Corporate Christmas gifts are end-of-year gifts companies send to employees and clients to say thank you. The ones that work are practical, cozy and seasonally relevant, branded with restraint rather than plastered with a logo. Typical budgets run 25 to 50 euros per person, up to 100 for premium. The single most important rule: start in September. Christmas is the busiest gifting period of the year, and gifts should arrive at least a week before the holidays, not two days before when carriers are jammed and offices are already empty.
Gifting is still gifting. If you give something, it should feel like something people actually want and can use. Otherwise it is often better to give nothing at all. A gift that feels random, cheap or forced gets forgotten, or worse, it creates the feeling that the company only gave something because it had to. Start from the recipient: what would they enjoy, what fits the season, what can they use at home or over the holidays. Useful, thoughtful and well-made beats generic and forgettable every time.
The hard rule
A good gift feels chosen. A bad gift feels obligated. That is the whole thing. If the gift feels random, cheap or forced, it ends up forgotten in a drawer, and it sends the opposite message to the one you intended. The fix is not to spend more, it is to think from the recipient. What would they genuinely enjoy? What fits the season? What can they actually use at home, at work, or over the holidays?
Get that right and a modest gift lands beautifully. Get it wrong and an expensive one still misses. Useful, thoughtful and well-made is the bar. Everything else in this guide is in service of clearing it.
Branded vs generic
Should you put your logo on it? Usually yes, but balance is the secret. A branded gift shows the company took the time to create something specific, instead of buying a random product off a shelf. But not every item has to be branded. The best Christmas packs combine both.
Think a branded wooden chopping board paired with a good bottle of wine, or a cozy branded blanket alongside premium tea, chocolate and a few festive items. The branded product gives the gift a company identity; the generic items make it feel warmer and complete. The rule to remember: branding should add meaning, not make the gift feel like advertising. A subtle woven label on a quality blanket reads premium. A giant logo across the front reads like a billboard, and it gets folded away.
The best corporate Christmas gifts
The strongest Christmas gifts are practical, cozy and seasonally relevant. Items people can use immediately and naturally. A branded blanket is one of the best examples there is: it works for men and women, it fits the season, it gets genuinely used at home, and with subtle branding it is premium without feeling commercial. It is the hero cozy gift, which is exactly why we paired this guide with our custom blankets guide. Preview a branded blanket in your colours with the free blanket mockup generator.
Beyond the blanket, a strong shortlist for 2026:
- A cozy branded blanket. Sizeless, kept for years, premium with a small label. The safest universal gift on the list. Browse custom blankets.
- A cozy home set. A mug with premium tea and snacks, or custom tea bags and a branded cookie-cutter set. Warm, seasonal, immediately usable.
- Soft winter accessories. A scarf, beanie and touchscreen gloves set. The classic winter pack, and one of the first Christmas gifts Sunday ever made.
- A premium everyday object. A good laptop bag branded on the inside, headphones or a small speaker, a chopping board with a food and wine pairing.
- A Christmas sweater. Fun, festive and highly recognisable. Great for parties and internal atmosphere, though worn only a few weeks a year.
For nine fully worked ideas with who each suits, and for real campaigns from B2B companies, watch this space as the rest of the series publishes.

The blanket is the hero cozy gift of the season: premium, sizeless, and kept for years.
Client Christmas gifts
Holiday gifts for clients follow different rules to staff gifts. Keep branding subtle, and prefer sizeless items. A client will not wear a hoodie with a big logo, but they will happily keep a high-quality blanket with a small label, a premium laptop bag branded on the inside, or a beautiful branded object for the home or office. Sizeless is also safer, because collecting client sizes and preferences is hard.
The payoff is real. Clients who receive a holiday gift are around twice as likely to continue the relationship, and roughly 45% of B2B buyers say a thoughtful gift influenced a renewal or expansion. A client Christmas gift is not a nicety, it is a relationship-building channel. The math is simple: pick your 100 best customers, spend 50 euros each, and a 5,000 euro campaign opens conversations, creates goodwill and drives meetings.
End of year gifts for staff
For employees you can go more branded. They are part of the company, so branded apparel, blankets, mugs and accessories all feel natural, as long as the design is good. It is also easier to collect sizes and addresses internally, which makes apparel and personal packs manageable. End of year gifts for staff are your chance to make people feel genuinely appreciated heading into the holidays.
