Update: This story was revised on Dec. 8, 2023, to add more attractions.
He鈥檚 a mean one, that Mr. Grinch, and he鈥檚 the star of this season鈥檚 鈥淚ce!鈥 exhibit at the Gaylord Texan. See him and other characters from Dr. Seuss鈥 How the Grinch Stole Christmas! carved in ice now through Dec. 31. It鈥檚 enough to make your heart grow three sizes. Other heartwarming destinations around Dallas-Fort Worth include 础诲诲颈蝉辞苍鈥檚 free walkable Vitruvian Lights exhibit and the Dallas Arboretum鈥檚 鈥12 Days of Christmas鈥 gazebos and European market-inspired Christmas Village.
Here鈥檚 where to find a display to make you feel merry and bright.
Check individual websites for safety policies, schedule changes and other updates, and visit for more holiday highlights.
FREE - The trees, fences and bridge in Irving鈥檚 Centennial Park will dazzle with 60,000 lights, including a lit walkway to keep the path visible after dark. Other nearby displays include lights at Whistlestop Plaza and the clock tower, at Heritage Park and along Main Street.
Through Dec. 26, nightly from dusk (about 6) to 10 at Centennial Park, 444 W. Second St., Irving. Free admission. .

FREE - More than 180,000 lights blink to 10 holiday songs in downtown Frisco. Visitors can drive through and tune their radios to 107.3 FM for the soundtrack. For those who鈥檇 like to walk through the display, music will play on speakers throughout the square. This year鈥檚 display includes a color-changing canopy and thousands of feet of roof-edge lighting. The event also features the Skate the Square outdoor ice rink ($20 per person, including skate rental, through Jan. 8), carriage rides ($15 per person), Santa visits ($15-$30) and light tunnel visits ($6 per person).
Through Jan. 6, nightly from 6 to 10 at Frisco Square, Main Street and Coleman Boulevard, Frisco. Free admission; some attractions require a fee. .
FREE - The special events plaza at this Richardson shopping center has half a million lights, an 18-foot-tall Christmas tree, strands of lights draped between buildings and moving lights in the living trees. Special events include Dec. 9鈥檚 Merry Market with Etsy-style vendors and crafts for kids.
Through Jan. 5 at CityLine Plaza, 1150 State St., Richardson. Free admission. .
FREE - Illuminated trees and buildings and a light show set to music on 99.9 FM are presented nightly outside the Central Fire Station.
Through Jan. 7, Sundays through Thursdays from 5:30 to 10:30 p.m. and Fridays and Saturdays from 5:30 to 10:50 p.m. at the Central Fire Station, 4900 Blair Oaks Drive, The Colony. Free admission. .
Walk through the zoo鈥檚 display of more than 2 million lights, including 60 larger-than-life animal-shaped lanterns and new lights in the 鈥淒estination: Dinosaurs鈥 exhibit. There will also be a light show programmed to holiday music, visits to Santa鈥檚 Village in the Lacerte Family Children鈥檚 Zoo with free photos with Santa, nightly musical performances in the Grove, photo ops, an illuminated art show, crafts, animal keeper chats and rides on the carousel and mini-train. Special events include Sensory Friendly Night on Nov. 27 ($15-$19) and Dallas Zoo After Dark, an adults-only night, on Nov. 30 ($34 for those 21 and older).
Through Jan. 2 from 5:30 to 10 on select nights at the Dallas Zoo, 650 S. R.L. Thornton Freeway, Dallas. $19-$22 for ages 12-64, $15-$18 for children 3-11 and seniors 65 and older, free for children 2 and under. Parking is $12. .
FREE - Towering in the middle of a skating rink at Galleria Dallas stands what is described as America鈥檚 tallest indoor Christmas tree, sparkling with 200,000 new programmable LED lights and more than 15,000 new ornaments and topped with a new 10-foot LED star. Starting Nov. 24, the tree鈥檚 daily Illumination Celebration light shows will be set to music (at noon, 2 p.m., 4 p.m. and 6 p.m.). There will be two Grand Tree Lighting events this year. On Nov. 24 and 25 at noon, see an ice skating show performed around the tree featuring Olympic skaters and Missile Toes, the ice-skating Santa, and a fireworks finale. Family festivities are scheduled throughout the season, including Slappy鈥檚 Playhouse Holiday Circus, Storytime With Mrs. Claus and performances by more than 70 local groups.
The tree is up through Jan. 7 at Galleria Dallas, 13350 Dallas Parkway. See the website for a schedule. Free. .
