About Cuchumbo

What a Cuchumbo is

Cuchumbo is, before it is an app, a tradition shared by Honduras and El Salvador: a gift exchange where each person draws a name from a cup and keeps the secret until the agreed day. This app borrows the name and the idea — the draw stays sealed, not even the organizer can see who got who, and players don't need an account.

Top-down view of a worn wooden table: an open notebook with a hand-written gift-exchange list, a pencil, a cup of tea, and three small wrapped gifts beside a sprig of pine.

What exactly is a Cuchumbo?

In Honduras and El Salvador, a Cuchumbo is several things at once. It is a calabash gourd, a small leather cup used to shake dice — and, by extension, the December gift exchange where each person draws a name from a cup. The custom is unhurried and warm. Names go on slips of paper, the Cuchumbo gets shaken, and each person draws one in secret — the secret is the whole point. A wish-list sheet circulates so everybody can drop hints, and over the next week or two small anonymous clues appear. On reveal day, the group gathers in a circle, opens the gifts together, and each person says something kind about whoever they drew. That is what this app does, digitally: the Cuchumbo shakes the names for you, hints replace the circulating sheet, and nobody — not even the organizer — sees the pairs until the agreed date. It works the same at the office closing out the year, at a family dinner, or among friends spread across different cities.