ARTICLES

10 Unique (And Unusual) Mother’s Day Traditions Around the World

From children tying their mothers' feet together to several days' feasts, the ways people choose to honor the women who raised them are as varied as the cultures themselves.

By: THURSD. | 13-04-2026 | 9 min read
Special Days Floral Education Flowers
Different Cultures and Traditions Have Unique Ways of Celebrating Mother’s Day. Here Are Some of Those Cultures and Traditions.

Cards, flowers, and a brunch reservation: that's how much of the Western world marks Mother's Day. But across the world, the picture is far richer, more surprising, and much more moving. From children tying their mothers' feet together in Serbia to three-day feasts in the Ethiopian highlands, the ways people choose to honor the women who raised them are as varied as the cultures themselves. Here is a look at ten distinctive Mother's Day traditions from around the world.

1. France: Medals, Flower-Shaped Cakes, and a Complicated Date

France's Fete des Meres has an unusually political origin. In the aftermath of World War I, alarmed by a dramatically declining birth rate, the French government began awarding medals to mothers of large families, with women who had raised five or more children honored in bronze, silver, or gold. 

 

Mother and daughter holding a bouquet of flowers for Mother's Day in France
Photo by @prostooleh

 

By the time the government officially fixed the holiday's date after World War II, the tradition had softened into something more familiar, featuring family meals, flowers, and a distinctive flower-shaped cake that children present to their mothers. 

The date itself comes with a caveat: it falls on the last Sunday of May, unless that Sunday coincides with Pentecost, in which case it moves to the first Sunday of June. It is a holiday that began with nationalism and wartime anxiety but has settled, over time, into one that is warm.

2. Japan: Art Contests, Carnations, and Egg Dishes

Japan's Haha no Hi falls on the second Sunday of May and is observed with a heartfelt intensity that reflects general Japanese cultural values of reverence and care. Red or pink carnations are the emblematic gift, symbolizing a mother's endurance and sacrifice. 

 

Mother smiling with her two children during a Mother's Day family moment in Japan
Photo by @nihongandocomnanda

 

Families gather for special meals that often feature egg-based dishes such as oyakodon (a chicken and egg rice bowl), chawanmushi (egg custard), and tamagoyaki (rolled omelet), with eggs being a traditional symbol of life and nurturing in Japanese culture. One of the most charming traditions belongs to schoolchildren, who draw portraits of their mothers to enter into art contests. 

The practice dates back to the 1950s, when the best entries were displayed internationally every four years. It is a Mother's Day that asks children not just to buy something, but to make something, look closely at their mothers, and try to capture them on the page.

3. Serbia: Tying Mom’s Feet for Treats

Perhaps the most playfully subversive of all Mother's Day traditions is in Serbia, where the holiday is turned into a three-day family celebration in December, alongside Father's Day and Children's Day, each falling on consecutive Sundays. 

 

Mother with two children and a dog reflecting the playful Materice tradition in Serbia
Materice. Photo by @sladje_od_sladje

 

On Mother's Day (Materice), children sneak into their mother's bedroom early in the morning and tie her feet together with ribbon or rope. She can only earn her freedom by handing out treats or small gifts to her captors. The same fate awaits fathers on Father's Day. 

Then on Children's Day, the tables turn, and kids get their own feet tied until they promise to behave for the year ahead. It is a wonderfully circular tradition that turns the whole concept of gifting on its head, with a dose of humor that binds the family together just as literally as the rope does.

4. Ethiopia: Antrosht, the Three-Day Feast for Mothers

In Ethiopia, there is no single Mother's Day so much as a multi-day celebration called Antrosht, which takes place at the end of the rainy season, typically between October and November. When the skies clear, families travel from across the country back to their homes for a communal feast.

 

Mother with two children, flowers, and the Ethiopian flag representing Antrosht celebrations
Photo by @cchtfederation

 

The preparation itself is a ritual in which daughters bring vegetables, spices, butter, and cheese, while sons supply lamb, bull, or other meats. Together, the family prepares a traditional hash dish, honoring their mother at the center of it all. 