Texas Motor Speedway turns into a winter wonderland for this annual drive-through attraction, which stretches 2 miles and features millions of LED lights. The show is not programmed to music, and Santa鈥檚 Village will not be open this year.
Through Jan. 7, starting daily at 6 p.m. and closing at 9 or 10 p.m. depending on the day, at Texas Motor Speedway, 3545 Lone Star Circle, Fort Worth. $35 per car or truck, $60 for larger vehicles. .

The Dallas Arboretum鈥檚 highlight of the season is the 鈥12 Days of Christmas鈥 holiday exhibit, which features a dozen elaborate outdoor vignettes depicting scenes from the classic Christmas carol of the same name. Attend during daylight hours or go after dark, when the gardens will be illuminated by 1 million lights. Holiday at the Arboretum also includes the Dazzling Musical Tree, a 50-foot-tall tree playing holiday tunes and featuring more than 42,000 lights, and the Christmas Village with its 23-foot-tall wooden Christmas pyramid. Special programming throughout the season includes Santa visits on select dates, two vendor markets and the DeGolyer House exhibit 鈥淐hristmas Classics,鈥 featuring Santas, angels, Nativities and a new collection of about 600 nutcrackers.
Through Jan. 5 at the Dallas Arboretum, 8525 Garland Road, Dallas. Open daily from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., plus select days from 6 to 10 p.m. Closed Christmas and New Year鈥檚 Day. Daytime admission: $20 for adults, $16 for seniors 65 and up, $12 for children 2-12, free for children younger than 2. Entrance to the Rory Meyers Children鈥檚 Adventure Garden is $3 extra. $15 for parking or $11 if bought online in advance. Nighttime admission: $15-$35 for adults, $15-$18 for seniors 65 and up, $13-$15 for children 2-12, free for children younger than 2. Parking is included with nighttime admission. .
The holiday spirit comes to Six Flags Over Texas as the park offers seasonal fun such as Santa Claus lighting the 70-foot-tall Christmas tree every night, story time with Mrs. Claus, Victorian carolers, festive train rides, light and ornament displays such as Gingerbread Lane and Candy Cane Forest, and the new Christmas haunted attraction called Krampus鈥 Holiday House of Horrors. The park will also offer seasonal performances, s鈥檓ores and other treats for sale and, of course, lots of rides.
Through Dec. 31 on select days at Six Flags Over Texas, 2201 Road to Six Flags, Arlington. $45-$90, free for kids 2 and younger. Upgrades available on the website. Parking is $40-$50. .
FREE Take a stroll down Hawk Avenue between North Richland Hills Library and NRH Centre to enjoy thousands of twinkling lights, the city鈥檚 46-foot-tall Christmas tree and other holiday scenery.
Nightly through Jan. 1 beginning around 5:30 at NRH Centre, 6000 Hawk Ave., North Richland Hills. Free admission. .
FREE - The PGA Frisco development, which includes golf courses, restaurants, shops and a hotel, will host a holiday attraction for children with reindeer, a longhorn, costumed characters, a train, balloon artists, an ornament craft to take home, golf games, holiday movies and photos with Santa. Add-ons include building stuffed animals and s鈥檓ores kits. On Dec. 1, the guys from Dude Perfect will light the 35-foot-tall Christmas tree, which will feature lights synced to holiday music. The district鈥檚 grounds are decorated with 35 Christmas trees and miles of garland and lights.
Through Dec. 23, on Fridays and Saturdays from 5 to 9 p.m. at PGA Frisco, 3255 PGA Parkway, Frisco. Valet available on-site. .

The Gaylord Texan鈥檚 annual holiday celebration includes 2 million lights decorating its atriums, a 54-foot Christmas tree with a light show set to holiday music, a large skating rink with real ice, an eight-lane snow tubing hill and a Christmas carousel. The event鈥檚 centerpiece, the 鈥淚ce!鈥 exhibit of sculptures hand-carved from about 2 million pounds of ice, features scenes based on Dr. Seuss鈥 How the Grinch Stole Christmas!, plus festive holiday scenes and six two-story ice slides. Lone Star Christmas also includes photos with Santa, holiday dining, Cirque: Spirit of Christmas shows and gingerbread decorating.
Through Dec. 31 at the Gaylord Texan, 1501 Gaylord Trail, Grapevine. Viewing the atrium decorations is free; prices for other activities vary. Some tickets are timed, and some prices vary by date. 鈥淚ce!鈥 tickets start at $28.99 for ages 12 and older, $19.99 for ages 4-11. Free for children 3 and younger. Parking is $25-$40, $45 for valet. .
