March Trivia Questions and Answers

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Get Ready for the Best March Trivia Questions

March trivia is the secret weapon for any gathering that needs a little extra spark. Whether you’re planning a March party, hosting a family game night, or just looking for something fun to do with a group, a solid round of trivia turns any occasion into a proper event. This month has more going for it than people realize. Spring arrivals, Irish celebrations, basketball madness, and some genuinely surprising history all packed into 31 days.

These March trivia questions are sorted into fun categories so you can run a full trivia night or just dip into a round or two. Questions range from easy warm-ups to head-scratchers, so everyone gets a moment to shine.

Grab your teams, pour the drinks, and let’s get into it!

daffodils in spring

March Trivia Questions About Spring and the Season

Q: What is the name of the astronomical event that marks the official start of spring?

The vernal equinox. It typically falls on March 20th or 21st in the Northern Hemisphere, marking the point when day and night are approximately equal in length. It’s a satisfying opener that catches more people off guard than you’d expect.

Q: What does the saying “in like a lion, out like a lamb” refer to?

March weather. The phrase describes how March often starts with wild, stormy conditions and ends with milder, calmer weather as spring settles in. It’s been used for centuries and still holds up as a pretty accurate description of the month.

Q: Which vegetables can be planted directly in the garden during March in most temperate climates?

Peas, lettuce, and radishes are the classic answers. They’re cold-hardy enough to go in the ground before the last frost, making March the official start of growing season for keen gardeners. Great question for a mixed group because everyone has a different level of garden knowledge.

Q: When does daylight saving time typically begin in the United States?

The second Sunday in March. Clocks spring forward one hour, giving everyone that glorious extra evening light but robbing them of an hour’s sleep. This one usually gets a groan of recognition from the whole room.

St. Patrick’s Day March Trivia Questions

Q: On what date is St. Patrick’s Day celebrated?

March 17th. It marks the traditional death date of St. Patrick, the patron saint of Ireland. If you’re running St Patrick’s Day party games, weaving in a trivia round about the man himself always goes down well.

Q: Who was St. Patrick and why is he celebrated?

St. Patrick was a missionary who brought Christianity to Ireland in the 5th century. He was actually born in Roman Britain, not Ireland, which surprises most people. He’s celebrated as the patron saint of Ireland and the holiday has grown into a global celebration of Irish culture.

Q: Which city dyes its river green every year for St. Patrick’s Day?

Chicago. The Chicago River has been dyed green every St. Patrick’s Day since 1962, and it’s become one of the most iconic St. Patrick’s Day traditions in the world. A reliable stumper for people who haven’t seen the photos.

green river in Chicago for St Patrick's Day

Q: What is the significance of the shamrock on St. Patrick’s Day?

According to tradition, St. Patrick used the three-leaf shamrock to explain the concept of the Holy Trinity to the Irish people. It became a national symbol of Ireland and is now synonymous with the holiday. Worth bonus points if anyone can explain all three leaves correctly.

Historical March Trivia Questions

Q: What is the Ides of March and when does it fall?

The Ides of March falls on March 15th and is famously associated with the assassination of Julius Caesar in 44 BC. Shakespeare immortalized it in his play with the line “Beware the Ides of March.” It’s one of those historical moments that most people know but can’t always place exactly.

Q: Which famous scientist was born on March 14th, also known as Pi Day?

Albert Einstein. Born on March 14, 1879, his birthday coinciding with Pi Day (3.14) feels almost too perfect. This one gets a satisfying reaction from the crowd every time.

Q: On what date did Alexander Graham Bell make the first successful telephone call, and what year?

March 10, 1876. Bell called his assistant Thomas Watson with the now-famous words “Mr. Watson, come here, I want to see you.” A great question for history buffs and a nice change of pace from the seasonal questions.

first telephone invented by Alexander Graham bell

Q: Which children’s author and illustrator was born on March 2nd, celebrated annually with Read Across America Day?

Dr. Seuss (Theodor Seuss Geisel). His March 2nd birthday is marked by Read Across America Day, a national celebration of reading. A crowd-pleaser that works especially well if you have kids or teachers in the group. Pairs nicely with classroom party games if you’re running this with a school group.

March Madness and Sports Trivia Questions

Q: How many college teams compete in the NCAA Basketball Tournament, also known as March Madness?

68 teams. The tournament begins in March and runs through to the championship game in early April. Even people who don’t follow basketball tend to get swept up in bracket predictions, which makes this a universally relatable category.

Q: What are the two leagues associated with MLB spring training, and which states host them?

The Grapefruit League in Florida and the Cactus League in Arizona. Teams head to these warm-weather states throughout March to prepare for the upcoming season. Baseball fans will nail this one; everyone else will have a great time guessing.

Q: What is March Madness officially known as?

The NCAA Division I Men’s Basketball Tournament. The nickname “March Madness” actually predates the college tournament and was originally used for Illinois high school basketball in the 1930s before being adopted nationally. That origin story makes for a brilliant bonus question.

Fun Facts March Trivia Questions

Q: What is the birthstone for March?

Aquamarine. The beautiful blue-green stone is associated with courage and serenity. March also has a secondary birthstone, bloodstone, for those who want a follow-up question to keep the round going.

aquamarine birth stone

Q: What are the two zodiac signs that fall in March?

Pisces (until around March 20th) and Aries (from around March 21st onwards). Astrology questions are reliably popular in trivia because everyone knows their own sign and loves debating the details.

Q: Which Hindu festival of colors often falls in March?

Holi. It celebrates the arrival of spring and the victory of good over evil, and is known for the joyful throwing of colored powders. A wonderful question for adding some global variety to your family game night trivia rounds.

Q: Which country celebrates its New Year, known as Nowruz, around March 20th?

Iran (and many other Persian and Central Asian cultures). Nowruz means “New Day” in Persian and coincides with the spring equinox. It’s one of the oldest celebrations in the world, dating back over 3,000 years.

Tips for Running Your March Trivia Night

1. Mix your difficulty levels: Start with easier questions to get everyone warmed up and confident, then ramp up the challenge. Nobody wants to feel left out in the first round.

2. Organize into themed rounds: Running questions in category blocks (spring facts, St. Patrick’s Day, history, sports) helps players anticipate what’s coming and builds momentum between rounds.

3. Use a points system with bonuses: Award standard points for correct answers and offer bonus points for extra details (like naming all three zodiac leaf meanings or the exact year of an event). It rewards the trivia nerds in the room.

4. Allow team huddles: Give teams 20 to 30 seconds to discuss before locking in an answer. The conversations that happen during those seconds are often the funniest part of the night.

5. Have tiebreaker questions ready: March trivia enthusiasm tends to run hot. Keep five or six extra questions in your back pocket for sudden-death rounds or photo finishes. These printable party games for adults work perfectly alongside a trivia night for a fuller event.

6. Print the questions out: Reading from your phone mid-round breaks the flow. Print your question sheet, hand answer sheets to teams, and keep the energy high. It also means you can run multiple tables at once if you have a bigger group.

7. Celebrate great wrong answers: Sometimes the confidently wrong answer is more entertaining than the right one. Acknowledge the effort, keep it fun, and remember that a great trivia night is about the laughs as much as the scores.

March trivia brings together the best parts of the month in one go. Spring arrivals, Irish history, basketball drama, and some genuinely surprising facts make it one of the most enjoyable trivia themes of the year. Whether you’re running a full spring party or just adding a quick round to your next get-together, these questions will keep everyone entertained from the first question to the last tiebreaker. So print out your sheets, divide into teams, and let the March trivia magic begin!

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