The feast is accompanied by singing, dancing, and the sharing of family stories and heroic tales. It is less a commercial holiday than a cultural homecoming, one that places the mother as the living heart of the family gathering, not so much as the recipient of a gift card.

5. Mexico: 10th May and Mariachi Serenades

Mexico's Dia de las Madres is celebrated on May 10th every single year, not quite on a Sunday or a floating date, but always on May 10th, regardless of what day of the week it falls on. The holiday has been observed since 1922, when journalist Rafael Alducin organized the first celebration in part to honor traditional motherhood as Mexican women began entering the professional world.

 

Red roses and a Mother's Day card symbolizing Dia de las Madres in Mexico
Photo by @la.libertad.avanza.cerrillos

 

Perhaps what makes it truly distinctive is the morning serenade where children, and sometimes entire families, gather outside the bedroom to wake their mothers with song, and those who can afford it hire a mariachi band to perform ‘Las Mananitas,’ a traditional celebration song. 

Schools hold festivals for the entire week leading up to the 10th, with children performing plays, dances, and songs for their mothers. Large family lunches featuring mole, pozole, and enchiladas round out a day that ranks among Mexico's most important holidays of the year.

6. Peru: Honoring the Living and the Dead

Peru marks Mother's Day on the same date as the United States, the second Sunday of May, but the tradition has an element that few Western countries share. Alongside flowers, family lunches, and gifts, many Peruvian families, particularly in the provinces, make their way to cemeteries to honor mothers and maternal relatives who have passed away. 

 

Little girl giving a bouquet to her mother in a Peruvian Mother's Day scene
Photo by @casa_bloom_florals

 

The visits are not somber occasions at all as families bring food, drinks, flowers, and balloons to share at graveside, and vendors have recognized the tradition by setting up stalls outside cemeteries selling flowers, balloons, and signs. 

Historically, children wore a red rose if their mother was alive and a white one if she had passed, a floral code of love and loss that echoes the carnation tradition Anna Jarvis once promoted in the United States. Today, red roses remain among the most popular flower choices for mothers across the country.

7. Thailand: A Royal Birthday and Jasmine Flowers

Thailand's Mother's Day falls on August 12th, the birthday of Queen Sirikit, the Queen Mother, born in 1932. The day has a dual purpose in that it honors the nation's symbolic mother and celebrates all mothers across the country. 

 

Mother and three children with flowers during Thailand's Mother's Day celebration
Photo by @paulataylor

 

Public fireworks displays and candle lighting ceremonies mark the occasion at a national level, while at a more personal level, children present their mothers with white jasmine flowers, chosen for the purity and sweetness that jasmine symbolizes in Thai culture. 

In many schools, a particularly moving ceremony takes place where children kneel before their mothers as a gesture of deep respect and gratitude. It is a tradition that fuses royalist sentiment, Buddhist reverence, and filial love into a single day unlike any other in the world.

8. Nigeria: A Celebration That Happens Three Times a Year

Nigeria's relationship with Mother's Day is unlike almost anywhere else in the world, because Nigerian mothers are frequently celebrated on up to three separate occasions each year. Anglican and many Protestant churches observe Mothering Sunday on the fourth Sunday of Lent, following the British tradition inherited from the country's colonial past. 

 

Woman holding a bouquet of flowers for Mother's Day celebrations in Nigeria
Photo by @omowunmi_dada

 

Catholic congregations mark a separate date tied to the feast of the Annunciation. And many secular families, particularly younger generations influenced by American culture, also celebrate on the second Sunday of May. Church celebrations form the heart of the occasion, with children giving performances, singing the beloved song ‘Sweet Mother,’ and the congregation offering prayers for mothers. 

Families gather afterward for meals of jollof rice, moi moi, and goat meat stew. The Yoruba concept of Iya ni wura (mother is gold) and the Igbo reverence for Nneka (mother is supreme) give the holiday more cultural roots that go beyond any single date on the calendar.

9. Nepal: The Sacred Pond of Mata Tirtha

In Nepal, a centuries-old tradition called Mata Tirtha Aunsi, observed on the new moon day of the Nepali month of Baisakh (typically late April or early May), draws thousands of people to the Mata Tirtha pond on the outskirts of Kathmandu. 

