 Trick or Treating. Trick or Treating is a Halloween ritual custom for children and adults in many countries. Children in costumes travel from house to house, asking for treats with the phrase Trick or Treat. The treat is usually some form of candy, although in some cultures money is used instead. The trick refers to a threat, usually idle, to perform mischief on the homeowners or their property if no treat is given. Trick or Treating usually occurs on the evening of October 31. Some homeowners signal that they are willing to hand out treats by putting up Halloween decorations outside their doors. Houses simply leave treats available on their porches for the children to take freely. The North America trick or treating has been a Halloween tradition since the late 1920s. In Britain and Ireland the tradition of going house to house collecting food at Halloween goes back at least as far as the 16th century, has had the tradition of people wearing costumes at Halloween. In 19th century Britain and Ireland, there are many accounts of people going house to house in costume at Halloween, reciting verses in exchange for food, and sometimes warning of misfortune if they were not welcomed. The Scottish Halloween custom of guising children disguised in costume going from house to house for food or money too, is first recorded in North America in 1911 in Ontario, Canada.3 While going house to housing costume has remained popular among scouts and Irish, the custom of saying trick or treat has only recently become common. The activity is prevalent in the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom. The Republic of Ireland, Puerto Rico, and Northwestern and Central Mexico. In the latter, this practice is called Colovarita Spanish for sugar scope and instead of trick or treat the children ask me the a mile colovarita. Can you give me my sugar scope? Puerto Colovarita is a small scope made of sugar or chocolate.