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  • 35 Lucky New Year’s Eve Traditions From Around the World

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    In New York City as the countdown to the new year is underway, Cruz Tuesday gave the iconic ball *** test drop in Times Square. The new and updated constellation Ball includes more than 5200 Waterford crystals and LED lights, but the glitz and glam isn’t all that’s being talked about. It’s also the security. The public should expect to see thousands of NYPD officers deployed throughout time. Square that includes officers from our specialized units including Emergency Service Unit, K9, the bomb squad, heavy weapons teams, and our harbor teams. Hundreds of thousands of people are expected to ring in the new year in Times Square, with millions around the world watching online or on TV. The NYPD says not only will it be deploying helicopters and drones, it’ll have ample boots on the ground. We will also deploy dedicated pickpocket teams, hotel response teams, and additional uniformed patrols. In our nation’s capital, you can see how crews were testing out *** New Year’s projection display on the Washington Monument early Tuesday morning. It’s *** part of Freedom 250 celebration of America’s anniversary and will showcase some of the nation’s history to the South. Almost *** year ago, January 1. The city of New Orleans was struck by an unspeakable act that New Year’s Day ISIS-inspired terror attack where *** man drove *** pickup truck into *** crowd of revelers on New Orleans’ Bourbon Street, killing 14 people and injuring dozens more. This year, New Orleans tightening security measures. Everything in that square of the French Quarter will be closed. I’m Cherelle Hubbard reporting.

