Archive December 13, 2025

Christmas supermarket hours 2025 – Aldi, Tesco, Asda, Sainsbury’s and M&S

Major supermarkets including Tesco, Aldi, Asda, Sainsbury’s and M&S will have altered opening hours over Christmas and New Year

If you’re planning to stock up for the festive season and New Year’s Day, it’s crucial to keep tabs on your local supermarket’s opening and closing times. The holiday period often sees supermarkets bustling with last-minute Christmas shoppers.

Moreover, as the New Year rings in, January sales start to appear, drawing crowds eager for discounted deals on a range of items. This rush can lead to changes in operating hours, potentially disrupting your shopping plans.

Since opening hours can differ from store to store, here’s a handy guide to the opening and closing times of all major UK supermarkets during the festive season.

Aldi

Aldi has confirmed many of its stores will have varying opening times across the Christmas period. Despite this, it has confirmed that stores will remain open and closed on these date:

When Aldi will be closed

  • Thursday, December 25
  • Friday, December 26
  • Thursday, January 1

Many Aldi branches will open their doors on Christmas Eve from 7am to 6pm, and on New Year’s Eve from 8am to 6pm, although these times may vary. You can check your local Aldi’s opening and closing times across the Christmas period on the supermarket’s store finder here.

Asda

Numerous Asda outlets will stay open on Christmas Eve from 5am to 7pm, and on Boxing Day from 9am to 6pm. For the New Year period, some stores will operate from 7am to 7pm on New Year’s Eve and 9am to 6pm on New Year’s Day.

However, this will likely vary from store to store, so it’s worth checking your local Asda’s opening and closing times on its store finder here.

Co-op

The Co-op has confirmed that many of its stores may operate on reduced hours during bank holidays, including Christmas and New Year’s Day. The opening and closing times of some Co-op supermarkets may differ from those of their convenience store counterparts.

For instance, certain Co-op supermarkets will be shutting up shop early at 7pm on Christmas Eve, while convenience stores could open their doors as early as 6am and close them at 8pm. Although all stores will remain closed on Christmas Day, many are expected to operate between 10am and 7pm on Boxing Day.

As for New Year’s Eve and New Year’s Day, most stores will likely close early at 7pm. More details can be found on the Co-op store finder here.

Lidl

Lidl has confirmed the following opening and closing hours for its stores across the festive period:

  • Saturday, December 20 – from 7am to 10pm
  • Sunday, December 21 – from 1pm to 6pm
  • Monday, December 22 – from 7am to 10pm
  • Tuesday, December 23 – from 7am to 10pm
  • Wednesday, December 24 – from 7amm to 10pm
  • Friday, December 25 – closed
  • Saturday, December 26 – closed
  • Wednesday, December 31 – from 8am to 6pm
  • Thursday, January 1 – closed

Full details for your local Lidl can be found on the store finder here.

Tesco

Shoppers can expect many Tesco stores to fling open their doors early at 6am and shut up shop by 7pm, while Tesco Express branches might extend their trading hours from 7am until 10pm. On Christmas Day, all stores will be taking a break, but Boxing Day will see most Tesco supermarkets back in action from 9am to 6pm, with Tesco Express locations typically operating from 9am to 7pm.

On New Year’s Eve, most Tesco stores will kick off at 6am and wrap up earlier than usual at 7pm, while Tesco Express outlets may trade between 7am and 10pm. On New Year’s Day, Tesco stores will mostly operate 9am to 6pm, with Tesco Express branches likely to open slightly longer, from 8am to 10pm.

Full details for your local store can be found on the Tesco store finder here.

M&S

Many M&S stores are expected to trim their opening hours over the festive period. On Christmas Eve, branches will mostly open from 6am and close at 7pm.

On Christmas Day and Boxing Day, most stores are expected to remain closed.

New Year’s will also affect M&S’ opening hours with most stores opening at 8am before closing early at 7pm. All M&S branches will then remain closed throughout New Year’s Day.

