I love celebrating the Holiday season with Christmas Horror movies. Here are my 15 favorites! Have some fun today! Video by @cobwebschannel!
Watch below or at YouTube:The Top 15 Best Christmas Horror Movies of All Time
By Daniel – The Cobweb Channel
Merry Christmas and happy holidays, everybody! Today we’re diving into the top 15 best Christmas horror movies of all time, and I couldn’t be more excited. This isn’t just a list of films that happen to take place near Christmas — these are the most Christmassy horror movies you can possibly watch. I’m talking maximum festive vibes, snowy dread, twinkling lights, cozy chaos, and pure holiday terror.
So grab some hot cocoa (or maybe something stronger), curl up by the tree, and let’s get started.
15. All the Creatures Were Stirring (2018)
Anything is better than being alone on Christmas Eve… right?
This indie anthology follows a couple on an awkward first date who attend a strange Christmas Eve theater production. What unfolds is a five-segment holiday horror showcase helmed by Rebecca McKendry (of Shockwaves and Colors of the Dark fame) and her husband.
This one is very indie, very L.A., and very uneven — but also very Christmassy in theme. Standouts include a Saw-inspired office-party nightmare and a brilliantly creepy parking-lot segment that alone makes the film worth watching. Some stories suffer from budget limits (the killer reindeer bit… yikes), but overall it’s festive enough in spirit to earn a spot on the list.
14. Better Watch Out (2016)
A babysitter, a quiet suburban neighborhood, and a night that starts like Home Alone... then takes a sharp, unexpected turn.
This is one of those films where the less you know going in, the better. It’s tense, twisty, smartly written, and extremely Christmassy with cold weather and glowing décor everywhere. The acting is rock-solid and the vibe is pitch-perfect.
The villain is almost too hateable, but the film keeps you fully invested, begging for certain things not to happen. It’s clever, surprising, and a must-watch for fans of Home Alone and horror.
13. A Christmas Horror Story (2015)
A Christmas-themed Trick ’r Treat? That’s the idea — and it mostly works.
Told through four interwoven tales narrated by a festive, boozy William Shatner as a small-town DJ, this film nails the dark-holiday atmosphere. The stories are bleak, bloody, and surprisingly ambitious: Krampus, zombie elves, creepy folklore, and even a subversive riff on the Virgin Mary.
The Krampus design looks more like a pro wrestler than a monster, but the overall tone is pure holiday dread wrapped in tinsel.
12. Jack Frost (1997)
Before you ask: yes, the serial killer really is named Jack Frost before he becomes a killer snowman.
Infamous for being “so bad it’s good,” this trashy little cult classic is absolutely in on the joke. It’s a full-blown horror comedy with a snowy small-town Hallmark-movie vibe — if Hallmark movies had violent snowmen, sleaze, and killer icicles.
It’s ridiculous, cheap, silly... but weirdly fun. Shannon Elizabeth appears in an early role with a hilariously memorable scene, and the whole movie is just a blast of frosty insanity.
11. There’s Something in the Barn (2023)
A cozy family-friendly Christmas horror movie? Yes, and it’s delightful.
This Norwegian-American film follows a family adjusting to life in rural Norway — only to discover folklore barn elves who aren’t thrilled about their arrival. It’s charming, snowy, festive, and full of heart. Martin Starr shines as the dad, and the culture-clash humor hits perfectly.
Not all Christmas horror needs to be twisted and gory — sometimes you just want a warm blanket with a little spooky edge. That’s this movie.
10. Silent Night, Deadly Night 5: The Toy Maker (1991)
Welcome to Pedo’s Toy Shop — yes, that’s the name — run by Mickey Rooney, who once publicly condemned the original Silent Night, Deadly Night. Irony is delicious.
This wild, sleazy, gory entry has living toys, bizarre plot turns, uncomfortable weirdness, and one of the most insane endings in Christmas horror. It's messy but incredibly entertaining, and easily the best of the franchise’s anthology-era sequels.
9. Christmas Evil (1980)
This is not a fun movie — but it is a very good one.
A lonely toy-factory worker becomes obsessed with “saving” the spirit of Christmas by becoming Santa himself. Sometimes he does kind things; sometimes he murders people. It’s bleak, psychologically driven, and deeply sad.