    Whether you like to be home and cozy or out partying when the clock strikes midnight, there’s no right or wrong way to ring in the New Year. What’s interesting, though, is the way some traditions have stood the test of time — dating back to ancient Babylon, some historians say —and how rituals vary from place to place. For example, many countries have a history of eating round foods on New Year’s, since their coin-like shape symbolizes prosperity, but in one place that may mean eating black-eyed peas, while in another it looks like a buffet of round citrus fruits.For those looking to explore new rituals with their families, here are some New Year’s Eve traditions from around the world. Some date back hundreds if not thousands of years, while others are relatively new. There are plenty ideas of good-luck foods to eat, or possibly smash, or hide under the pillow or bed, depending on the culture. There are a few that focus more on prognostication and looking for signs about the year to come, and there are more than one that involve pigs. (So many pigs.) Take your pick, and get ready for good things in the year to come!Watch the big dropNew Year’s Eve countdowns are synonymous with Times Square and its famous annual ball drop. This year’s ball is forging its own new tradition: It’s debuting Waterford Crystals in circular shapes, which is a change from the triangles they’ve been using since 1999. In total, there are 5,280 crystals and LED light pucks on this year’s ball, which makes it weigh in at 12,350 pounds. YAnd while the Times Square ball gets all the glory, it’s not the only symbol counting down the seconds until the new year. Atlanta, Georgia, has used a giant peach (which will now be a drone show instead of a traditional drop); Plymouth, Wisconsin, lowers a big slice of cheese; Kennett Square, Pennsylvania, drops a sparkling mushroom; and Hackettstown, New Jersey, drops a giant M&M. Now that’s a sweet way to start a new year!Plan a movie marathonWhether it was “The Twilight Zone” or “The Honeymooners,” binging TV marathons used to be the thing to do on New Year’s Day. But for those who aren’t into classic television, it might be better to program your own. Movies like “When Harry Met Sally,””Phantom Thread,” “Highball,” “The Poseidon Adventure,” and “Strange Days” all have key scenes set at New Year’s, and you can mix and match depending on the type of movie mood you’re in. Eat 12 grapesIn Spain the tradition is to eat one grape at each stroke of midnight.Those who do it are promised good luck for the next year — if the rules are followed: “Eating one grape at each of midnight’s 12 clock chimes guarantees you a lucky year—if and only if you simultaneously ruminate on their significance,” Atlas Obscura reports. “If you fail to conscientiously finish your grapes by the time the clock stops chiming, you’ll face misfortune in the new year.” Jump seven wavesSpending New Year’s Eve on the beach sounds nice in and of itself, but in Brazil it’s believed that your luck increases if you get in the surf and jump over seven waves — one for each of the divine spirits of the Umbanda religion. Revelers also get one wish for each wave, which is an added incentive to get in the water. Dream of the futureMost people may be familiar with mistletoe traditions associated with Christmas (and kissing). In Ireland, there are also rituals involving the plant on New Year’s Eve, and they are no less romantic. According to custom, those who put mistletoe (or holly, or ivy) under their pillow before you go to bed on Dec. 31 will have dreams of their future partner. It’s one reason not to stay up all night. Deck out the doorEveryone wants to invite growth and prosperity into their houses for the new year. How do the Greeks do it? They hang bundles of onions over the door, since onions have been known to sprout even when no one pays attention to them, which makes them good symbols of fertility and abundance. Wear whiteMillions of people gather along Brazil’s beaches to celebrate the new year, and most of them are color-coordinated. There, it’s a tradition to wear white, a color that symbolizes good luck and peace — and one that makes for great, matching photo opps!Make Hoppin’ JohnThe mix of black-eyed peas, pork and rice is delicious no matter when you eat it. But the dish carries extra significance if it’s eaten on Jan. 1, since many believe it’ll bring luck, peace and prosperity for the rest of the year.According to History.com, “Hoppin’ John was, and still is, often eaten with collard greens, which can resemble paper money, and ‘golden’ cornbread. The peas themselves represent coins. Some families boost the potential of their Hoppin’ John by placing a penny underneath the dishes—or adding extra pork, which is thought to bring more luck.”Get the Good Housekeeping recipe for Hoppin’ John » Leap into 2026Celebrants can run into the new year. They can dance into the new year. Or, they can do what they do in Denmark, which is stand on a chair and “leap” into the new year as the clock strikes midnight. It’s good luck if you do it—doubly so if you don’t land on your face—and bad luck if you forget.Make a resolutionHistorians believe that the idea of a New Year’s resolutions, in one form of another, dates back more than 4,000 years. They say the Babylonians, one of the first cultures to actually celebrate the changing of the year, made promises to pay debts or return borrowed objects. If they could do it, so can you. Give more giftsChristmas was forbidden in Soviet Russia, so New Year’s became the big gift-giving occasion during that time. Presents were delivered not by Santa but by Ded Moroz, or Father Frost, often aided by his granddaughter, Snegourochka. Anyone ready for another round of gift-giving?Plant a smoochFinding someone to kiss at midnight has been the inspiration for songs, rom-coms, and other New Year’s tales. But just where did the idea come from? According to the Washington Post, the tradition finds its roots in English and German folklore, but it wasn’t just about finding romance. It was believed that it’s “the first person with whom a person came in contact that dictated the year’s destiny,” so don’t plant your lips on any old so-and-so. Eat round foodsThere are so many New Year’s Eve traditions around foods, and lots of cultures say that eating round foods—reminiscent of coins or money — will lead to prosperity. In Italy, lentils serve the same function as the black-eyed peas in Hoppin’ John. And in the Philippines, it’s customary to eat 12 round fruits, one for every month, to ensure a year of abundance. The fruits usually take center stage at the table for the media noche, or the midnight meal.Dot it upIt’s not just what you eat on New Year’s Eve that can attract prosperity — what you wear may play a role, too, at least according to tradition in the Philippines. There, people wear polka dots on Dec. 31, since the pattern represents the same thing round fruits do. Throwing a few coins in the pockets doesn’t hurt, either. Buy a new lucky charmIn Germany and Austria, there are a few different lucky symbols that you can gift to friends and family to bring them good fortune. These include pigs (a sign of wealth), lucky pennies, horseshoes, toadstools, ladybugs, clovers, and chimney sweeps. Visitors can buy little tokens of these lucky charms at a holiday market — or get edible ones made out of marzipan or pastry. Yum!Turn lemons into pigsNot just limited