One word of caution that ties into budgets and tax: branded items are safer than high-value consumer electronics. If you start handing out iPhones, it becomes much harder to argue the gift is a gift and not part of compensation. A well-made branded gift in the 50 euro range is both more appropriate and cleaner on the books.
Per-head budgets
Most corporate Christmas gifts land between 25 and 50 euros per person. Premium employee or customer gifts go up to around 100, and important clients or high-value accounts can go higher, but do not overdo it. A good gift feels thoughtful and generous; an excessive gift can feel uncomfortable or misaligned with the relationship. Here is a practical starting point:
| Audience | Typical per-head budget | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Employees | ~€50 (≈$50) | The safe, common range. Depends on country and local tax rules. Go branded. |
| Core clients | ~€75–125 | Subtle branding, sizeless items. A premium blanket or object lands well. |
| VIP accounts | ~€150–300+ | Reserve for your most important relationships. Keep it appropriate, not excessive. |
| Premium staff gift | up to ~€100 | For milestone years or smaller, high-impact teams. |
The headline: roughly 50 euros is the safe centre for employees, clients scale to the relationship, and branded beats expensive-but-generic almost every time.
The tax rule companies miss
The money and admin side trips people up more than the gift choice. The clearest example is the UK trivial-benefits rule. In the UK, a staff gift is a tax-free trivial benefit if it costs 50 pounds or less, is non-cash, and is not a reward for performance. Within those limits there is no cap on how many you can give per employee per year (directors of close companies are capped at 300 pounds a year), and it is generally corporation-tax deductible. Go one penny over 50 pounds and the whole amount becomes taxable. GOV.UK sets out the rule in full.
This is why the 50 euro or 50 pound range keeps appearing. It is generous enough to feel real and clean enough to stay simple. Rules differ by country, so confirm your local equivalent, but the principle holds everywhere: a well-judged branded gift around this level is the sweet spot of appreciated and uncomplicated.
The timeline starts in September
Here is the line that matters most in this entire guide: Christmas gifting starts in September. Christmas is the single busiest gifting period of the year. Design teams, production lines, warehouses and carriers all get crowded at once. Wait too long and you risk limited product availability, rushed decisions, delayed production, and packages stuck in the shipping peak. Gifting also involves more stakeholders than people expect, marketing, HR, leadership, procurement, local teams, so selection, budget and design approval take days to weeks on their own.
The full timeline, step by step:
- Early September: start. Choose the product selection, define the audience (employees, clients, partners or a mix), and set the budget.
- End of September: confirm the design, after one or two rounds of feedback.
- Production: two weeks for some items, up to four, six, eight or ten to twelve weeks for larger volumes or complex custom.
- Warehouse intake: about one week to ship to the warehouse, check, receive and prepare.
- Dispatch: usually leaves the warehouse within 24 hours.
- Delivery: fast in calm periods, but assume several days right before Christmas.
The rule: gifts should arrive at least one week before Christmas, so people receive and enjoy them before the holidays and you avoid delivering to an empty office. The biggest mistake is shipping two days before Christmas, at peak carrier pressure with people already on holiday. If your timeline is tight, deliberately position it as a New Year's gift and ship about a week after Christmas, which also dodges the December rush. And if you want a fully custom product from scratch, a unique jacket or a complex high-volume item, start even earlier, because development plus production can take up to six months.
Christmas gifts for remote teams
Remote and international staff are where Christmas gifting usually breaks. Gifting is still gifting: it should feel easy, thoughtful and positive. It should not mean someone has to chase a courier five times, pay unexpected duties before they can receive the package, or sort out a wrong-address delivery. That frustration kills the gift's value before it even arrives, and it reflects on the sender, whether the recipient is an employee or a customer.
Crossing borders, or shipping at scale, you need a partner and a system that handle the full process: data collection, packaging, customs, shipping, tracking and delivery follow-up. Sunday manages this for hundreds of thousands of packages. Duties are pre-financed so the recipient is never billed, and you get full visibility instead of a spreadsheet and a prayer. That is what our distribution service is built for.