 

Mother and little girl celebrating together for Mata Tirtha Aunsi in Nepal
Photo by @swostifiona

 

According to legend, a young man who came to the pond after his mother's death had a vision of her in the water, and the site became sacred. Those whose mothers are still living visit the pond to offer gifts, flowers, and prayers in their honor. Those whose mothers have passed make a ritual visit to seek a reflection in the water. 

It is perhaps the most spiritually charged Mother's Day tradition in the world, one that does not distinguish the living and the dead, but asks all children to seek out and honor their mothers wherever they may be.

10. Haiti: Three Flowers, Three States of Grief

Haiti's Mother's Day, observed on the last Sunday of May, weaves a moving floral code into its traditions. Much like Peru's red and white rose distinction, Haitians wear a flower to honor their mother, but the Haitian version has three distinct meanings: a red flower if your mother is living, a white flower if she passed away recently, and a lavender flower if she has been gone for many years. 

 

Mother and young daughter in Haiti illustrating the country's floral Mother's Day tradition
Photo by @nadege_inc

 

The celebration includes extended church services filled with prayers and songs honoring the sacrifices of mothers, and the flower worn throughout the day serves as a quiet, visible declaration of a person's relationship to loss and love. It is a tradition that acknowledges, without sentimentality, that grief and gratitude are often the same thing.

The Universal Language of Flowers on Mother’s Day

Whatever form it takes, the thread that runs through almost each of these (and other) cultures is flowers. Roses show love and passion in Norway. Chrysanthemums stand in for carnations in autumnal Australia.

Jasmine represents purity in Thailand. Lily of the Valley is the French preference. In Japan, the color of the carnation carries meaning: red for a living mother, white for one who has passed. And in Haiti, three flower colors mark the full arc of a mother's life and absence.

 

Mother cradling her baby among flowers to represent the universal language of Mother's Day
Photo by @soyfotokids

 

Flowers are the one truly global grammar of this holiday; a language spoken from February in Scandinavia all the way to December in Indonesia, wherever and whenever a child wants to show gratitude to their mother.

 

Featured and header image by prostooleh.

FAQ

Which country has the most unusual Mother's Day tradition?

Serbia is widely considered to have the most unusual Mother's Day tradition in the world. On Materice, children sneak into their mother's bedroom and tie her feet together with ribbon or rope - she can only win her freedom by handing out treats and small gifts. The tradition is part of a three-day family celebration in December that also includes Father's Day and Children's Day on consecutive Sundays.

Which countries celebrate Mother's Day for more than one day?

Several countries celebrate Mother's Day as a multi-day event. Ethiopia's Antrosht is the most notable - a three-day feast held at the end of the rainy season (October–November) involving communal cooking, singing, dancing, and family storytelling. Nigeria celebrates mothers on up to three separate dates each year depending on religious denomination. In Peru, many families extend the occasion across an entire week with meals, outings, and parties.

Why does Mexico always celebrate Mother's Day on May 10th?

Mexico celebrates Mother's Day on May 10th as a fixed calendar date every year - it never moves to a Sunday or floating date. The tradition dates back to 1922, when journalist Rafael Alducin organized the first Dia de las Madres celebration. The fixed date allows schools, communities, and families to plan week-long festivals, mariachi serenades, and large family lunches around a reliable anchor each year.

What flowers are traditionally given on Mother's Day around the world?

Mother's Day flower traditions vary widely around the world. Red and pink carnations are the classic choice in Japan and the United States, symbolizing a mother's endurance. White jasmine is given in Thailand for its association with purity. Lily of the Valley is the French preference. White chrysanthemums are traditional in Australia. Daffodils are popular in the United Kingdom. In Haiti, the color of flower worn - red, white, or lavender - signals whether a person's mother is living, recently passed, or long gone.

Are there Mother's Day traditions that honor deceased mothers?