to treats in Austria and Germany, pigs feature in many New Year Eve’s traditions, typically because they’re a symbol of prosperity. To invite that wealth into a home, some have transformed their lemons into piglets they can display on a table. It’s usually done by using the nub at the end as a snout, adding cloves for the eyes, sticking toothpicks at the bottom for feet, and cutting slits into the peel to make ears and a mouth. For extra luck, a penny is placed in the mouth as well. Scare away the spiritsHere’s a tradition that helps bring good vibes to the new year and lets you take out some of your aggression over the last one: In Ireland, it’s customary to chase away bad spirits by banging bread on the walls and doors of the house. It’s also a tradition to do a New Year’s tidying up, presumably from all of the crumbs.Color-code the underwearCertain countries, especially in Latin America, believe that the color of the underwear you wear on Dec. 31 can bring good things to you in the next 12 months. Yellow is for luck, red is for love, and white undies bring peace. Just so long as they’re also clean and free of holes! Pack lightIn fact, pack nothing at all. In Colombia, people take empty suitcases and run around the block as fast as they can, right foot first. It’s supposed to guarantee a year filled with travel. One writer for the Tampa Bay Times tried it with her Colombian husband in her Florida neighborhood. “Upon seeing two silhouettes tearing down the street at midnight with backpacks in their arms, our neighbors who were outside to watch fireworks made a beeline to their front doors. We worried they were calling the police.” The writer did, however, travel to Colombia that year. So hey, maybe it works!Do something fishyPork for wealth, round foods for prosperity, what else can make a New Year’s meal complete? Some traditions say fish. Why? Fish can only swim in one direction — forward — much like the endless march of time. Start off the year with some omega-3’s, and you might have a healthy year, too. Open the windows and doorsNo one wants the old year, and all its baggage, hanging around. A common superstition says that keeping the windows and doors open will let the old year out so the new one can arrive in its place. Just makes sure you also have some cozy blankets to snuggle in while waiting for the exchange to happen.Smash the peppermint pigIn upstate New York, they sell special peppermint pigs all throughout the holiday season. Everyone gets to take a turn hitting it with a special candy-size hammer and eating a piece for good fortune in the coming year. The peppermint is very strong, so it’s recommended to only take a small piece. At least everyone will start the year with fresh breath! Try to predict what’ll come nextIn Germany, you can buy a Bleigießen (Bleigiessen) kit which will supposedly give you hints for what’s to come in the year ahead. The tradition is to melt lead (now tin or wax, since lead is poisonous) on a spoon over a candle and then pour the metal into cold water. The resulting shape will reveal your fortune. Round balls represent good luck rolling your way, for example, while swords predict risk-taking.Smash a pomegranateIn Turkey, pomegranates are symbols of abundance. Eating them is great, sure—but those who really want a good 2026 will smash the fruit on their doorstep instead. The more pieces there are and the farther they spread, the more prosperous the year will be. For a little extra luck, a sprinkle of salt in front of the door is said to bring peace. Sing “Auld Lang Syne””Auld Lang Syne” is often credited to Scottish poet Robert Burns, who sent it to the Scots Musical Museum in 1788. But the writer himself admits that he didn’t write the lyrics; he was just the first to transcribe an old folk song. If you really want to impress the other members of your party, learn the other verses (there are 10 in total).Hide a surpriseIn Greece, New Year’s dessert isn’t just a treat, it’s a game of chance. Guests eat vasilopita, or a cake or sweet bread that has a coin baked into it. Whoever finds the coin will have good luck for the next year! In Scandinavian countries, they do something similar with rice pudding, served either at New Year’s or Christmas. One portion will have a peeled almond in it, and whoever finds it in their bowl is assured of luck in the new year and might even win a prize. Throw water out the windowLook out below! In Puerto Rico, they believe that dumping a bucket of water out the window drives away evil spirits. If that seems a little too unfair to the people who might be passing by, Puerto Ricans also sprinkle sugar outside their houses to invite the good luck in, which is a little sweeter (pun intended).Eat long foodsIn Japan, it’s traditional to eat “toshikoshi soba,” a dish with buckwheat noodles that’s served hot or cold. The long noodles symbolize longevity, and the hearty buckwheat plant represents resilience. Listen for bellsIn Japan, for ōmisoka, buddhist temple bells ring out 108 times as in the lead-up to midnight. Each chime is supposed to root out a worldly passion, such as anger, suspicion, or lust. The last toll comes at midnight, to start the next year out on a vice-free foot.Grab a potatoIn Colombia, it’s possible to let potatoes predict the financial outlook of the next 12 months. The custom is to put three potatoes under each family member’s bed: one peeled, one half-peeled, and one unpeeled. Each person has to grab one without looking, and that will determine if the year is a good one for money (the unpeeled potato), a bad one (the peeled one), or half-and-half (the half-peeled potato). At the very least, participants will have enough to make mashed potatoes. Burn the old yearIn Ecuador, the bad parts of the old year — or año viejo — are turned into effigies and burned. People make sawdust-filled dummies out of politicians, pop-culture figures, and other characters, and then burn them at midnight as a sort of cleansing ritual. For extra good-luck points, participants try to jump over the flames 12 times, once for every month.Take a dipSince the early 1900s, it’s been a tradition to start off Jan. 1 by submerging in freezing cold water, a ritual known as a Polar Bear Plunge. Often, participants with a high tolerance for the cold use the chilly swim as an opportunity to raise money for local nonprofits, so all of that teeth-chattering goes for a good cause. Sing for candyKids didn’t get enough candy on Halloween? In Norway, they have a tradition called Nyttarsbukk, where the little ones can go door-to-door and sing New Year’s Eve songs in exchange for sweets. It’s like caroling and trick-or-treating rolled into one.Spice up the champagneIn Russia, Champagne gets an extra ingredient on New Year’s: Revelers write a wish down on a piece of paper, burn it and add the ashes to the drink. It all has to be done before the first and last stroke of midnight, too. Bottoms up! Invite the first guest of the new yearThe first person through the door on the New Year’s Day may set the tone for the coming months. In Scotland, the Isle of Man, and some other parts of Northern England, the “first footer,” as it was called, was extremely important. Tradition in those parts of the world states to select a man who is tall and dark (as a protection against Vikings), who would come with simple gifts of coal, salt, shortbread, and whisky, representing the basic needs of heat, food, and drink.