Further details can be found on the M&S store finder here.

Morrisons

On Christmas Eve, Morrisons’ opening times will vary by location, though the vast majority of branches are set to trade between 6am and 6pm. All stores will remain closed on Christmas Day, before reopening on Boxing Day, when most locations will operate from 9am until 6pm.

Trading hours for the New Year will be slightly reduced at Morrisons. Stores are set to open from 7am to 7pm on New Year’s Eve, and most will revert to a 9am to 6pm schedule on New Year’s Day.

Further details for your local branch can be found on the Morrisons store finder here.

Sainsbury’s

Sainsbury’s will alter many of its opening and closing times on Christmas Eve, with most stores expected to open from 6am to 7pm. Convenience stores may stay open a bit longer, from 6am to 9pm.

All Sainsbury’s stores will be closed on Christmas Day. Boxing day will see most supermarkets open from 9am to 6pm, while convenience stores typically operate from 9am to 9pm.

On New Year’s Eve, larger Sainsbury’s stores are expected to open from 10am to 7pm, with convenience stores potentially operating from 6am to 9pm. On New Year’s Day, larger Sainsbury’s stores are due to run from 8am to 8pm, with convenience stores generally opening between 9am and 9pm.

Further details for your local branch can be found via Sainsbury’s store finder here.

Waitrose

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Waitrose has confirmed that only some stores at Welcome Break Service stations will maintain their usual trading times on Christmas Day. However, most Waitrose locations will be closed on Boxing Day, with only a small number remaining open for Uber Eats, Deliveroo, and Just Eat orders.

Russia damages Turkish-owned vessels in attack on Ukrainian ports

Russian forces have attacked two Ukrainian ports, damaging three Turkish-owned vessels, including a ship carrying food supplies, according to Ukrainian officials and a shipowner.

Friday’s attacks by Russian forces targeted Chornomorsk and Odesa ports in Ukraine’s southwestern Odesa region on the Black Sea. A Ukrainian navy spokesperson told the Reuters news agency that three Turkish-owned vessels were damaged in total, but did not provide additional details.

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Posting video footage on social media of firefighters tackling a blaze on board what he described as a “civilian vessel” in Chornomorsk, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said the Russian attacks “had no … military purpose whatsoever”.

“This proves once again that Russians not only fail to take the current opportunity for diplomacy seriously enough, but also continue the war precisely to destroy normal life in Ukraine,” Zelenskyy said.

“It is crucial that … the world maintains the proper moral compass: who is dragging out this war and who is working to end it with peace, who is using ballistic missiles against civilian life, and who is striking the targets that influence the functioning of Russia’s war machine,” he said.

Zelenskyy did not name the vessel, but it was identified as the Panama-flagged and Turkish-owned Cenk T by Reuters, which matched cranes and buildings to satellite imagery of Chornomorsk port.

The ship’s owners, Cenk Shipping, confirmed it was attacked at about 4pm local time (14:00 GMT). There were no casualties among the crew, and damage to the ship was limited, it added.

An employee of a private company was also injured in a separate attack on Odesa port, where a cargo loader was also damaged, Ukraine’s Deputy Prime Minister Oleksii Kuleba confirmed.

He added that Russia had used drones and ballistic missiles in the port strikes, which were “aimed at civilian logistics and commercial shipping”.

Ukraine’s three large Black Sea ports in the Odesa region are a key economic artery for Kyiv.

Late on Friday, Turkiye’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs confirmed the vessel had been attacked in Chornomorsk port. It added that there were no reports of injured Turkish citizens.

The ministry said in a statement that the attack “validates our previously stated concerns regarding the spread of the ongoing war in the region to the Black Sea, and its impact on maritime security and freedom of navigation”.

“We reiterate the need for an arrangement whereby, in order to prevent escalation in the Black Sea, attacks targeting navigational safety as well as the parties’ energy and port infrastructure are suspended,” it added.

