Hallmark Christmas in July 2026 Movies Schedule Revealed

If you thought you had to wait until December for twinkle lights, small-town romance, and emotionally significant mugs of cocoa, think again. Hallmark is cranking up the snow machines in the middle of a heatwave with its annual Christmas in July event.

The 2026 lineup might be its most deliciously predictable yet. Four brand-new original movies, stacked across four consecutive Saturday nights, promise cabin renovations, endangered Christmas markets, swoony ski lodge inspections, and second-chance romance under aggressively well-placed mistletoe.

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In other words, summer just got a whole lot frostier.

Hallmark Christmas in July 2026 Is Serving Snow With a Side of Swoon

Every Saturday night at 8/7c throughout July, Hallmark Channel is premiering a brand-new holiday film. While the rest of us are debating SPF levels and grill techniques, Hallmark is asking us to emotionally invest in wreath placement and the structural integrity of charming inns.

This year’s slate features four original movies and a roster of familiar, fan-favorite faces. Expect to see Jessica Lowndes, Daniel Lissing, Katherine Barrell, Stephen Huszar, Vanessa Lengies, Marcus Rosner, Jen Lilley, and Nick Bateman bringing peak cozy energy to your air-conditioned living room.

July 4: A Cabin Renovation With Romantic Complications

Premiering Saturday, July 4, the first film drops us into extremely Hallmark territory. Jessica Lowndes stars as Chelsea, a reality TV host renovating a cozy New Hampshire cabin for her hit show, Renovation Romance.

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The twist—because there’s always a twist—is that the cabin’s owner is charming, handsome, and single. Daniel Lissing plays Cooper, the man who turns a straightforward renovation into an emotional remodel.

What starts as a project involving rustic beams and probably way too many throw pillows quickly turns into something warmer. There will be meaningful glances near fireplaces and snow falling at the exact right moment.

Honestly, the cabin becomes less about square footage and more about matters of the heart.

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Expect:

  • Festive décor montages
  • A misunderstanding that briefly threatens everything
  • A grand romantic realization just in time

Saving Christmas, One Small Town at a Time

If there’s one thing Hallmark gets, it’s that Christmas is always under threat from a developer with big plans and questionable priorities. The July 11 premiere leans right into that formula.

This time, though, it’s not only about saving a building. It’s about protecting a community tradition that basically runs on hot cider and collective nostalgia.

July 11: The Christmas Market That Almost Wasn’t

Katherine Barrell stars as an artist determined to rescue her town’s cherished Christmas market before a developer changes everything. Enter Stephen Huszar as an architect tangled up in the deal, which complicates things in the most romantically inconvenient way possible.

The stakes feel cozy but urgent. Garland must be hung, town meetings must be dramatically attended, and feelings must be wrestled with.

As sparks fly between the artist and the architect, the film plays with that classic Hallmark tension: can love bloom when professional loyalties collide? Or will ambition ice over something that could have been magical?

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Translation: there will be at least one scene where someone reconsiders their life choices while standing in softly falling snow.

A Ski Lodge, A Clipboard, And A Very Inconvenient Attraction

By July 18, Hallmark leans fully into winter fantasy with a story set at a picturesque ski lodge. It’s the kind of place where the snow is pristine, the décor is timeless, and the owner looks suspiciously like a former model.

This installment pairs workplace evaluation with romantic temptation, a Hallmark combination as reliable as sleigh bells.

July 18: When Business Gets Personal on the Slopes

Vanessa Lengies plays Cassidy Evergreen, which honestly feels like the most holiday-coded name in cinematic history. She’s a hotel manager sent to assess a cozy ski lodge and determine its future.

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The job is supposed to be straightforward and professional. Then she meets Trey Sanderson, played by Marcus Rosner, the lodge’s charming owner.

Suddenly, objectivity gets a little fuzzy. The lodge transforms from a business asset into a living, breathing space filled with history, heart, and undeniable chemistry.

Cassidy’s checklist starts to blur as she wonders what matters more: corporate expectations or personal connection.

Add snow-covered pines and strategic eye contact, and you’ve got a mid-July blizzard of feelings.

Second Chances Wrapped in Mistletoe

The final premiere on July 25 brings out one of Hallmark’s most beloved tropes: the high school reunion romance. Because here, first love never really clocks out.

Old memories show up. Regrets soften. And somehow, mistletoe keeps appearing at exactly the right moment.

July 25: Rekindling an Old Flame for a Good Cause

Jen Lilley and Nick Bateman star as Grace and Ryan, two former high school connections reunited to revive a struggling charity fundraiser. The event alone is enough to stir nostalgia, but working side by side reignites something deeper.

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The town rallies. Decorations multiply. The fundraiser becomes symbolic of something much larger: unfinished emotional business.

Watching two people confront who they were and who they’ve become is comfort television at its finest. Especially when it involves:

  • Accidental run-ins that feel anything but accidental
  • Lingering looks across decorated rooms
  • Mistletoe that seems suspiciously well positioned

By the time the credits roll, you can bet more than just the fundraiser has been revived.

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Why Christmas in July Works Every Single Time

On paper, watching holiday romances while cicadas hum outside sounds mildly unhinged.

In practice, it’s escapism at its most efficient.

Christmas in July offers:

  • Predictable comfort in an unpredictable world
  • Low-stakes conflict that resolves beautifully
  • Scenery that feels like a vacation from summer chaos

There’s something oddly satisfying about cranking up the air conditioner, dimming the lights, and letting fake snow pull you into a softer, easier place.

Hallmark movies promise warmth without risk, romance without cynicism, and resolutions that show up right on cue.

This year’s lineup? It’s got renovation fantasies, community-saving quests, workplace tension that somehow turns romantic, and those rekindled love stories that just won’t quit.

While everyone else is mapping out beach trips, maybe you’re plotting Saturday nights around fictional ski lodges and Christmas markets.

No judgment here. Honestly, that might be the smartest way to spend July.

If Hallmark has taught us anything, it’s that magic doesn’t bother with the calendar.

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Sometimes it drops by in the middle of summer, wearing a great sweater and holding a cup of cocoa, just because it can.

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