    Whether you like to be home and cozy or out partying when the clock strikes midnight, there’s no right or wrong way to ring in the New Year. What’s interesting, though, is the way some traditions have stood the test of time — dating back to ancient Babylon, some historians say —and how rituals vary from place to place. For example, many countries have a history of eating round foods on New Year’s, since their coin-like shape symbolizes prosperity, but in one place that may mean eating black-eyed peas, while in another it looks like a buffet of round citrus fruits.

    For those looking to explore new rituals with their families, here are some New Year’s Eve traditions from around the world. Some date back hundreds if not thousands of years, while others are relatively new. There are plenty ideas of good-luck foods to eat, or possibly smash, or hide under the pillow or bed, depending on the culture. There are a few that focus more on prognostication and looking for signs about the year to come, and there are more than one that involve pigs. (So many pigs.) Take your pick, and get ready for good things in the year to come!

    Watch the big drop

    New Year’s Eve countdowns are synonymous with Times Square and its famous annual ball drop. This year’s ball is forging its own new tradition: It’s debuting Waterford Crystals in circular shapes, which is a change from the triangles they’ve been using since 1999. In total, there are 5,280 crystals and LED light pucks on this year’s ball, which makes it weigh in at 12,350 pounds. Y

    And while the Times Square ball gets all the glory, it’s not the only symbol counting down the seconds until the new year. Atlanta, Georgia, has used a giant peach (which will now be a drone show instead of a traditional drop); Plymouth, Wisconsin, lowers a big slice of cheese; Kennett Square, Pennsylvania, drops a sparkling mushroom; and Hackettstown, New Jersey, drops a giant M&M. Now that’s a sweet way to start a new year!

    Plan a movie marathon

    Whether it was “The Twilight Zone” or “The Honeymooners,” binging TV marathons used to be the thing to do on New Year’s Day. But for those who aren’t into classic television, it might be better to program your own. Movies like “When Harry Met Sally,””Phantom Thread,” “Highball,” “The Poseidon Adventure,” and “Strange Days” all have key scenes set at New Year’s, and you can mix and match depending on the type of movie mood you’re in.

    Eat 12 grapes

    In Spain the tradition is to eat one grape at each stroke of midnight.

    Those who do it are promised good luck for the next year — if the rules are followed: “Eating one grape at each of midnight’s 12 clock chimes guarantees you a lucky year—if and only if you simultaneously ruminate on their significance,” Atlas Obscura reports. “If you fail to conscientiously finish your grapes by the time the clock stops chiming, you’ll face misfortune in the new year.”

    Jump seven waves

    Spending New Year’s Eve on the beach sounds nice in and of itself, but in Brazil it’s believed that your luck increases if you get in the surf and jump over seven waves — one for each of the divine spirits of the Umbanda religion. Revelers also get one wish for each wave, which is an added incentive to get in the water.

    Dream of the future

    Most people may be familiar with mistletoe traditions associated with Christmas (and kissing). In Ireland, there are also rituals involving the plant on New Year’s Eve, and they are no less romantic. According to custom, those who put mistletoe (or holly, or ivy) under their pillow before you go to bed on Dec. 31 will have dreams of their future partner. It’s one reason not to stay up all night.

    Deck out the door

    Everyone wants to invite growth and prosperity into their houses for the new year. How do the Greeks do it? They hang bundles of onions over the door, since onions have been known to sprout even when no one pays attention to them, which makes them good symbols of fertility and abundance.

    Wear white

    Millions of people gather along Brazil’s beaches to celebrate the new year, and most of them are color-coordinated. There, it’s a tradition to wear white, a color that symbolizes good luck and peace — and one that makes for great, matching photo opps!

    Make Hoppin’ John

    The mix of black-eyed peas, pork and rice is delicious no matter when you eat it. But the dish carries extra significance if it’s eaten on Jan. 1, since many believe it’ll bring luck, peace and prosperity for the rest of the year.

    According to History.com, “Hoppin’ John was, and still is, often eaten with collard greens, which can resemble paper money, and ‘golden’ cornbread. The peas themselves represent coins. Some families boost the potential of their Hoppin’ John by placing a penny underneath the dishes—or adding extra pork, which is thought to bring more luck.”

    Get the Good Housekeeping recipe for Hoppin’ John »

    Leap into 2026

    Celebrants can run into the new year. They can dance into the new year. Or, they can do what they do in Denmark, which is stand on a chair and “leap” into the new year as the clock strikes midnight. It’s good luck if you do it—doubly so if you don’t land on your face—and bad luck if you forget.

    Make a resolution

    Historians believe that the idea of a New Year’s resolutions, in one form of another, dates back more than 4,000 years. They say the Babylonians, one of the first cultures to actually celebrate the changing of the year, made promises to pay debts or return borrowed objects. If they could do it, so can you.