Hours earlier, in talks with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Turkmenistan’s capital of Ashgabat, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan called for calm in the Black Sea and suggested that a limited ceasefire for energy facilities and ports could be beneficial for regional security.

Turkiye, which has the longest Black Sea coastline at approximately 1,329km (826 miles), has grown increasingly alarmed at the escalating attacks in its back yard and has offered to mediate between Kyiv and Moscow.

The attacks come just days after Putin promised retaliation and threatened to cut “Ukraine off from the sea” for Kyiv’s maritime drone attacks on Moscow’s “shadow fleet” – unmarked tankers thought to be used to circumvent oil sanctions – in the Black Sea.

Staggering amount Apprentice star Luisa Zissman allegedly spent flying her horses to Dubai

Apprentice 2013 runner up Luisa Zissman announced this week she is relocating to the UAE with her family and beloved horses after growing tired of the UK’s weather and escalating crime

A former Apprentice star has revealed her five horses have landed safely in Dubai after she is thought to have paid a staggering amount to fly them there.

Apprentice 2013 runner up Luisa Zissman announced this week she is relocating to the UAE with her family after growing tired of the UK’s weather and escalating crime. The 38-year-old will be leaving behind her multi-million pound Grade II-listed Hertfordshire home which she and Andrew bought shortly after their 2015 wedding.

Luisa previously explained that her eldest daughter, 15 year-old Dixie who she shares with her ex-husband Oliver Zissman, will remain in the UK and finish her education at her boarding school. But her other children and four-legged friends will be making the move to Dubai.

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Sharing an update on social media last week, Luisa told fans that five of her horses were ready to fly out as part of the ‘big relocation to Dubai for us all’. And on Friday, she revealed that her horses Cherry, Champ, Clemmie, Oreo and Jupi had landed safely.

It is estimated that Luisa would have paid around £25,000 to fly all of our horses to her new home. For some other people who have transported their horses from the UK to Dubai, they have revealed on forums that it costs around £5,000 per horse to make the trip.

But depending on routes taken, the company and airline chosen, and whether your horse is in a private or shared stalls on the plane – it can cost as much as £25,000 for one single animal, according to MailOnline.

Before the flight, Luisa shared a video of her horses being walked into shared metal stalls which were then closed and driven over to the aircraft to be moved onto the plane. “Bon voyage my babies have a safe flight – see you in the sunshine. I love you,” she wrote.

Sharing an update after the flight took off, she wrote: “And they are off. Taken on there on to the plane. I have to say after all the stress of the build up, this was so easy, smooth and professional. Feel very happy and they will be well looked after.”

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After a smooth flight they have now landed in Dubai and Luisa shared the following update with her fans: “One of the grooms that was flying with some other horses yesterday took videos of a few of my babies coming off the plan and I am so happy! Because I don’t really know how they are, I haven’t seen a picture of them yet.”

She added: “I’ve managed to arrange via the friend who I booked the horses to travel with through, a vet to go and give them all a drip today to rehydrate them after travelling and make sure they’re okay and manage to deliver some food there.”

Cambodia claims Thailand still bombing hours after Trump ceasefire call

BREAKING,

Cambodia has accused Thailand of continuing to drop bombs in its territory hours after United States President Donald Trump said Bangkok and Phnom Penh had agreed to stop fighting.

“On December 13, 2025, the Thai military used two F-16 fighter jets to drop seven bombs” on a number of targets, the Cambodian Defence Ministry said in a post on social media on Saturday.

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“Thai forces have not stopped the bombing yet and are still continuing the bombing,” the ministry said, listing aerial attacks on hotel buildings and bridges earlier in the morning.

Local news outlet Khmer Times cited the Cambodian Ministry of Information as saying that two hotels were bombed in the Thmor Da area of Pursat province, on the border with Thailand. The news outlet published a series of photos showing badly bombed hotel and casino buildings.

