A visitor who arrives in the Netherlands in November and says "Secret Santa" will often be corrected. What the Dutch celebrate on pakjesavond is Sinterklaas, not a Christmas exchange — and the rules, the date, the written element and the cultural weight are all distinct.
Four points of difference
The date — 5 December vs 24–25 December
Sinterklaas happens on the evening of 5 December — pakjesavond, "package evening". Christmas Secret Santa, when the Dutch run it, happens at a separate event on 24 or 25 December. They are two events, not one with two names.
The draw mechanic — lots vs sealed
Sinterklaas among adults is often drawn by hand from a hat weeks in advance — called trekken. Christmas Secret Santa runs with the standard sealed mechanic. The Sinterklaas draw tolerates being a little less secret, since the celebration that follows is more elaborate.
The poem — the crucial Dutch element
A Sinterklaas gift comes with a rhyming poem, often a few stanzas long, teasing the recipient gently and accompanying a "surprise" — a crafted wrapping that disguises the present inside another object. The poem is as important as the gift itself.
The tone — affectionate mockery
The Sinterklaas poem is allowed to tease. It pokes at habits, hobbies, recent embarrassments. The recipient is expected to laugh at themselves. Christmas Secret Santa, being more international, tends to stay on the warmer side.
Which tradition are you running?
If it is November and the gift goes with a rhyming poem, you are running Sinterklaas — choose a theme that accommodates a poem, block an evening for pakjesavond, remember that surprises matter. If it is December and the gift is delivered on Christmas morning, you are running Secret Santa — the rules are the familiar ones.
Run either tradition in one app
Cuchumbo ships a Sinterklaas theme alongside the standard mode — pick it at creation and the player page picks up a poem prompt and the Sinterklaas accent palette. The draw and reminder schedule are the same as for any other Cuchumbo. Free, no account, Dutch fully supported.