23 New Year's Eve Traditions From Around the World That (Hopefully) Bring Good Luck

Roy Rochlin/Getty Images

As you make your plans to ring in 2025, consider partaking in one of the New Year's Eve traditions from around the world. The past few years have truly been unlike any other, but one thing has been clear: Certain practices are now more important than ever, as they keep us grounded and remind us of the future ahead (and what to look out for, if you're following any New Year’s superstitions).

Travel isn't always an option for everyone around this time of year, so we’ve rounded up a few of our favorite New Year’s traditions from cultures all over the globe. Pick one that lends itself to your own celebration, and maybe ask a few friends to join in the fun. Make traditional New Year's food while you reminisce over the past year, give each other New Year's gifts, or just start a new tradition and watch some of the best New Year’s movies instead.

May 2025 be a year of good fortune with a generous dose of sanity. Just don’t forget to make those New Year’s resolutions—we need all the good luck we can get. And happy New Year!

<h1 class="title">Times Square New Year's Eve 2020 Celebration</h1><cite class="credit">Roy Rochlin/Getty Images</cite>

Times Square New Year's Eve 2020 Celebration

Roy Rochlin/Getty Images

Let's begin our list of New Year's Eve traditions with the one you've likely already participated in: Millions of Americans gather around their television sets (or on the streets of Times Square, despite freezing temps) to watch the ball drop at the stroke of midnight each year. Kicking off in 1907 to ring in January 1908, New York Times owner Adolph Ochs created the countdown event in New York City to draw attention to the Times’s new headquarters, and it’s been an annual spectacle and one of the most popular New Year’s Eve celebrations in America ever since.

<h1 class="title">A Day in Rio de Janeiro as the City Begins to Shut Down</h1><cite class="credit">Buda Mendes/Getty Images</cite>

A Day in Rio de Janeiro as the City Begins to Shut Down

Buda Mendes/Getty Images

“In Brazil, people usually go to the beach since it’s the summer there,” says Hudson Bohr, a Brazilian photographer based in NYC. “Immediately after midnight, you’re supposed to jump seven waves while making seven wishes.” The tradition is rooted in paying homage to Yemanja, the goddess of water. “Before you get in the water, you’re supposed to wear all white, as it symbolizes purity,” he explains.

<h1 class="title">Bunch of Chardonnay grapes, Valle dei Laghi</h1><cite class="credit">DEA / ALBERT CEOLAN</cite>

Bunch of Chardonnay grapes, Valle dei Laghi

DEA / ALBERT CEOLAN

One of the easiest New Year traditions for good fortune to replicate anywhere you live comes from Spain. The Spanish start off their new year by eating 12 grapes, which symbolize each strike of the clock. The tradition of las doce uvas de la suerte started in the late 19th century and is believed to ward off evil while boosting your chances of a prosperous and lucky new year. However, this will work only if you manage to eat all of the grapes in a matter of seconds since they need to be gone by the time the clock finishes striking midnight.

<h1 class="title">Fire Burning in Fire Pit</h1><cite class="credit">Education Images/Getty Images</cite>

Fire Burning in Fire Pit

Education Images/Getty Images

“Back in Bombay we’d make an effigy of an ‘old man’ that symbolized the old year and burn it at midnight,” says Stephanie Fernandes, an associate creative director in San Francisco. The burning symbolizes the passing of grievances from the old year and makes space for a new year to be born. “Everyone would gather around singing ‘Auld Lang Syne’ and then it would turn into a little party. Bombay is very cosmopolitan and was home to people of various faiths; therefore, we’d have a ton of different festivals, but this was one that united across ages and faiths.”

<h1 class="title">Ceramic bowl of asian style soup with green tea soba noodles, egg, mushrooms, spring onion and tofu cheese, served with chopsticks over old wooden background. Top view, copy space</h1><cite class="credit">Getty Images</cite>

Ceramic bowl of asian style soup with green tea soba noodles, egg, mushrooms, spring onion and tofu cheese, served with chopsticks over old wooden background. Top view, copy space

Getty Images

Here's a New Year's Eve appetizer idea: People in Japan kick off the New Year by eating a warm bowl of soba noodles. The tradition dates back to the Kamakura period and is tied to a Buddhist temple giving out the noodles to the poor. Because the long thin noodles are firm yet easy to bite, it is believed eating them symbolizes a literal break away from the old year.