Harry’s chimney scene is one of the most disturbing in Christmas horror — because it portrays a Santa without magic attempting the impossible. The ending is legendary, and the film’s seriousness sets it apart.
8. Deadly Games aka Dial Code Santa Claus (1990)
A French proto–Home Alone — but much darker, much weirder, and much more stylish.
A young boy with a glorious mullet must defend his mansion and disabled grandfather from a deranged impostor Santa. This movie looks gorgeous, feels huge, and delivers tension, suspense, and brutal Santa-infused action.
The killer Santa is genuinely unsettling, and the kid goes full action hero. It's a hidden gem and an absolute Christmas thrill ride.
7. Rare Exports: A Christmas Tale (2010)
From Finland comes one of the most original Christmas horrors ever made.
Less focused on decorations and more on icy atmosphere, this film explores the “true” ancient Santa myth — terrifying and monstrous. Its elves are unsettling, the lore is amazing, and the final reveal is unforgettable.
My only complaint? I wanted more. A sequel would be a dream.
6. Terrifier 3 (2024)
Art the Clown puts on a Santa suit… and it’s as sick, gory, and twisted as you'd expect.
Switching the franchise from Halloween to Christmas was genius. This film is extremely Christmassy — vintage lights, snowy streets, tons of décor, and a strong family-drama core following Sienna and Jonathan trying to rebuild their lives.
It’s incredibly violent — even fans of the series may feel queasy. Victoria continues to be absolutely horrifying. And yes, it has its own Christmas song, which automatically rules.
5. Black Christmas (2006)
A trashy, extreme, gloriously unhinged early-2000s remake.
This version leans into grotesque backstory, outrageous kills (including an unforgettable icicle moment), and a slick, candy-colored Christmas aesthetic. Mary Elizabeth Winstead, Michelle Trachtenberg, and Lacey Chabert form an iconic time-capsule cast.
Not as masterful as the original — but bold, bloody, and wildly entertaining.
4. Silent Night, Deadly Night (1984)
Love it or hate it, this is the quintessential Christmas slasher.
The uproar was huge when it released — protests, news outrage, accusations of moral decay — and all over a Santa with an axe. Today, that feels quaint, but the movie itself still hits.
Packed with plot, psychology, snow, sleaze, and some truly gnarly kills (watch the unrated cut!), it’s a Christmas horror staple.
3. Black Christmas (1974)
One of the scariest slashers ever made.
The obscene phone calls alone are nightmare fuel — raw, disturbing, and deeply unsettling. Bob Clark’s direction blends dread with surprising touches of humor, and the cast (Olivia Hussey, Margot Kidder, John Saxon) is phenomenal.
It’s atmospheric, stylish, haunting, and filled with vintage Christmas warmth twisted into menace.
2. Gremlins (1984)
Yes, it absolutely is a horror movie — a horror-comedy with monsters wreaking havoc.
Snowy streets, cozy lights, small-town charm, and Amblin magic make this one of the most rewatchable holiday movies ever. Gizmo is adorable, the gremlins are monstrous, and the practical effects are some of the best ever filmed.
Perfect for families, creature-feature fans, and anyone wanting a spooky-but-fun holiday vibe.
1. Krampus (2015)
My number one — by a mile.
This is the only Christmas horror movie I watch every single year without fail. It’s the perfect blend of family Christmas movie and dark holiday nightmare, heavily inspired in tone by Christmas Vacation but loaded with creatures, folklore, and escalating terror.
The cast is fantastic, the comedy works, the drama lands, and the horror goes much darker than its PG-13 rating suggests. Krampus himself looks incredible — my favorite portrayal ever — and the film is full of practical monsters, killer toys, elves, and snowy chaos.
Michael Dougherty (of Trick ’r Treat) created the ultimate Christmas horror classic.
Streaming Options & Final Thoughts
Streaming availability can change at any time, so be sure to check your platforms or physical media options.
What Christmas horror movies do you love? Drop your favorites in the comments — and follow @cobwebschannel if you want to hang out with me some more.
Happy holidays, folks. Stay spooky, stay festive, and don’t forget to check your chimney...
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