    Give more gifts

    Christmas was forbidden in Soviet Russia, so New Year’s became the big gift-giving occasion during that time. Presents were delivered not by Santa but by Ded Moroz, or Father Frost, often aided by his granddaughter, Snegourochka. Anyone ready for another round of gift-giving?

    Plant a smooch

    Finding someone to kiss at midnight has been the inspiration for songs, rom-coms, and other New Year’s tales. But just where did the idea come from? According to the Washington Post, the tradition finds its roots in English and German folklore, but it wasn’t just about finding romance. It was believed that it’s “the first person with whom a person came in contact that dictated the year’s destiny,” so don’t plant your lips on any old so-and-so.

    Eat round foods

    There are so many New Year’s Eve traditions around foods, and lots of cultures say that eating round foods—reminiscent of coins or money — will lead to prosperity. In Italy, lentils serve the same function as the black-eyed peas in Hoppin’ John. And in the Philippines, it’s customary to eat 12 round fruits, one for every month, to ensure a year of abundance. The fruits usually take center stage at the table for the media noche, or the midnight meal.

    Dot it up

    It’s not just what you eat on New Year’s Eve that can attract prosperity — what you wear may play a role, too, at least according to tradition in the Philippines. There, people wear polka dots on Dec. 31, since the pattern represents the same thing round fruits do. Throwing a few coins in the pockets doesn’t hurt, either.

    Buy a new lucky charm

    In Germany and Austria, there are a few different lucky symbols that you can gift to friends and family to bring them good fortune. These include pigs (a sign of wealth), lucky pennies, horseshoes, toadstools, ladybugs, clovers, and chimney sweeps. Visitors can buy little tokens of these lucky charms at a holiday market — or get edible ones made out of marzipan or pastry. Yum!

    Turn lemons into pigs

    Not just limited to treats in Austria and Germany, pigs feature in many New Year Eve’s traditions, typically because they’re a symbol of prosperity. To invite that wealth into a home, some have transformed their lemons into piglets they can display on a table. It’s usually done by using the nub at the end as a snout, adding cloves for the eyes, sticking toothpicks at the bottom for feet, and cutting slits into the peel to make ears and a mouth. For extra luck, a penny is placed in the mouth as well.

    Scare away the spirits

    Here’s a tradition that helps bring good vibes to the new year and lets you take out some of your aggression over the last one: In Ireland, it’s customary to chase away bad spirits by banging bread on the walls and doors of the house. It’s also a tradition to do a New Year’s tidying up, presumably from all of the crumbs.

    Color-code the underwear

    Certain countries, especially in Latin America, believe that the color of the underwear you wear on Dec. 31 can bring good things to you in the next 12 months. Yellow is for luck, red is for love, and white undies bring peace. Just so long as they’re also clean and free of holes!

    Pack light

    In fact, pack nothing at all. In Colombia, people take empty suitcases and run around the block as fast as they can, right foot first. It’s supposed to guarantee a year filled with travel. One writer for the Tampa Bay Times tried it with her Colombian husband in her Florida neighborhood.

    “Upon seeing two silhouettes tearing down the street at midnight with backpacks in their arms, our neighbors who were outside to watch fireworks made a beeline to their front doors. We worried they were calling the police.” The writer did, however, travel to Colombia that year. So hey, maybe it works!

    Do something fishy

    Pork for wealth, round foods for prosperity, what else can make a New Year’s meal complete? Some traditions say fish. Why? Fish can only swim in one direction — forward — much like the endless march of time. Start off the year with some omega-3’s, and you might have a healthy year, too.

    Open the windows and doors

    No one wants the old year, and all its baggage, hanging around. A common superstition says that keeping the windows and doors open will let the old year out so the new one can arrive in its place. Just makes sure you also have some cozy blankets to snuggle in while waiting for the exchange to happen.

    Smash the peppermint pig

    In upstate New York, they sell special peppermint pigs all throughout the holiday season. Everyone gets to take a turn hitting it with a special candy-size hammer and eating a piece for good fortune in the coming year. The peppermint is very strong, so it’s recommended to only take a small piece. At least everyone will start the year with fresh breath!

    Try to predict what’ll come next

    In Germany, you can buy a Bleigießen (Bleigiessen) kit which will supposedly give you hints for what’s to come in the year ahead. The tradition is to melt lead (now tin or wax, since lead is poisonous) on a spoon over a candle and then pour the metal into cold water. The resulting shape will reveal your fortune. Round balls represent good luck rolling your way, for example, while swords predict risk-taking.

    Smash a pomegranate

    In Turkey, pomegranates are symbols of abundance. Eating them is great, sure—but those who really want a good 2026 will smash the fruit on their doorstep instead. The more pieces there are and the farther they spread, the more prosperous the year will be. For a little extra luck, a sprinkle of salt in front of the door is said to bring peace.