The reports of continued bombing follow after President Trump said that Thailand and Cambodia had agreed “to cease all shooting” on Friday.

“I had a very good conversation this morning with the Prime Minister of Thailand, Anutin Charnvirakul, and the Prime Minister of Cambodia, Hun Manet, concerning the very unfortunate reawakening of their long-running War,” Trump said on his Truth Social platform on Friday.

“They have agreed to CEASE all shooting effective this evening, and go back to the original Peace Accord made with me, and them, with the help of the Great Prime Minister of Malaysia, Anwar Ibrahim,” Trump said.

With Thailand’s attacks reportedly ongoing against Cambodia, the current outbreak of violence between the two Southeast Asian neighbours has now entered a sixth day.

The latest cross-border clashes, which broke out on Monday, have so far killed at least 20 civilians and soldiers in both countries and left some 200 more wounded.

Russia-Ukraine war: List of key events, day 1,388

Here’s where things stand on Saturday, December 13:

Fighting

  • Ukrainian forces said they had retaken parts of the northeastern town of Kupiansk and encircled Russian troops there, as President Volodymyr Zelenskyy visited the area and praised the operation, saying it strengthened Ukraine diplomatically.
  • In a video clip, President Zelenskyy, wearing a bulletproof vest, is seen standing in front of a sign bearing the town’s name at the entrance to Kupiansk. “Today it is extremely important to achieve results on the front lines so that Ukraine can achieve results in diplomacy,” he said.
  • Ukrainian drones struck two Russian oil rigs in the Caspian Sea, an official in the Security Service of Ukraine (SBU) said. The SBU drones hit the Filanovsky and Korchagin oil rigs, which both belong to Russia’s Lukoil. The Filanovsky rig – part of Russia’s largest Caspian oilfield – came under attack earlier this week as Ukraine steps up its campaign to disrupt Russian oil and gas output.
  • Ukraine said it conducted an operation alongside a local resistance movement to hit two Russian ships transporting weapons and military equipment in the Caspian Sea. They did not specify when the strike took place.
  • Ukraine’s military also said it attacked a major Russian oil refinery in Yaroslavl, northeast of Moscow, and industry sources said the facility had suspended output.
  • Russia attacked Ukraine’s Chornomorsk and Odesa ports, damaging three Turkish-owned vessels, including a civilian ship carrying food supplies, Ukrainian officials said.
  • Moscow previously threatened to cut “Ukraine off from the sea” in retaliation for Kyiv’s maritime drone attacks on its “shadow fleet” tankers thought to be used to export oil.
  • Russia also attacked energy facilities in the southern Ukrainian Odesa region overnight, causing fires and leaving several settlements in the region without electricity, the local governor and emergency service said.
  • Russia’s Ministry of Defence said it had destroyed 90 Ukrainian drones over the country and the Black Sea overnight.
  • Moscow’s Sheremetyevo airport said it suspended departures amid the overnight drone attacks, while in the city of Tver, 181km (112 miles) northwest of Moscow, authorities said seven people were injured.