FREE Drive through this Oak Cliff park to see a 26-foot-tall lit Christmas tree, live trees decked out in strings of white lights and holiday light displays. Park to walk through and take photos amid the scenery. The display will be lit Dec. 9 during the .
Dec. 9-Jan. 1, Sundays through Thursdays from 5:30 to 9 p.m., Fridays and Saturdays from 5:30 to 10 p.m. at Kiest Park, 3080 S. Hampton Road, Dallas. Free admission. .
THE LIGHT PARK
This drive-through holiday light display has returned to a parking lot and added a second location . Both locations are open daily through Jan. 1 and feature millions of lights synced to Christmas music.
Through Jan. 1, nightly starting at 5:30 and closing at 10 or 11 depending on the day at Six Flags Hurricane Harbor, 1800 E. Lamar Blvd., Arlington, and Riders Field, 7300 Rough Riders Trail, Frisco. $29-$49 per personal vehicle (no buses, limos or trailers allowed). Fast passes and season passes available. .
This outdoor display at Plano鈥檚 Heritage Farmstead Museum will include more than a million lights along a quarter-mile trail with a 20-foot-tall Christmas tree and animated displays. Paid amenities will include visits with Santa ($10) and concessions such as hot cocoa and make-your-own s鈥檓ores.
Through Dec. 30, Fridays and Sundays from 6 to 8 p.m. and Saturdays from 5 to 9 p.m. at Heritage Farmstead Museum, 1900 W. 15th St., Plano. Also open Dec. 14, 21 and 28 from 6 to 10 p.m. Closed Christmas Eve. $12-$15 for adults, $5-$10 for seniors 65 and older, $7-$10 for children 3-12, free for children 2 and younger. .

The Fort Worth Botanic Garden will again host the internationally touring light display, which has been redesigned for this season. Lightscape will feature new light-based art installations, sounds and activities along a 1.2-mile walking trail. The display will include tunnels of lights to walk through, sculptures and scenes in the gardens along the pathway. The new Christmas Village will include photos with Santa on certain nights, music, fire pits and concessions such as s鈥檓ores and hot cocoa.
Through Jan. 1 on select days from 5:30 to 10 p.m. at the Fort Worth Botanic Garden, 3220 Botanic Garden Blvd., Fort Worth. Last admission at 8:30 p.m. Closing an hour early Dec. 24 and 31. $23-$30 for adults, $15-$20 for ages 3-12, free for ages 2 and under. On-site parking is $20 in advance; off-site parking is $15 at the event. Anytime passes are $50 and include on-site parking. .
FREE - The Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth and its tree-dotted grounds will be illuminated throughout the holiday season and the Fort Worth Stock Show and Rodeo. The museum closes before dark most days, but it鈥檚 open Fridays until 8 p.m. Gallery admission is free all day on Fridays. And there will be First Friday at the Modern events on Jan. 5 and Feb. 2.
Through Feb. 4, nightly from 5 to midnight at the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, 3200 Darnell St., Fort Worth. Free to view the lights. .
FREE - Enjoy the shopping center鈥檚 antique Candy Santa and his reindeer made from pecans flying high and other holiday hallmarks such as live Santa Claus visits through Dec. 24, Scrooge Puppet Theatre, the Twelve Days of Christmas Clock and puppet show The Tale of the Yeti鈥檚 Christmas Spaghetti. Other upcoming events include performances by local arts groups, a Dec. 15 screening of Wonka as part of the Movies With a Mission series at AMC NorthPark 15, Camp Gingerbread (Dec. 9) and the Gingertown Dallas display of gingerbread houses, which will be on view through Jan. 1. The paid exhibit 鈥淭he Trains at NorthPark鈥 is open through Jan. 5.
NorthPark Center is at 8687 N. Central Expressway, Dallas. Free admission; some activities require a fee. .
The Hilton Anatole鈥檚 new indoor Christmas experience for families will feature Santa鈥檚 Workshop with a sleigh photo op; the North Pole Shoppes, including the Toyland Marionette Theater and Life Size Snow Globe; and Immersive Adventure, which has 20 activity rooms such as North Pole Mail Room, Elf Academy, Cookie Factory, Reindeer Stables and Candy Cane Lane. While you鈥檙e at the Anatole, check out the new holiday light show in the 10-story Grand Atrium.
Dec. 8-30 on select days at the Hilton Anatole, 2201 N. Stemmons Freeway, Dallas. $49 for adults, $39 for children 3-17, free for children younger than 3. VIP passes are $79-$159. .
