How to Tell Your Kids About Santa as They Get Older

Emergency Santa Kit

How to Tell Your Kids About Santa as They Get Older

Santa’s magic is real.

Let’s start with the truth: Santa Claus is real. New York Sun‘s newspaper reported it in 1897. There are historical records about St. Nick going all the way back to the 3rd Century. And anyone who’s seen Miracle on 34th Street understands the fact that the postal system delivers letters to the North Pole proves that the federal government recognizes a Santa Claus — and that’s proof that can hold up in court.

But, as kids get older, they may have more questions about Santa and how his magic really works. When it comes time to give them more information, here’s how to tell your kids about Santa Claus.

Keep an eye out for questions.

Figure out who really needs Santa. “Sometimes, it’s less about when your child is ready and more about when you are ready,” says MegAnne Ford, a parenting coach and owner/CEO of Be Kind Coaching. “We as adults started the story, and it’s our job as adults to finish the story. However, I think as soon as your child starts questioning, it’s time to start the planning process. Think of this as an invitation to decide how your family will view the story of Santa, in your unique way.”

Sometimes, the signal that they’re ready comes from a subtle shift in a way they ask the Santa question. “When a child starts asking if Santa Claus is real, most parents I know — myself included — either say ‘of course,’ or redirect the question to not quite answer it,” says Emily Edlynn, Ph.D., who runs The Art and Science of Mom. “When a child is satisfied with this, even if they start to have doubts, they may not be ready to stop believing. When a child says something along the lines of, ‘Santa isn’t real, is he?’ it can be useful to reflect the question back to them to figure out why they think so. When they’re older and can think more critically, they’ll tell you Santa isn’t real, and especially when their peers are talking about Santa not being real. These are good indicators they’re really to hear the truth.”

As for when the shift starts to happen, it’s different depending on the child, but expect the questioning to get serious somewhere between the ages of 7 and 10. In 2019, House Method surveyed more than 4,500 families across the United States, and found the overall average age for no longer believing in Santa Claus is 8.4 years old. (But it varies by state: Kids in Mississippi generally believe until they’re 10, while kids in Oregon stop believing at 7.)

Respond to your child’s emotions.

Children react differently to hearing the news about Santa. “My 9-year-old daughter seemed proud to have matured into this grown-up secret she could keep from her younger siblings!” Dr. Edlynn says. Others might feel embarrassed that they believed for so long, or are sad to lose the version of the Santa they knew.

Don’t try to direct your kids to react a certain way. “Your role as a parent is not to govern your child’s emotions, whether positive or negative,” Ford says. “It’s your role to create a safe, loving and validating environment. Make sure that the focus is on honesty, connection and compassion, and that’ll ensure the conversation ends in everyone’s favor.”

You can also focus on ways to keep the good feelings associated with Santa going. “It’s fun to talk to kids about ways we can keep up the Santa spirit during the holidays even if we are too old to believe in the red-suited man handing out gifts all night,” Dr. Edlynn says. “Talking about the spirit of Santa — generosity, kindness, happiness — can help keep the magic alive, no matter our age.”

Take them from believing in Santa to being Santa.

One anonymous parent, whose idea went viral through an admiring Facebook post, came up with a brilliant idea that takes that last point to the extreme: Tell children that, while they don’t receive presents from Santa, they’re now old enough to become Santa. She explains:

When they are 6 or 7, whenever you see that dawning suspicion that Santa may not be a material being, that means the child is ready. I take them out “for coffee” at the local wherever. We get a booth, order our drinks, and the following pronouncement is made: “You sure have grown an awful lot this year. Not only are you taller, but I can see that your heart has grown, too. [Point out 2–3 examples of empathetic behavior, consideration of people’s feelings, good deeds etc, the kid has done in the past year]. In fact, your heart has grown so much that I think you are ready to become a Santa Claus. You probably have noticed that most of the Santas you see are people dressed up like him. Some of your friends might have even told you that there is no Santa. A lot of children think that, because they aren’t ready to BE a Santa yet, but YOU ARE … We then have the child choose someone they know — a neighbor, usually. The child’s mission is to secretly, deviously, find out something that the person needs, and then provide it, wrap it, deliver it — and never reveal to the target where it came from. Being a Santa isn’t about getting credit, you see. It’s unselfish giving.

While its exact origins are unclear, the little essay has circulated online forums for years, and before popping up in that viral Facebook post (where you can read more details about the mom’s technique for revealing the Santa truth):

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