These 5 cozy cities in California are trending this Christmas season

In California’s holiday travel economy, the “Christmas trip” is increasingly sold as one driveable, walkable, event-oriented weekend– less about the profusion of itineraries and more about a city that can convincingly play the role of ‘winter’. National lifestyle coverage has helped this shift by spotlighting places that can make it happen a cohesive seasonal aesthetic– lights, markets, parades and a distinct local food tradition – without the friction of big metro crowds.
What follows are five small-town contenders drawing outsized attention this season, each with a distinct holiday signature—and enough off-schedule content (wine country, redwoods, coastline, mountain air) to warrant more than a single photo stop.
Solvang for a California-built “European Christmas Market” atmosphere
Solvang’s appeal is not subtle: every winter, the Danish-founded city recasts itself as one European style Christmas village– a narrative amplified by recent national reporting that positions it as a premier vacation destination in the state.

The backbone is Julefesta series of events lasting over a month stretching from November 28, 2025 to January 4, 2026including a tree lighting weekend, a parade and a schedule designed for repeat visits rather than one-night tourism.
What makes Solvang ‘trend-friendly’ is how neat the experience packages are: lighting + markets + Danish pastries + wine country in a compact city center.
Cambria front Christmas market & light experience

Cambria’s vacation story is built around the Cambria Christmas Marketa Central Coast production that borrows the grammar of traditional European markets –craft vendors, beer garden style food, live music and fire pits-then scales it up with spectacle lighting.
Organizers advertise three million lamps and a seasonal span November 28 to December 31, 2025 (select dates)making it one of the longer-term small-town vacation destinations in the state.
Ferndale for onen iconic lighting of living trees and small town traditionS

Ferndale field is pure Americana: a Victorian village on the north coast where main tradition plays the leading role illumination of a huge living Christmas tree at the end of Main Street – described locally as a decades-old ritual, supported by volunteer firefighters and a citywide turnout.
The Ferndale Chamber’s own materials connect the celebration to a tradition that goes back 1934and recent reporting has even turned claims of the region’s “largest living Christmas tree” into a friendly rivalry – an oddly modern subplot for a city that sells old-world charm.
Nevada City for a historic takeover of the city center

Victorian Christmas in Nevada City succeeds by doubling down on a specific, readable idea: a Gold Rush-era center that has been transformed into a historic street fair. The event is a long-standing regional tradition (dating back to 1978) that has recently been reframed in lifestyle coverage as an intentional destination rather than a local calendar listing.
The run is on the program this year December 7–21, 2025which takes place on certain days and nights, creating the kind of scarcity that drives bookings. The tone is strikingly analogous: roasted chestnuts, mulled wine, wandering artists and a deep bench of artisans.
Nevada City is a strong choice for a “holiday weekend” for travelers who want the atmosphere of a Christmas market without having to commit to a single-ticket attraction—more wandering and less queuing.
Kernville for the holiday feeling a community-led tree lighting story

Kernville’s rise this season is less a marketing campaign than a narrative momentum. A recent news story about the city’s tree-lighting preparations — derailed by stolen decorations and then revived by community donations and a last-minute twist — called Kernville the kind of place where holiday cheer is still practiced as a civic reflex.
The most telling sentence of the story came from Tricia La Belle, a local business owner and organizer, who clearly summarized the call: “Our party is small town kitschy, but it’s really fun.”
How to use these cities as a smarter vacation plan
The common thread is not just lighting, that’s what it is structure. Each city offers an organizing principle (a festival calendar, a market, a tree lighting, a downtown takeover) that turns an otherwise generic December trip into a reportable, repeatable experience.
Whenever possible, go during the week, consider weekends as peak demand, and plan at least one hour off-schedule (coffee, a hike, a winery, a cliff walk) so that the trip feels like more than a single seasonal attraction.
Featured image source: Nevada City Chamber of Commerce






