
Others take the day to recuperate from all the Christmas madness after all the festive cooking and preparing.
But December 26 hasn’t always just been about football matches and eating leftovers of Christmas dinner, as over the years new traditions have evolved.
Why is Boxing Day called Boxing Day?
Believe it or not, it has nothing to do with the boxing sport.
Instead, it’s thought the name came from when Queen Victoria was on the throne.
“In Victorian times, the wealthy would box up items they no longer needed to give to the poor, explains House Beautiful.
“It was a day where servants would be given time off and thanked for their hard work with a 'special box' of treats.
“The servants would then head home and use the 26th to spend with their own families — and share the presents they had just received.”
Who celebrates Boxing Day?
Boxing Day became an official bank holiday in the UK back in 1871.
It is also celebrated in many former British colonies that remain part of the Commonwealth, such as Canada, Australia, Nigeria, South Africa, Trinidad and Tobago, according to National Geographic.
However, some parts of the world have their own traditions.
National Geographic explains: “Though Northern Ireland celebrates Boxing Day, the Republic of Ireland to the south celebrates St. Stephen’s Day instead. And on December 26, pockets of people across the entire island continue the tradition of Wren Day, or Lá an Dreolín.”
Will the UK get snow this winter?
Why doesn’t America celebrate Boxing Day?
It’s thought there is no definitive reason as to why America doesn’t celebrate Boxing Day other than the country had already adopted its own Christmas holidays.
They created Thanksgiving Day in November 1798 to give thanks for “livelihood and good health” throughout the year.
In America, the day after Thanksgiving is Black Friday which is the largest shopping and sales day of the year, instead of the day after Christmas in the UK.
Comments: Our rules
We want our comments to be a lively and valuable part of our community - a place where readers can debate and engage with the most important local issues. The ability to comment on our stories is a privilege, not a right, however, and that privilege may be withdrawn if it is abused or misused.
Please report any comments that break our rules.
Read the rules here