Family cuchumbo

A cuchumbo for the whole family, in one link

Family exchanges run differently than office ones — more generations, more locations, a wider budget spread. A tool that handles all three lets a relative in Buenos Aires draw a cousin in Rome without anyone opening a spreadsheet.

A stack of small wrapped gifts in mixed papers (kraft, green, patterned) on a worn dining table, with family members blurred in the background sharing a candlelit meal.

The hard part of a family cuchumbo is rarely the draw — it is the tooling. Someone ends up running a spreadsheet, a couple of in-laws refuse to sign up for yet another app, and by mid-November three people have dropped out from sheer friction. A link-based tool solves it: one invitation, no participant accounts, the same sealed-draw mechanic that powers an office cuchumbo but tuned for a multi-generation roster. Different countries, different first languages, a wider age range, the cousin who types with two fingers — the tool absorbs all of it and stays out of the way.

Four reasons family draws work on Cuchumbo

  1. No account, no app — just a link

    Your aunt does not want to create yet another account. She should not have to. A single invitation link, tapped once, joins her to the draw — same as the fifteen-year-old cousin. No password to forget, no email to confirm, no app to download. The cousin who used to keep the family spreadsheet open in three browser tabs every December finally gets to retire from logistics.

  2. Fourteen languages in one exchange

    The Italian grandmother sees the exchange in Italian, the American grandson sees it in English, the Dutch uncle in Dutch. One draw, one roster, each participant in their own language. The reminders, the hints page, the draw-ready notice and the personal page — all fourteen locales, automatically. No translator-aunt, no half-translated automated email confusing half the cousins.

  3. A budget that covers the family gap

    Set one number the whole family can meet — often modest — and make it clear that handmade gifts and hand-me-down gifts count. The fifteen-euro nephew and the sixty-year-old uncle play the same game. A clear cap pushes the older relatives down to where the teenagers actually are, instead of one side overspending while the other apologises.

  4. Kids can participate with an adult

    Young children can participate with an adult helping them use the invitation, contact email and personal page. The adult sees the child’s match, supports the shopping and keeps the logistics moving, while the child still chooses the gift within the family rules. The secret remains meaningful without making a young child manage the admin alone.

Two tips for a family draw that sticks

Draw early — late November for a Christmas reveal gives international shipping room, customs slack, and mailbox surprises. And encourage hints — the hints feature is what makes a cross-continent gift feel personal instead of generic. A nephew listing his favourite tea, a grandmother listing the puzzle brand she loves: those small, specific notes are what stop the remote relative from defaulting to a gift card.

Shake the family exchange now

Cuchumbo can support parallel family exchanges: one draw for children, another for adults. Use separate invitations for each roster, and let adults help children join with a reachable contact email when needed. Free, no participant account, assignments hidden from the organizer.

See also