Peace deal

  • Turkiye has called for an urgent end to the war in Ukraine after Turkish-owned vessels were damaged in an attack on Ukraine’s Chornomorsk port by Russia, saying the incident underscored risks to Black Sea maritime security.
  • Ankara called for an arrangement to suspend attacks targeting navigation safety, energy and port infrastructure “to prevent escalation”.
  • Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan also met with Russian President Vladimir Putin, telling him that a limited ceasefire around energy facilities and ports in particular could be beneficial.
  • Ukrainian, European and United States national security advisers met and discussed coordination of their positions on proposals for a settlement to the conflict in Ukraine, the head of the Ukrainian negotiating team, Rustem Umerov, said.
  • Ukraine’s Prime Minister Yulia Svyrydenko said the meeting was attended from the US side by Jared Kushner and Steve Witkoff, as well as World Bank chief Ajay Banga and BlackRock CEO Larry Fink.
  • President Donald Trump said a US-proposed free economic zone in the Ukraine-controlled parts of the eastern Donbas would work after Washington suggested creating such an economic zone as a compromise between Ukraine and Russia.
  • Ukraine, the US and European powers are still working to find a joint position that would outline the contours of a peace deal, including security guarantees for Kyiv, in a ceasefire deal that “American negotiators are willing to bring to the Russians”, a French presidency official said.
  • Kremlin foreign policy aide Yury Ushakov said a ceasefire is only possible after Ukrainian forces withdraw from the entire Donbas region, and the area Kyiv currently controls is taken over by the Russian National Guard.
  • “If not by negotiation, then by military means, this territory will come under the full control of the Russian Federation. Everything else will depend entirely on that,” Ushakov said.

Sanctions

  • The European Union agreed to indefinitely freeze 210 billion euros ($246bn) worth of Russian sovereign assets held in Europe, removing a big obstacle to using the cash to help Ukraine defend itself against Russia. The agreement removes the risk that Hungary and Slovakia, which have better relations with Moscow than other EU states, could refuse to roll over the freeze at some point and force the EU to return the money to Russia.
  • Russia’s central bank said the EU plans to use its assets to support Ukraine were illegal and it reserved the right to employ all available means to protect its interests.
  • The bank said separately it was suing Brussels-based financial institution Euroclear – which holds many of the assets – in a Moscow court over what it said were damaging and “illegal” actions.
  • In advance of the vote to freeze the funds, Hungary lodged a protest against what it called an “unlawful” step by the EU to hold Russian assets indefinitely. Prime Minister Viktor Orban said the decision would “cause irreparable damage to the Union”.
  • “Hungary protests the decision and will do its best to restore a lawful situation,” Orban said.

International affairs

  • North Korean leader Kim Jong Un attended a welcoming ceremony for the 528th Regiment of Engineers of the Korean People’s Army that returned home after carrying out duties in Russia, praising the officers and soldiers for their “heroic” conduct and “mass heroism” during a 120-day overseas deployment.
  • Berlin has summoned Russia’s ambassador over what it said was a huge increase in threatening hybrid activities, including disinformation campaigns, espionage, cyberattacks and attempted sabotage. “[We] made it clear that we are monitoring Russia’s actions very closely and will take action against them,” Germany’s Federal Foreign Office spokesperson Martin Giese said.

New York Times reporter pitched Epstein interview on ‘your terms’

A New York Times reporter told Jeffrey Epstein that he could write an article that would define the financier on his own terms as he faced allegations of sexually abusing minors in the months leading up to his 2008 conviction, newly uncovered emails reveal.

After a negative article about Epstein was published in September 2007, then-New York Times journalist Landon Thomas Jr advised Epstein to “get ahead” of more bad publicity by doing an interview that would define the story “on your terms”.

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“I Just read the Post. Now the floodgates will open — you can expect Vanity Fair and NYMag to pile on,” Thomas wrote to Epstein in an email dated September 20, 2007, referring to the magazines Vanity Fair and New York Magazine.

“My view is that the quicker you get out ahead of this and define the story and who you are on your terms in the NYT, the better it will be for you.”

Thomas, who left the Times in 2019, urged Epstein to quickly do an interview to prevent the “popular tabloid perception” about him from hardening, and expressed sympathy over his legal troubles.

“I know this is tough and hard for you, but remember jail may [be] bad, but it is not forever,” Thomas wrote.

As part of his pitch to Epstein, Thomas recalled a 2002 profile he wrote about the financier for New York Magazine, titled Jeffrey Epstein: International Moneyman of Mystery.

Written before Epstein’s first arrest in 2006, the profile portrayed the financier as an enigmatic but highly successful businessman with the appearance of a “taller, younger Ralph Lauren” and a “relentless brain that challenges Nobel Prize-winning scientists”.