    Sing “Auld Lang Syne”

    “Auld Lang Syne” is often credited to Scottish poet Robert Burns, who sent it to the Scots Musical Museum in 1788. But the writer himself admits that he didn’t write the lyrics; he was just the first to transcribe an old folk song. If you really want to impress the other members of your party, learn the other verses (there are 10 in total).

    Hide a surprise

    In Greece, New Year’s dessert isn’t just a treat, it’s a game of chance. Guests eat vasilopita, or a cake or sweet bread that has a coin baked into it. Whoever finds the coin will have good luck for the next year! In Scandinavian countries, they do something similar with rice pudding, served either at New Year’s or Christmas. One portion will have a peeled almond in it, and whoever finds it in their bowl is assured of luck in the new year and might even win a prize.

    Throw water out the window

    Look out below! In Puerto Rico, they believe that dumping a bucket of water out the window drives away evil spirits. If that seems a little too unfair to the people who might be passing by, Puerto Ricans also sprinkle sugar outside their houses to invite the good luck in, which is a little sweeter (pun intended).

    Eat long foods

    In Japan, it’s traditional to eat “toshikoshi soba,” a dish with buckwheat noodles that’s served hot or cold. The long noodles symbolize longevity, and the hearty buckwheat plant represents resilience.

    Listen for bells

    In Japan, for ōmisoka, buddhist temple bells ring out 108 times as in the lead-up to midnight. Each chime is supposed to root out a worldly passion, such as anger, suspicion, or lust. The last toll comes at midnight, to start the next year out on a vice-free foot.

    Grab a potato

    In Colombia, it’s possible to let potatoes predict the financial outlook of the next 12 months. The custom is to put three potatoes under each family member’s bed: one peeled, one half-peeled, and one unpeeled. Each person has to grab one without looking, and that will determine if the year is a good one for money (the unpeeled potato), a bad one (the peeled one), or half-and-half (the half-peeled potato). At the very least, participants will have enough to make mashed potatoes.

    Burn the old year

    In Ecuador, the bad parts of the old year — or año viejo — are turned into effigies and burned. People make sawdust-filled dummies out of politicians, pop-culture figures, and other characters, and then burn them at midnight as a sort of cleansing ritual. For extra good-luck points, participants try to jump over the flames 12 times, once for every month.

    Take a dip

    Since the early 1900s, it’s been a tradition to start off Jan. 1 by submerging in freezing cold water, a ritual known as a Polar Bear Plunge. Often, participants with a high tolerance for the cold use the chilly swim as an opportunity to raise money for local nonprofits, so all of that teeth-chattering goes for a good cause.

    Sing for candy

    Kids didn’t get enough candy on Halloween? In Norway, they have a tradition called Nyttarsbukk, where the little ones can go door-to-door and sing New Year’s Eve songs in exchange for sweets. It’s like caroling and trick-or-treating rolled into one.

    Spice up the champagne

    In Russia, Champagne gets an extra ingredient on New Year’s: Revelers write a wish down on a piece of paper, burn it and add the ashes to the drink. It all has to be done before the first and last stroke of midnight, too. Bottoms up!

    Invite the first guest of the new year

    The first person through the door on the New Year’s Day may set the tone for the coming months. In Scotland, the Isle of Man, and some other parts of Northern England, the “first footer,” as it was called, was extremely important. Tradition in those parts of the world states to select a man who is tall and dark (as a protection against Vikings), who would come with simple gifts of coal, salt, shortbread, and whisky, representing the basic needs of heat, food, and drink.

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  • Penny ‘funeral’ brings hundreds to Lincoln Memorial – WTOP News

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    Hundreds of mock mourners headed to The Lincoln Memorial on Saturday to attend a “funeral” for the penny. 

    Hundreds of mock mourners headed to the Lincoln Memorial on Saturday to attend a “funeral” for the penny. 

    Along with musicians playing taps, there were a couple of Abraham Lincoln look-alikes, actors portraying George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Mary Todd Lincoln, and yes, even John Wilkes Booth.

    The ceremony started with pallbearers dressed as Lincoln carrying a white casket. People were encouraged to toss pennies in the open casket like a wishing well.

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    Penny ‘funeral’ brings hundreds to Lincoln Memorial

    Hundreds of mock mourners headed to the Lincoln Memorial on Saturday to attend a “funeral” for the penny. 

    Along with musicians playing taps, there were a couple of Abraham Lincoln look-alikes, actors portraying George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Mary Todd Lincoln, and yes, even John Wilkes Booth.

    The ceremony started with pallbearers dressed as Lincoln carrying a white casket. People were encouraged to toss pennies in the open casket like a wishing well.

    One of the crowd favorites was a speech given by Knowlton Anderson, who works for RAMP, the all-in-one financial operations platform that put on the funeral.

