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Americans say these will be the most popular Halloween costumes

Black Panther and Donald Trump will be popular Halloween costumes this year, say Americans

Between the creative costumes and the festive parties, it’s no wonder that Halloween is a popular holiday among Americans. Over one-third (37%) of Americans say that Halloween is one of their favorite holidays, and 22% plan to celebrate by wearing a costume this year, according to new data from YouGov Omnibus. Millennials (37%) are more likely than Gen X (23%) and significantly more likely than Baby Boomers (6%) to plan on dressing up. Parents of children under 18 years old (35%) are about twice as likely as those without young children (17%) to say they plan on dressing up.

When asked what they thought the most popular fictional character costumes would be this year, the top responses among Americans were: Black Panther (13%), Wonder Woman (10%), and Fortnite skins (9%). By a wide margin, the celebrity costume Americans think will be most popular is Donald Trump (35%), followed distantly by Cardi B (5%), Stormy Daniels (4%) and Meghan Markle (4%).

Of those who may dress up on Halloween, about a quarter (24%) say that the look they’re going for is “creative.” Other popular answers were “unique” (21%), “funny” (14%), “scary” (11%), and “sexy” (9%). Women were considerably more likely than men to say they wanted their costumes to be “creative” (29% of women and 19% of men) or sexy (15% of women and 1% of men); Men were about twice as likely to say they wanted their costume to be scary (15% of men and 8% of women).

The question of cultural appropriation and Halloween costumes tends to become a focus around the holiday every year. Several colleges have previously issued guidelines on appropriate costumes and cultural sensitivity. However, 47% of Americans disagree with the idea that it is offensive to dress up in a cultural costume (i.e., Native American headdress, geisha robes, Mexican sombrero) if the wearer is not a part of that culture. One-quarter (25%) agreed, saying that it is offensive to do so, and 22% said they neither agree nor disagree with the statement.

Millennials were more likely (34%) than Gen X’ers (23%) and baby boomers (19%) to say wearing these costumes is offensive. However, a larger number (37%) of millennials say that it is not offensive.

About half (48%) of Americans say that Halloween costumes are mostly for children, while 32% disagree. People 55 and older were especially likely (62%) to agree that Halloween costumes are for children, while 18-34-year olds were particularly likely (46%) to disagree with the statement.

See full results here.

Learn more about YouGov Omnibus.

Image: Getty

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Larita Shotwell

Update: 2024-06-12