Bulk Christmas gifts for staff
At volume, the gift is the easy part. The hard part is getting hundreds of them branded, boxed and delivered, to different addresses, in different sizes, before the holidays. This is exactly where a stocked and automated model beats a one-off bulk order. You design once, hold stock, and release sends on your schedule, including split send dates where some go before Christmas and some after.
Multi-office companies have it even easier with pre-made boxes. A company with 15 offices can have ready-made boxes delivered to each office, so local teams simply hand them out without assembling anything.
Christmas gift boxes for employees
Gift boxes and pre-made kits are often the strongest format, and they are quietly a high-traffic search in their own right. Several products in nice packaging, with a personal Christmas note, create a full unboxing experience, which makes the gift feel more thoughtful and premium. The unboxing moment genuinely matters.
Compare that to a single Christmas sweater. The sweater is a fun, highly recognisable seasonal classic, great for parties and internal atmosphere, but it is very temporary, worn only a few weeks a year. A box that combines a branded hero item with a few warm extras gives people something to open and something to keep. For most employee programs, the box wins.

A branded winter package. Several items in considered packaging beat a single gift, every time.
How to automate a big send
The first challenge in any large send is collecting the right information: names, addresses, phone, email, sizes, product choices, delivery preferences, sometimes a personalised note. Doing this by email is almost impossible. Someone ends up spending weeks chasing and correcting spreadsheets.
The fix is a redeem page: a branded page where recipients enter their own delivery details, pick a size, choose between products and confirm their info. It is easier for the company and better for the recipient. And once you are at 500 to 1,000 packages across countries, with different contents, personalised notes and split send dates, tracking and reporting become essential, one place that shows what is sent, in transit, delivered, or needs follow-up. Explore the Sunday platform.
The old way vs the Sunday way
| The old way | The Sunday way | |
|---|---|---|
| Data collection | Weeks chasing spreadsheets by email | A branded redeem page recipients fill in themselves |
| Sizes and choices | Guesswork and reorders | Recipients pick their own size and product |
| International shipping | Surprise customs bills for the recipient | Duties pre-financed, recipient never billed |
| Tracking | No visibility once it ships | One dashboard: sent, in transit, delivered, follow-up |
| Multi-office | Manual assembly at HQ | Pre-made boxes delivered to each office |
| Timing | One rushed pre-Christmas send | Split send dates, before and after Christmas |
Does gifting pay off
Done well, gifting creates real commercial impact. The clearest example we have run: a Cloudflare end-of-year gifting campaign, around 30,000 euros invested, linked to roughly 3 million euros in closed-won pipeline. Gifting done well is not just a nice gesture, it is a measurable relationship-building channel.
You do not need that scale to see it work. Take the client math again: 100 best customers at 50 euros each is a 5,000 euro campaign that opens conversations and creates goodwill at exactly the moment people are receptive. With around 45% of B2B buyers saying a thoughtful gift influenced a renewal or expansion, the question is less whether to gift and more how to do it well.

Edgard & Cooper's festive sweaters. A recognisable, fun internal moment, the sweater's natural home.
Two more programs worth knowing. Twilio ran one of Sunday's first Christmas campaigns about eight years ago: a custom branded winter set, scarf, beanie and touchscreen gloves, shipped across Europe to key accounts. It proved early that companies were struggling with international gifting and needed a better way. Deel ran a large global campaign to 7,000 plus people across Europe, India, the US and beyond, which is where Sunday learned international address management, customs, duties and global gifting at scale.

An ML6 Christmas sweater. Branded with restraint so it reads festive, not like an ad.
How Sunday delivers
Sunday is merch infrastructure, not a supplier. We design and make the gifts, build the boxes, collect recipient data through a branded redeem page, warehouse the stock and ship it globally with duties pre-financed, all inside the tools you already use. Merch, in your brand, live in 30 seconds. That is how brands like Cloudflare, Deel, Twilio, Edgard & Cooper and ML6 run their Christmas programs with us. Explore the catalog, see how it works, or start with the paired hero gift, custom blankets.
Build your Christmas campaign with Sunday
Branded gifts, a redeem page, global shipping with duties handled, all in one place. Start before September and land before the holidays.
Build this campaign







