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10 of Best Places to Hide Christmas Gifts Where Your Family Will Never Find Them

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There is a scene in National Lampoons Christmas Vacation that has never sat well with me (yes, just the one). Clark Griswold sneaks up to the attic to hide a bag full of Christmas presents, only to discover an old, dust-covered Mother’s Day gift dated 1983 hidden in the very same secret spot. (Given that the movie was released in 1989, that doesn’t make the forgotten gift quite as old as it sounds today.) The implication is that Clark had hidden it away and then forgotten it pretty quickly, but that always felt like a stretch of logic to me. He forgot where he hid the gift at the time, yet is drawn right back to the very same, admittedly clever, gift-hiding nook several years later? It’s not a coincidence—he goes straight for the spot!

Regardless, if you’re anything like Clark (and aren’t we all at least a little bit like Clark?), you, too, are about to be in the thick of gift-purchasing—and gift-hiding—season. But as you tip-toe through your own home, don’t be tempted by the easiest—and thus most obvious—hiding spots. Your partner knows what all those bags stashed in the back of the closet are, and your kids are going to peek under your bed the second you take your eyes off of them. Let this year be the year you baffle them all by hiding their gifts in places they’d never even think to suspect.

Holiday storage bins

Even if your basement or attic has not an inch of storage space to spare, there should be at least a couple of available bins lying around once you muster up the energy to decorate your home for the holidays this year. Nobody thinks to rummage through the holiday storage bins for anything once the decorations are out and on display, so stick ’em in a dark corner once you’re done pulling out all the lights, and fill ‘em with gifts.

The Christmas tree box

Likewise, if you happen to have a fake Christmas tree box that isn’t all torn apart on one side due to years of trying to get a stupid tree back into a goddam box that was clearly never large enough for it in the first place, then you’ve got another perfect stash-away spot to complement your storage-bin trick. This would never work for me, personally, given the state of my Christmas tree box, but I hope it is an option for you.

Stacks of empty shipping boxes

If you don’t muster up the energy to decorate for the holidays this year, and thus your red and green bins are still full to the brim, you’ve got other options: Hide your gifts in (nearly) plain sight—in that stack of empty Amazon boxes you almost certainly have somewhere in your house. If you don’t have a stack of those—and kudos on that—maybe you’ve got some sturdy moving boxes you hung onto after your last move that you didn’t want to part with but aren’t serving much of a purpose between moves.

Mislabeled (or half-full) storage bins

Similarly, if you have stacks of storage bins in varying sizes, shapes, and colors in your basement or attic, chances are that some of them have a little storage room to spare. Have a bin that’s only half-full of spare blankets or sentimental baby clothes you know no one will go looking for? That’s empty space that has finally found a greater purpose.

Suitcases

Assuming you don’t actually need said suitcases for holiday travel, this is another spot that is easy for a gift-snooper to overlook—particularly if they’re tucked away in a rarely traversed part of the home, such as a basement, attic, or garage.

Coolers

Similar to suitcases, those coolers you use but a few times a year can double as gift-hiders during the holiday months. Stash away the gifts in a cooler, stack another storage box on top of it, and your family will be none-the-wiser.

The spare tire well of your trunk

I’m not a huge fan of hiding the gifts in the open part of the trunk—mostly because I drive an SUV in which you can see into the trunk from the back seat, rendering it a terrible hiding place. But even if my trunk was enclosed, I’d be worried that I’d slip up one day, forget about the gifts, and open the trunk directly in front of my son. The spare tire well, though? Nobody’s going looking in there, especially if you’ve got plenty of other random items—reusable bags, blankets, jumper cables, and the like—junking up the space.

Under your kid’s bed

I admit this one feels a little risky, but I also think it’s kind of genius. When is the last time your child even attempted to make sense of the abyss under their bed? Exactly. When concealed properly, this may be the best hiding spot of all. This is particularly good if you store their out-of-season clothing in bins under their bed—no child, tween, or teen is going rooting through last summer’s shorts and bathing suits in search of presents. You know your child best, though, so proceed with caution on this one.

The creepiest spot in your home

Do you know where my son would never find a gift? In the dark, narrow tool closet in my creepy, circa-1925 basement, that’s where. You have to step down into it, people, like it’s the basement’s basement. Sure, you may not have a spooky, 100-year-old nook that served God-knows-what original purpose, but you probably have an equivalent area: an attic crawl space, a cluttered shed, the corner of the basement where the most house centipedes live (I kid). Wherever the others in your home have no desire to venture, is the perfect place to seal and store away their presents.

Someone else’s house

You know who doesn’t care what your spouse is getting for Christmas? The neighbor’s teenage kids, that’s who. Do a little gift-stash-swap to hide your presents away in another home entirely—be it that of a friend, neighbor, or relative—and hide theirs in your home. Be up front with everyone that they can go snooping if they want, but they’re only going to discover what Uncle Dave bought for Aunt Jeni.

Source: LifeHacker.com