Seasonal & Holidays

GA City Ranks Among Nation's Best To Celebrate Halloween

A major tourist town in Georgia landed in the top 100 on WalletHub's latest Halloween ranking.

A Georgia town is among the best to celebrate Halloween in the U.S.
A Georgia town is among the best to celebrate Halloween in the U.S. (Rachel Nunes/Patch)

GEORGIA — As the spooky season creeps into the Peach State, a Georgia city may make a great addition to your schedule as it was named among the best places to celebrate the traditionally scary holiday.

Personal-finance website WalletHub released on Oct. 22 its 2024 Best Cities for Halloween, with Atlanta ranking 58th in the top 100. No other Georgia towns made the list.

The cities on the best list were scored out of 100 points based on their rankings in the following categories: trick-or-treater friendliness, Halloween fun and Halloween weather.

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With a total score of 44.89, Atlanta ranked as follows:

  • Trick-or-treater friendliness: 93
  • Halloween fun: 7
  • Halloween weather: 62

Atlanta is tied for the most costume stores per capita in the U.S.

Find out what's happening in Atlantafor free with the latest updates from Patch.

“Halloween holds a big place in American popular culture, and we collectively spend billions of dollars celebrating every year," WalletHub analyst Chip Lupo said in a news release. "At the same time, it’s also a holiday that comes with a certain amount of risk, given that children visit strangers’ houses in the dark. The best cities for Halloween are those that provide the safest conditions for celebrating, along with an abundance of activities, Halloween-related stores and good weather.”

Here are the top 10 best places to celebrate Halloween:

  1. New York, New York
  2. Jersey City, New Jersey
  3. Miami, Florida
  4. Las Vegas, Nevada
  5. Chicago, Illinois
  6. Los Angeles, California
  7. Washington, D.C.
  8. Anaheim, California
  9. Boston, Massachusetts
  10. Gilbert, Arizona

Halloween is traditionally observed on Oct. 31 and was established by the ancient Celtic festival of Samhain. Festival-goers would spark bonfires and don costumes to ward off ghosts, according to the History Channel.

The annual holiday was originally deemed All Hallows Eve and later became known as Halloween - which was observed as a marker for summer's end and "the beginning of the dark, cold winter, a time of year that was often associated with human death," the History Channel stated.

Pope Gregory III, during the 18th century, proclaimed the day after Halloween as All Saints Day as a way to honor all saints.

"Celts believed that on the night before the new year, the boundary between the worlds of the living and the dead became blurred. On the night of Oct. 31, they celebrated Samhain, when it was believed that the ghosts of the dead returned to earth," the History Channel stated.

In the U.S., Halloween largely gained popularity in the South, specifically in Maryland.

Since its inception, the Celtic holiday has been Americanized, and celebrations include gatherings, trick-or-treating, costume-wearing and the carving of jack-o-lanterns.

According to the History Channel, Halloween is the second-largest commercial holiday after Christmas nationwide. Roughly $6 billion is spent yearly during Halloween in the U.S.

>> See WalletHub's full report here.

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