Norway’s Christmas Eve Brooms: A Folklore Tradition That Refuses to Disappear
- MASX
- Dec 25, 2025
- 3 min read
In Norway, Christmas Eve is quiet, candlelit, and deeply atmospheric. Families gather, snow softens the streets, and tradition fills the air.
And in some homes, something unexpected happens.
Brooms are hidden.
Not for cleaning. Not for decoration.But to protect the household from spirits believed to roam on Christmas Eve.
To outsiders, it sounds like superstition. To Norwegians, it’s a fascinating example of how ancient folklore still whispers through modern life.

What Is the Christmas Eve Broom Tradition?
The tradition goes like this:
On Christmas Eve, brooms are hidden or put away so that evil spirits and witches cannot steal them.
According to old beliefs, witches and malicious spirits would come out on Christmas Eve — one of the most spiritually charged nights of the year — and use brooms to fly through the sky.
No broom, no flight.
Where Did This Belief Come From?
The custom dates back several hundred years to pre-Christian Scandinavian folklore, when Christmas (Yule) was believed to blur the line between the human world and the supernatural.
In these belief systems:
Christmas Eve was a liminal night
Spirits were active
Homes needed protection
The broom, associated with domestic life and magic, became a key object in these stories.
When Christianity spread, many folk beliefs didn’t disappear — they layered themselves onto the holiday, quietly surviving into modern times.
Do Norwegians Still Do This Today?
Yes — but often symbolically.
Most modern Norwegians don’t genuinely fear witches stealing brooms. However:
Some families still hide them “just in case”
Others treat it as a playful nod to heritage
Many people know the story even if they don’t practice it
It’s similar to knocking on wood or avoiding bad luck rituals elsewhere — a cultural echo rather than a literal belief.
Why This Tradition Still Matters
What makes this custom special isn’t fear — it’s continuity.
Norwegian Christmas culture values:
Quiet reflection
Respect for the past
Subtle tradition rather than spectacle
The broom tradition reminds people that Christmas isn’t only about light and joy — it also acknowledges darkness, mystery, and protection.
That balance is very Scandinavian.
A Christmas of Stillness, Not Noise
To many tourists, Norwegian Christmas feels unusually calm.
There’s less:
Loud celebration
Public spectacle
And more:
Candles
Silence
Snow
Old stories
Hiding the broom fits perfectly into this atmosphere — it’s an inward-facing tradition meant for the home, not the crowd.
Why This Surprises Travelers
Visitors are often surprised that:
Such an old belief still exists
Christmas folklore includes darker elements
Traditions don’t need logic to have meaning
But that’s exactly what makes travel richer. Understanding these customs shows how cultures carry their past gently into the present.
How to Experience This Tradition Respectfully as a Visitor
If you’re spending Christmas in Norway:
Don’t joke dismissively about the tradition
Ask locals about childhood memories
Notice how many customs are quiet, not performative
You may not hide a broom yourself — but you’ll see how stories shape the season.
Norway’s hidden Christmas brooms aren’t about witches.
They’re about remembering that:
Winter is long
Darkness has meaning
Stories protect us as much as walls do




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