For many people, the holidays bring warmth, connection, and meaningful traditions. For others, the season can also amplify stress, sadness, loneliness, grief, and conflict. When those feelings show up but don’t meet the threshold of a major depressive episode, people often refer to it as the “holiday blues.”
Holiday blues can show up differently in adults and children, but the patterns are familiar:
Adults may notice:
Low mood, irritability, tearfulness, or emotional “numbness.”
Sleep changes (too much or too little), fatigue
Increased anxiety, rumination, or dread about events
More conflict with family/partners
Increased alcohol or comfort-eating
Feeling “behind,” guilty, or like you’re disappointing others
Children and teens may notice:
More meltdowns, irritability, defiance, or “attitude.”
Clinginess, separation anxiety, or sleep regression
Headaches/stomachaches with no clear medical cause
Withdrawal from family events, friends, or favorite activities
Increased screen time as a coping strategy
School-related anxiety before/after break transitions
A few high-level indicators underscore how widespread seasonal stress can be:
Holiday stress is ubiquitous.
In an APA holiday stress survey,
nearly 9 in 10 U.S. adults (89%)
reported stress related to the season (including concerns like money, missing loved ones, and anticipated family conflict).
A significant portion of the report addresses the direct impact of the holidays on mental health.
According to the American Psychiatric Association’s 2025 holiday poll, approximately 1 in 5 adults (21%) indicated that the holiday season adversely affects their mental well-being.
Kids’ baseline anxiety rates are already substantial.
CDC data indicate that about 11% of children ages 3–17 have current, diagnosed anxiety (data presented on CDC’s children’s mental health statistics page).
Many children are already in care, or need it.
A CDC/NCHS data brief reports that in 2021, 11.5% of children ages 5–17 received counseling or therapy from a mental health professional in the prior 12 months.
Parent stress spills over to kids.
The C.S. Mott Children’s Hospital National Poll on Children’s Health found that 1 in 6 parents report high holiday stress, and 1 in 5 say their stress negatively affects their child’s enjoyment of the holidays.
Holiday blues often come from a convergence of pressures:
Financial strain and consumer pressure
Family dynamics
(old roles, unresolved conflict, different values)
Grief and loss
(empty chairs feel louder this time of year)
Overcommitment
and a disrupted routine (sleep, meals, exercise, school schedule)
Seasonal factors
(reduced daylight, less time outdoors)
Social comparison
(“everyone else looks happy”)
Pick 1–3 priorities (e.g., one meaningful tradition, one social event, one self-care routine). Let the rest be optional.
Try this: Replace “It has to be perfect” with “It has to be good enough.”
Boundaries work best when they are specific and behavioral.
Time boundary: “We can stay until 6:30.”
Topic boundary: “I’m not discussing parenting/weight/politics tonight.”
Role boundary: “I’m not mediating arguments—let’s change the subject.”
Kids often look “fine” until they’re overtired and overstimulated.
Keep bedtime/wake time within a reasonable range
Build in a quiet “buffer” time before/after events
For teens: plan decompression time without shaming them for needing space
If you know a gathering is tough, decide your coping plan in advance:
Who is your “safe person” to text?
Where can you take a 5-minute break?
What’s your exit plan if things escalate?
Think “minimum effective dose”:
10-minute walk outside (daylight helps)
A short strength or stretch routine
Protein + water early in the day
A “no phone for 15 minutes” reset
A helpful script:
“A lot of people feel big feelings during the holidays—excited and stressed at the same time.”
“If your body feels ‘too full’ of feelings, we can take breaks.”
“You’re not in trouble for feeling overwhelmed. We’ll figure out what helps.”
Consider getting support if you experience these symptoms:
Last most days for 2+ weeks
Cause major impairment (work, school, relationships)
Include panic attacks, worsening substance use, or persistent hopelessness
If you or your child is in immediate danger or you’re worried about safety, call/text 988 (U.S.) for the Suicide & Crisis Lifeline.
Counseling can be especially effective during seasonal stress because it provides structure when life feels unstructured.
Common therapy goals this time of year
Stress and anxiety management:
coping skills, grounding strategies, panic tools
Depression support:
behavioral activation, CBT strategies, self-compassion skills
Family conflict navigation:
communication tools, boundary setting, and role clarification
Grief work:
processing loss, creating meaningful rituals, reducing avoidance
Parent coaching:
practical scripts, co-regulation strategies, consistent limits
Child/teen support:
emotion regulation, social stress, school transition after break
What progress can look like
Fewer blowups and shutdowns
Clearer boundaries with less guilt
Improved sleep/routine stability
Feeling more present (less dread, less “white-knuckling” through events)
A plan for January (when many people feel the post-holiday crash)
If you or your child are struggling this holiday season, reaching out for support can make a meaningful difference. Counseling can help you navigate stress, strengthen family connections, and enter the new year with clarity and resilience.