    “I am Abraham Lincoln’s second cousin, six times removed.” said Anderson. “No one has ever found it interesting. But suddenly, the penny is dying, and now I’m in hot demand.”

    After the funeral, Anderson told WTOP, “the gathering was a great testament to how much people actually do care about the penny and coinage.”

    Before the start of the ceremony, RAMP’s creative producer Amber Layne explained the reason behind the funeral.

    “As you know, the federal government stopped minting pennies last month, and so RAMP decided to throw a ceremony and invite the community to grieve together and say goodbye to inefficient spending,” said Layne.

    A lot of those in attendance were dressed in Victorian-age fashion and one person was wearing a Penny Wise costume.

    Of those attending the funeral, Aubrey Sellman from Arlington, Virginia, brought a penny pillow that she bought from the U.S. Mint in Philadelphia.

    “It’s an injustice really, the penny is a very impactful part of my life,” said Sellman.

    Another mourner said she was going to miss the cups on the counter at stores that read, “need a penny, take a penny.”

    There were also two coin appraisers that were both in the early 20s, who met with the crowds and showed them historic and valuable pennies.

    Hunter Hicks and Ethan Opdahl’s friendship started at coin camp. The two, who bickered like Larry David and and the late Richard Lewis, were as entertaining as anything on stage during the mock funeral.

    “Lincoln was added in 1909 for his 100th birthday, and it is the longest serving design, I believe, on any U.S. coin ever,” said Hicks.

    “I’d say what most people don’t know about the penny is probably that it was costing about four times what it was worth when they stopped making it,” said Opdahl. “So we weren’t profiting on the penny.”

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    Jimmy Alexander

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  • The Penny Shortage Could Eat Into Your Profit Margin. Meanwhile, Investors Are Spending Millions on Them

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    Change is hard. Making change keeps getting harder.

    Owners of restaurants, cafés, and other retail businesses across the U.S. continue battling a worsening shortage of pennies after the Treasury Department stopped producing them on Nov. 12. But as entrepreneurs searched beneath sofa cushions and car mats for any extra one-cent coins they’d previously tossed aside, investors shelled out over $16.7 million for the final 696 pennies ever minted.

    That represents a veritable fortune paid for coins the government doesn’t think are worth producing anymore, since each one costs four times its face value to make. But that willingness by investors to fork out between $48,000 and $800,000 for the last pennies ever minted demonstrates the dramatically clashing fortunes of the nation’s one-cent piece.

    On the one hand, collectors continually increased their bids during a Dec. 11 Stacks & Bowers auction of the 232 lots up for grabs, each containing three of the final coppery portraits of Abe Lincoln ever produced. On the other, the National Restaurant Association (NRA) begged the U.S. Treasury to urgently distribute more of the now condemned pennies to its members and other small businesses, many of whom are now struggling to make change for customers.

    “When operators can’t provide exact change, it creates friction at checkout, frustrating customers,” said NRA president Michelle Korsmo in a letter to the Treasury and Federal Reserve. “In a highly competitive industry, like restaurants, any change to the hospitality our customers expect could mean a lost return sale for an operator.”

    It risks costing even more than that.

    Eager to avoid clashes with diners peeved by penniless business owners rounding up to the nearest nickel, the NRA says its members are instead routinely rounding down. That, Korsmo warned, will cost U.S. restaurants an estimated $13 million to $14 million per month unless they can get their hands on more one-cent coins soon.

    Meanwhile, with the profit margins of U.S. eateries averaging just 3 percent to 5 percent, the NRA said a penny here and a penny there will quickly reduce their monthly proceeds to nothing.

    To avoid that, the organization is calling on the Fed and Treasury to resume distribution of increasingly mothballed one-cent coins, which they stopped doing earlier this year. In addition, the NRA echoed an October appeal by the National Retail Federation (NRF,) which urged federal agencies or Congress to issue formal rules for business owners rounding off in making change without pennies.

    Regulations on how and when to round up or down would not only be valuable in navigating — or indeed preventing — disputes with customers angered at losing a few cents in the process. The NRF also said it would protect companies that do most of their sales in cash from “legal risks simply for implementing necessary practices in response to the nationwide penny shortage.”

    As Inc. previously reported, many small businesses are seeking solutions of their own. Some are appealing to customers to use their spare pennies for purchases, or in swaps for credit toward future buys. Other entrepreneurs are offering free drink refills or other giveaways to people handing over their reserves of one-cent coins.

    But all that is just nickel and diming compared to the money paid for the auctioned lots of the last pennies ever made.

    All 696 of those coins were struck with the Greek letter omega beside Lincoln’s portrait, signifying they were among the last minted in the penny’s 232-year history. And each set of those three, one-cent coins also contained a specially minted 24-carat gold version.

    That extravagance must seem well over the top to small business owners — especially those struggling to scrounge up the modest penny or two they need to send change-stickling customers happily on their way.