Four million lights twinkle along a 2-mile path at this drive-through holiday attraction, which will offer new displays in shapes of all kinds. Halfway through the drive, stop at the Holiday Village to enjoy photos with Santa, the Walk-Thru Forest, carnival rides, concessions, shopping and more. The grand finale is a redesigned tunnel of lights.
Through Dec. 31, nightly from 6 to 10 at Lynn Creek Park, 5610 Lake Ridge Parkway, Grand Prairie. Admission starts at $50 per car. Fast passes start at $149. .
This Christmas lights drive-through is about a mile long with 2 million lights set to holiday songs on the radio. Optional VIP amenities include fast pass, hot cocoa, popcorn and magic light glasses.
Through Dec. 30, nightly starting at 6 and closing at 9 or 10 depending on the day, at the Parker County Sheriff鈥檚 Posse Rodeo Grounds, 2251 Mineral Wells Highway, Weatherford. $29.95-$49.95 per personal vehicle (no buses, limos or trailers allowed). .
Families can visit Galleria Dallas鈥 Santa Claus in Santaland, which starts with a simulated train ride and scenic walk to Santa鈥檚 cabin, where he鈥檒l be ready to hear wishes and pose for photos. Then visitors are transported back to the Galleria 鈥 unless they also bought tickets to Snowday, a holiday-themed display for photo-taking fun. In that case, they take a shortcut to Snowday鈥檚 collection of rooms and other spaces filled with festive photo backdrops. A handful have lights and cameras triggered by scanning a wristband, with photos then sent by email.
Santaland is open daily through Dec. 24, and Snowday is open daily through Jan. 7 at Galleria Dallas, 13350 Dallas Parkway, on Level 1 adjacent to Banana Republic. Closed Thanksgiving and Christmas Day. See the website for a schedule. Santaland admission is $21.99 for children 12 and younger, $14.99 for ages 13-64, $9.99 for ages 65 and older. Snowday admission is $34.99 for ages 13-64, $31.99 for ages 65 and older, $19.99 for ages 4-12, free for ages 3 and younger. There is a 15% discount for combo packages and discounted admission Tuesdays through Dec. 12. .
Located north of Fort Worth, this drive-through attraction is a mile long and includes 2 million lights synced to holiday music, a 50-foot-tall tree, a 25-foot-tall gingerbread house, a 16-foot-tall snowflake and six tunnels.
Through Dec. 31, nightly starting at 5:30 at 12452 Willow Springs Road, Haslet. $34-$49 per vehicle depending on the day and time. .

This model train exhibit has stopped at a new station at NorthPark Center. The new location is on the first floor in the Macy鈥檚 Court near Santa鈥檚 hangout. The new layout still includes elaborate scenes with more than 600 rail cars and 1,600 feet of track. See the trains pass cityscapes of New York and Washington, D.C., national landmarks such as the Grand Canyon and San Francisco鈥檚 Golden Gate Bridge, the iconic Route 66 and the fall foliage of New England, and Dallas attractions such as Reunion Tower, NorthPark Center, and Fair Park with Big Tex, the Cotton Bowl and the Texas Star Ferris wheel.
Through Jan. 5 on Level 1 next to Macy鈥檚 at NorthPark Center, 8687 N. Central Expressway, Dallas. Mondays through Saturdays from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m., Sundays from noon to 6 p.m. Holiday hours vary; closed Nov. 23 and Dec. 25. $10 for adults, $5 for children 2-12 and seniors 65 and up, free for children younger than 2. .
FREE - Visit this Uptown park to see the white Christmas lights decorating Arlington Hall鈥檚 columns and roofline and nearby trees.
Through Feb. 1 at 3333 Turtle Creek Blvd., Dallas. Free admission..
FREE - Stroll through Vitruvian Park鈥檚 12 acres to see more than 550 illuminated trees wrapped in 1.5 million sparkling LED lights. The large number of single-color trees gives this display a modern flair. The park鈥檚 trail goes by water that reflects the brightly glowing trees, creating additional pizazz.
Through Jan. 1, nightly from 5 to 11 at 3966 Vitruvian Way, Addison. Free admission. Parking is $15 cash at the Bella Lane and Ponte Avenue parking lots and Alfred J. Loos Sports Complex. .
The is a partnership between 四虎影院 and The Dallas Morning News.
Shannon Sutlief writes about fun things to do in Dallas-Fort Worth for The Dallas Morning News.