<h1 class="title">U.S. Fears Bubbly Shortage As French Champagne Production Drops Sharply</h1><cite class="credit">Drew Angerer/Getty Images</cite>

U.S. Fears Bubbly Shortage As French Champagne Production Drops Sharply

Drew Angerer/Getty Images

While the notion of drinking wine in France is about as groundbreaking as florals for spring, the French up the ante and go all out on Champagne to celebrate the New Year. There is usually plenty of dancing and party hopping, but the food choices, however, remain the same: sparkling wines are typically paired with oysters, turkey, goose, or a Cornish hen.

<cite class="credit">Photo by Chelsea Kyle/ Food styling by Jennifer Ophir</cite>
Photo by Chelsea Kyle/ Food styling by Jennifer Ophir

“January 1 is actually Haitian Independence Day,” says Olivier Joseph, a graduate student in Chicago. Because of that, there's an important New Year’s traditional meal associated with the holiday. “We eat pumpkin soup, soup joumou, because it was a delicacy that enslaved Black people were not allowed to have. We often go to other people’s houses and bring some of our soup and swap for some of theirs—everyone makes it a little different.”

<h1 class="title">Smashing Plate</h1><cite class="credit">Al Barry/Getty Images</cite>

Smashing Plate

Al Barry/Getty Images

Chucking plates at your friends usually signals a conversation gone very wrong. In Denmark, however, New Year’s Eve traditions like this bring your loved ones the best luck. Tradition has it that the more broken kitchenware you accumulate on your door step, the better off you’ll be in the next year.

<h1 class="title">A father and his kids are ice fishing on the frozen Lake</h1><cite class="credit">Wolfgang Kaehler/Getty Images</cite>

A father and his kids are ice fishing on the frozen Lake

Wolfgang Kaehler/Getty Images

Freezing temps don’t keep Canadians from starting the new year with a winter favorite sport—ice fishing. According to Global News, families will rent heated huts and cooking equipment so that they can enjoy their feast with loved ones on the spot as one of their New Year traditions.

<h1 class="title">Tesco Opens First Own-Brand Supermarket in China</h1><cite class="credit">Andrew Wong/Getty Images</cite>

Tesco Opens First Own-Brand Supermarket in China

Andrew Wong/Getty Images

On New Year’s Eve, families in the Philippines make sure to serve 12 round fruits, like apples, grapes, and plums, which are believed to represent prosperity due to their shape, which mirrors coins. As for the lucky number, each fruit represents one month out of the year.

<h1 class="title">Traditional Mexican Food</h1><cite class="credit">NurPhoto/Getty Images</cite>

Traditional Mexican Food

NurPhoto/Getty Images

In Mexico families gather to make New Year’s Eve food—specifically tamales, which are corn dough stuffed with meat, cheese, and veggies all wrapped in husks—and then hand them out to loved ones on New Year’s Eve. On New Year’s Day, the warm pockets are often served with menudo, a traditional Mexican soup made from cow’s stomach.

<h1 class="title">International Green Week 2018 Agricultural Trade Fair</h1><cite class="credit">Sean Gallup/Getty Images</cite>

International Green Week 2018 Agricultural Trade Fair

Sean Gallup/Getty Images

Not only are onions a kitchen staple, they can also bring you good luck for the year ahead—at least, according to the Greeks. In Greece it’s tradition to hang an onion outside your door. Believed to symbolize fertility and growth (thanks to its ability to sprout on its own), the onion is hung on the door after church service on New Year’s Day.

<h1 class="title">Potatoes, Sweet Potatoes and Apples, Burough Market, London</h1><cite class="credit">Hoberman Collection/Getty Images</cite>

Potatoes, Sweet Potatoes and Apples, Burough Market, London

Hoberman Collection/Getty Images

On New Year’s Eve, Colombian households have a tradition, called agüero, of placing three potatoes under each family member’s bed—one peeled, one not, and the last one only partially. At midnight each person grabs for one with eyes closed and depending on the potato they select, can either expect a year of good fortune, financial struggle, or a mix of both.

<h1 class="title">FD/BREAD Washington Post Studio DATE: February 27, 2008 PH</h1><cite class="credit">The Washington Post/Getty Images</cite>

FD/BREAD Washington Post Studio DATE: February 27, 2008 PH

The Washington Post/Getty Images

To ward off evil spirits, families in Ireland make way for a healthy and prosperous New Year by banging loaves of Christmas bread against the walls and doors throughout the home.

<h1 class="title">GENERAL INFORMATION: Kari Lie makes Kransekake, a Norwegian wedding cake.IN THIS PHOTO: Bloomington, Mn., Weds., May 8, 2002--Kari Lie's Kransekake, a Norwegian wedding cake with many layers. She has decorated it with flags and English crackers.</h1><cite class="credit">Star Tribune via Getty Images</cite>

GENERAL INFORMATION: Kari Lie makes Kransekake, a Norwegian wedding cake.IN THIS PHOTO: Bloomington, Mn., Weds., May 8, 2002--Kari Lie's Kransekake, a Norwegian wedding cake with many layers. She has decorated it with flags and English crackers.