The piece contained glowing appraisals from Epstein’s many high-profile associates, whose praise-filled descriptions included that he was “very smart”, “amazing”, “extraordinary”, and “talented”.

“Remember how for a while my NY Mag piece was the defining piece on you? That is no longer the case after all this,” Thomas wrote to Epstein.

“But I think if we did a piece for the Times, with the documents and evidence that you mention, plus you speaking for the record, we can again have a story that becomes the last public word on Jeffrey Epstein.”

Jeffrey Epstein is pictured for the New York State Sex Offender Registry on March 28, 2017 [File: New York State Sex Offender Registry via AP]

A little more than a week later, on September 28, Thomas sent Epstein an email reiterating the importance of “getting out ahead” of other publications.

Thomas suggested that he begin reaching out to associates of Epstein who could talk about the financier’s business activities and scientific and philanthropic work, including former Harvard President Larry Summers and Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak.

“Before I get a glimpse of the legal material, I was thinking that I should at least start calling around to people who know you. Again to focus on the business and scientific/philanthropic aspect of the piece,” Thomas wrote.

“Could I start to do that — call people like Larry Summers, Jess Staley, George Mitchell, Ehud Barak, Bill Richardson and others?” Thomas finished the email expressing his hope that Epstein was “holding up okay” and stating his view that “we need to move on this.”

It is not clear how Epstein responded to Thomas’s emails, which were included in a trove of emails from Epstein’s personal accounts that were made available to Al Jazeera by the whistleblower website Distributed Denial of Secrets.

Thomas did not respond to a request for comment.

Following Thomas’s correspondence with Epstein, the Times went on to publish an article by the journalist detailing the financier’s downfall the following year.

The article, published a day after Epstein’s guilty plea on June 30, 2008, drew from in-person and phone interviews that Thomas had conducted with the financier, including during a visit to Epstein’s island of Little St James several months earlier.

In the article, Thomas described the financier sitting on the patio of his island mansion as he likened himself to the eponymous character of the satirical novel Gulliver’s Travels.

“Gulliver’s playfulness had unintended consequences,” Epstein was quoted as saying.

“That is what happens with wealth. There are unexpected burdens as well as benefits.”

LSJ
Little St James, a small private island formerly owned by the late financier Jeffrey Epstein, is pictured in the US Virgin Islands on November 29, 2025 [File: Marco Bello/Reuters]

A 2019 report by NPR said colleagues of Thomas at the Times had been “appalled” by the article when they reviewed it years later, following the journalist’s admission that he had solicited a $30,000 donation from Epstein for a cultural centre.

The emails obtained by Al Jazeera also show that Epstein emailed an error-strewn Word document to himself in which Thomas is described discussing the legal case against Epstein with then-Florida prosecutor David Weinstein.

The purpose and origin of the document, which describes Thomas and Weinstein discussing technical aspects of the charges facing Epstein, is unclear. Weinstein said he spoke to Thomas in January 2008, but that the document did not contain an accurate description of their conversation.

Weinstein said they had spoken about the “criminal justice process and general state and federal statutes”, but not Epstein’s case specifically.

He said he did not know where the information in the document came from or who provided it to Epstein.

“I never spoke with him about the specific facts of the late Mr Epstein’s case, nor did I offer any opinion about that matter,” Weinstein told Al Jazeera.

The emergence of the emails between Thomas and Epstein comes after correspondence the two men shared from 2015 to 2018 came to light last month in a batch of documents released by US lawmakers.

Among other revelations, those emails showed that Thomas let Epstein know that the late investigative journalist John Connolly had contacted him for information for Connolly’s 2016 book Filthy Rich: The Jeffrey Epstein Story.

“He seems very interested in your relationship with the news media,” Thomas wrote to Epstein in an email dated June 1, 2016. “I told him you were a hell of a guy :)”.