Yes - several Mother's Day traditions around the world specifically honor deceased mothers. In Peru, families visit cemeteries with food, flowers, and balloons to celebrate mothers who have passed, turning graveside visits into joyful communal gatherings. In Nepal, the ancient Mata Tirtha Aunsi pilgrimage draws thousands to a sacred pond near Kathmandu, where those who have lost their mothers seek a vision of them in the water. In Haiti, wearing a lavender flower signals that a mother has been gone for many years.

When is Mother's Day celebrated in different countries?

Mother's Day dates vary dramatically around the world. The United States, Japan, Peru, and India celebrate on the second Sunday of May. Mexico observes a fixed date of May 10th every year. France marks the last Sunday of May (or first Sunday of June if it falls on Pentecost). Thailand ties its celebration to August 12th, the Queen Mother's birthday. Ethiopia's Antrosht falls between October and November. Serbia celebrates in December. Nepal observes Mata Tirtha Aunsi on the new moon day in late April or early May, and Nigeria celebrates on up to three separate dates depending on religious affiliation.

How is Mother's Day celebrated in Mexico?

Mother's Day in Mexico, known as Dia de las Madres, is celebrated every year on May 10th and ranks among the country's most important holidays. The most distinctive tradition is the morning serenade — children and families gather outside their mother's bedroom to sing, and many hire a mariachi band to perform 'Las Mananitas.' Schools hold festivals the entire week before, with children performing plays, dances, and songs. The day typically ends with a large family lunch featuring traditional dishes like mole, pozole, and enchiladas.

How is Mother's Day celebrated in Japan?

Mother's Day in Japan, called Haha no Hi, is celebrated on the second Sunday of May. The tradition centers on red or pink carnations, which symbolize a mother's endurance and sacrifice. Families gather for special meals that often include egg-based dishes like oyakodon (chicken and egg rice bowl) and tamagoyaki (rolled omelet), since eggs symbolize life and nurturing in Japanese culture. One of the most beloved traditions involves schoolchildren drawing portraits of their mothers to enter into art contests - a practice dating back to the 1950s.

How is Mother's Day celebrated in Thailand?

Thailand celebrates Mother's Day on August 12th, the birthday of Queen Sirikit, the Queen Mother. The day serves a dual purpose - honoring the nation's symbolic mother and celebrating all Thai mothers. Children present their mothers with white jasmine flowers, chosen for the purity and sweetness jasmine represents in Thai culture. At a national level, the occasion is marked with fireworks and candle-lighting ceremonies. In many schools, children kneel before their mothers in a moving ceremony of respect and gratitude rooted in Buddhist tradition.

What is Antrosht in Ethiopia?

Antrosht is Ethiopia's multi-day Mother's Day celebration, held at the end of the rainy season between October and November. When the rains clear, families travel from across the country to gather at their homes for a communal feast. Daughters bring vegetables, spices, butter, and cheese, while sons supply lamb or other meats. Together they prepare a traditional hash dish with the mother at the center of the celebration. The feast is accompanied by singing, dancing, and the sharing of family stories and heroic tales - making Antrosht more of a cultural homecoming than a commercial holiday.

YOU MAY ALSO LIKE

Iris flowers
Celebrating the Beauty of Irises on National Iris Day
Special Days
Apr 16 | 5 min read
Lei Day Celebrations in Hawaii
Lei Day – The Perfect Time to Celebrate the Spirit of Aloha With Hawaiian Flowers
Floral Events Special Days
Apr 16 | 10 min read
Celebrating the Diversity and Beauty of Orchids on National Orchid Day
All About Celebrating Orchid Beauty and Diversity on National Orchid Day
Look out for National Administrative Day
Look Out for National Administrative Professionals’ Day!
Special Days Flowers
Apr 15 | 6 min read
Which Are the Best Flowers Give to Your Mom on Mother’s Day?
Mother’s Day Flowers – Which Flowers Would You Give to Your Mom?
Earth Day
The Importance of Earth Day and Its 2026 Theme – 'Our Power, Our Planet'
Special Days
Apr 13 | 9 min read
four phones with a thursd page open

Can't get enough?

Subscribe to the newsletter, and get bedazzled with awesome flower & plant updates

Sign up