Star Tribune via Getty Images

Kransekake, a traditional ringed cake often made with at least 18 layers, is eaten in both Denmark and Norway on New Year’s Eve. The sugary layers, which look like cookies, are held together with a tasty royal icing. This is definitely one of the most delicious traditions on New Years you could try.

Pair of heart print boxer shorts. (Getty Images)
Pair of heart print boxer shorts. (Getty Images)

In Italy, it's considered good luck to be wearing red undergarments as the ball drops. How and when this practice started is disputed, but why not give it a try? We'll wear any underwear color in the new year if it means a bright future ahead. Hell, lean in and choose red for your New Year's Eve nails and New Year's outfit too. Who said we can't start new New Year traditions for good luck?

<h1 class="title">Basket with brushes, rags, natural sponges and cleaning products.</h1><cite class="credit">Anna Puzatykh</cite>

Basket with brushes, rags, natural sponges and cleaning products.

Anna Puzatykh

In many countries, Puerto Rico included, it's customary to start the year by cleaning everything—and we mean everything. The idea behind it is simple: out with the old, in with the new. The idea behind New Year's Day traditions like these is simple: If you start the year fresh, it will continue that way.

<h1 class="title">The New Year Is Celebrated In London</h1><cite class="credit">Peter Macdiarmid/Getty Images</cite>

The New Year Is Celebrated In London

Peter Macdiarmid/Getty Images

“On New Year's Eve, it's traditional for British households to gather waiting for the bells of Big Ben, the clocktower at the Houses of Parliament, to ring in the New Year as midnight strikes,” says Glamour executive editor Natasha Pearlman. “As the bells toll, don't be surprised if a huge circle forms, people link hands, and start singing a traditional song called ‘Auld Lang Syne.’”

<h1 class="title">Old retro TV against blue vintage wall in the room</h1><cite class="credit">scanrail</cite>

Old retro TV against blue vintage wall in the room

scanrail

In some European countries, including Austria and Germany, watching this black-and-white British comedy sketch, recorded in 1962, has become traditional viewing on New Year's Eve. Some die-hards even make the four-course dinner featured in the 18-minute sketch.

<h1 class="title">Directly above shot of soup in bowl on table,Aldie,Virginia,United States,USA</h1><cite class="credit">Linda Hughes / 500px</cite>

Directly above shot of soup in bowl on table,Aldie,Virginia,United States,USA

Linda Hughes / 500px

In the Southern states, especially among Black American families, it's tradition to eat a meal of black-eyed peas, collard greens, and other dishes that symbolize good fortune on New Year's Day. “I don’t let a New Year’s Day go by without having some form of greens, pork and black-eyed peas,” the food historian Jessica B. Harris told The New York Times. The black-eyed peas are said to resemble coins and promise good luck and health, while the collard greens are thought to resembled paper money and represent greater prosperity in the coming year.

<h1 class="title">Kilt</h1><cite class="credit">©Studio One-One</cite>

Kilt

©Studio One-One

Outlander fans, you'll like this: In Scotland, New Year's Eve celebrations are known as Hogmanay, or the Scottish New Year. There are several traditions associated with the holiday, including the “first footing.” Basically, the first person to cross the threshold of your home after the clock strikes midnight will set the tone of the year—and it's especially lucky if that person at the front door is a tall, dark, and handsome stranger.

<h1 class="title">Smashed pomegranate</h1><cite class="credit">Asurobson</cite>

Smashed pomegranate

Asurobson

For the Greeks, the pomegranate fruit has been a symbol of fertility, abundance, and luck since ancient times. There's a tradition to smash the fruit on your front porch or door to symbolize filling your home with health and happiness in the next year. The more seeds that splatter, the better luck you'll have! If you don't wish to make a mess yourself, consider including pomegranate on the menu at your NYE party as a fun nod to the tradition.

<h1 class="title">Tourist visiting Spain during winter</h1><cite class="credit">martin-dm</cite>

Tourist visiting Spain during winter

martin-dm

In Colombia, it's tradition to run down your street with empty luggage on New Year's Eve. Why? If you do, they say you'll have lots of travel in the year ahead. We like the sound of that! You could even make a game of it at your New Year's party and have guests do a suitcase race around the block.


Originally Appeared on Glamour