Glossary · Wichteln

Wichteln Varianten — the German gift-exchange traditions

Wichteln is not one game — it is a family of them. Classic Wichteln resembles Secret Santa, but the variants that carry real weight in German offices and households are different games entirely. Here are the four that matter.

The word Wichteln comes from Wichtel, the small household spirit of German folklore. The classic draw runs like Secret Santa, but the popular office variants — Schrottwichteln, Schokowichteln, Räuberwichteln — each change the rules enough to be their own tradition. The variant a German office picks signals more about the office than about the season: a buttoned-up firm runs the classic draw, a creative agency picks the chaotic dice game, a school keeps it to chocolate. Each variant is a different bargain between order and mischief, and reading the room before picking is half the work.

Four variants, four rule sets

  1. Klassisches Wichteln — the Secret Santa variant

    A sealed draw assigns each participant a giftee in secret. Budgets are set, gifts are wrapped, the exchange happens at a shared event. This is the version closest to international office Secret Santa and the one Cuchumbo handles natively, complete with German-localised reminders, hints and the sealed-draw promise.

  2. Schrottwichteln — the white elephant variant

    Everyone brings something from home they no longer want — the "Schrott" in the name literally means junk. Gifts are drawn from a pile or traded through a dice game, exactly like the Yankee Swap played in North American offices. The joy is in the absurd — a half-used candle, a mystery novel read five times, a novelty mug.

  3. Schokowichteln — the chocolate variant

    Every gift is chocolate. The budget stays low, the variance stays low, and the whole exchange becomes a tasting. Common in schools and informal offices where a broader gift exchange feels heavy. The cap is usually 5 to 10 euros, and the focus is on quality of confectioner over quantity of bars.

  4. Wichteln mit Würfeln — the dice variant

    Participants bring wrapped gifts and sit in a circle. Dice are passed and certain rolls trigger moves — take a gift, swap with a neighbor, open yours. A game replaces the draw entirely. Chaotic, playful, best with a cohesive group, and the rules — like a Sinterklaas surprise — reward the group that already knows each other well enough to laugh together.

How to pick the right variant

For classical offices — klassisches Wichteln. For a casual year-end with a lot of old stuff lying around — Schrottwichteln. For a school or kids' group — Schokowichteln. For a group that likes games — Würfelwichteln. The rules set the tone; pick the variant that matches the room. And whichever one you pick, agree on the variant in writing before the draw — half of all Wichteln misfires come from one half of the team thinking it is classical and the other half having brought something from the bottom of a drawer.

Klassisches Wichteln, digital

Cuchumbo handles classical Wichteln with a sealed draw and localised German strings. Create an exchange, share the invite, shake the Cuchumbo.

See also