Chief executive Dave Lewis said the better Christmas was due to lower prices and more staff in stores.
Shares in the UK's largest supermarket jumped more than 7% on the news.
But
Tesco reported a 1.5% fall in sales for the 13 weeks ending 28 November
after scrapping its "£5 off £40" promotion held in 2014.
Mr Lewis said in a statement:
"Our Christmas performance was strong... There is plenty more to do,
but we are making progress and are trading in line with profit
expectations for the full year."
Tesco shares jumped almost 5% to 166p, after today's trading update.
The figures follow sales updates this week from Morrisons and Sainsbury's that were received positively by investors.
Price cuts
Tesco's total group sales, on a like-for-like basis, also rose over the six week Christmas period, increasing 2.1% on the same period last year.
However, group sales for the quarter were down 0.5%.
Mr
Lewis said international sales were improving. "We continued our strong
positive sales momentum in both Europe and Asia, with our Thai business
reaching its highest ever market share."
Since taking over as
Tesco chief in September 2014, Mr Lewis has put Tesco's focus on price
cuts and putting more staff in stores in an attempt to revive the
company's fortunes.
In April last year, Tesco reported the worst
results in its history, with a record statutory pre-tax loss of £6.4bn
for the year to the end of February.
However, Mr Lewis told the BBC in October that he was "quietly confident" about Tesco's turnaround.
The
company said that its price cuts and 4,000 additional 'Here to Help'
staff in stores had been key to the sales improvement over Christmas.
It added that its prices over the period were about 5% cheaper than previously "on the lines that mattered".
Tesco said clothing sales over the period did particularly well, growing "significantly ahead of the market".
'Tick in the box'
Like
other major supermarkets, the retail giant has been battling to halt a
decline in sales in the face of stiff competition from German
discounters Lidl and Aldi.
Tesco's share price hit an 18-year low last month as investors fretted over the pace of progress under Mr Lewis.
Analysts
hope that stronger sales will translate into improved profitability,
although there will be a worry that lower prices will eat into margins.
"This
is a useful tick in the box for Tesco, generating good growth despite a
more disciplined and less promotionally fuelled trading approach year
on year. It offers some hope that the business might be able to deliver
sustained volume growth," said analysts at Stifel in a note.
Earlier this week Morrisons reported better-than-expected sales over the Christmas shopping period compared with a year earlier.
And Sainsbury's, which is considering a bid for Argos-owner Home Retail Group, announced a 0.4% fall in like-for-like sales over the Christmas period. But the decline was less than many analysts had forecast.
Richard
Hunter, head of equities at Hargreaves Lansdown Stockbrokers, said:
"With its competitors already having provided some pleasant surprises,
Tesco has completed the supermarket sweep with an update which has
highlighted a particularly strong Christmas trading period.
"The
picture for the third quarter overall may make less positive reading,
although a return to growth for the first time in four years is an
achievement, albeit at an anaemic rate."
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