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    Bruce Crumley

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  • Why McDonald’s Is Rounding Up On Cash Payments

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    McDonald’s told CBS News they’ll be taking on a rounding method when it comes to customers paying in cash.

    Reason being? The US Mint in Philadelphia pressed its last penny on Wednesday, leaving McDonald’s and other stores to figure out how to deal with the fallout

    Order totals will be rounded to the nearest five cents. So if a customer’s order totals $10.17, they’ll pay $10.15. But if instead it comes out to $10.18, they’ll be asked to pay $10.20. 

    Other chains are curving more to the customer’s advantage. 

    GoTo Foods, the parent company of Auntie Anne’s, Cinnabon, Jamba, and Carvel said that it’s “recommending that franchisees round cash transactions in the guest’s favor.” 

    Wendy’s and Midwestern convenience chain Kwik Trip are hopping on a similar train.

    “We have given guidance to our restaurants to round cash transactions down to the nearest nickel if they are experiencing penny shortages,” Wendy’s said. Kwik Trip said the same.

    The practice of rounding cash payments isn’t brand new. Countries like Canada, Australia and New Zealand have been implementing variations of the method since their own lower value coins were eradicated.

    Kroger is still holding out hope that customers will be able to pay their amounts down to the cent. 

    “We kindly ask customers to consider providing exact change,” the restaurant told CBS News

    Giant Eagle, based in Pennsylvania, had an ahead-of-the-game approach. The supermarket hosted an event on November 1 encouraging customers to trade in pennies for gift cards worth twice as much. The minimum exchange amount was 50 cents and the maximum was $100, which would translate to a $200 gift card.

    “This proactive step allows the company to maintain accuracy and fairness while it awaits formal guidance from the US government regarding future rounding practices,” Giant Eagle said. 

    Sheetz had a similar idea. The chain offered a promotion where customers could earn a free drink for $1.00 in pennies. Still, Sheetz said it prefers cashless payments. 

    All stores seem to be awaiting federal guidance on how they should proceed with the penny pinch. 

    The early-rate deadline for the 2026 Inc. Regionals Awards is Friday, November 14, at 11:59 p.m. PT. Apply now.

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    Ava Levinson

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  • US Mint In Philadelphia To Press Final Penny As The 1-Cent Coin Gets Canceled – KXL

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    PHILADELPHIA (AP) — The U.S. Mint in Philadelphia is set to strike its last circulating penny as the president has canceled the 1-cent coin.

    President Donald Trump has ordered its demise as costs climb to nearly 4 cents per penny and the 1-cent valuation becomes somewhat obsolete.

    The U.S. Mint has been making pennies in Philadelphia, the nation’s birthplace, since 1793.

    The last one is being made Wednesday.

    There are billions of them in circulation, but they are rarely essential to carrying out financial transactions.

    Still, many people have a nostalgia for the copper-plated coins, seeing them as lucky or fun to collect.

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    Grant McHill

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  • Emerson St revamp: Penny for your thoughts on the Napier CBD – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

    Emerson St revamp: Penny for your thoughts on the Napier CBD – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

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    The Napier City Council plans to start design work in its proposed Emerson Street CBD revamp early in the New Year, although it is yet to finish the consultation.

    The Revitalise Emerson pop-up shop has another week to run at 247 Emerson St, with feedback sought from anyone interested in sharing their thoughts.

    It will be the biggest rethink of the shopping centre in the 30 years since it was transformed into a pedestrian shopping precinct, with single-lane vehicle access replacing the two-way traffic, from the days of the main-street drag.

    Cruise visitors enjoy a stroll along Emerson St in Napier on Wednesday. Photo / NZME
    Cruise visitors enjoy a stroll along Emerson St in Napier on Wednesday. Photo / NZME

    Council’s City Activation lead Steph Kennard said that with some government funding the council is keen to make the most of that opportunity and “do something really cool for the community”.

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    The work includes gathering data around the movement of people, vehicles and micro-transport options like bikes and scooters, with interviews, observations and video analysis by a local research company.

    Meanwhile, the week-long Squares in the City, focused on Clive and Memorial squares, is in full swing and the Napier Night Fiesta series starts its 2023-2024 season on December 8.

    Original Author Link click here to read complete story..

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    MMP News Author

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  • National Cemetery in Westwood, a place for quiet reflection on Veterans Day

    National Cemetery in Westwood, a place for quiet reflection on Veterans Day

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    After learning about Veterans Day in his transitional kindergarten class, Wilson Zeier, 4, asked his father what they could do to recognize the men and women who served.

    So on Saturday morning Wilson stood with his father, Bill, and mother, Mai, on a knoll overlooking tens of thousands of white gravestones in rows on a lush green background at the Los Angeles National Cemetery in Westwood.

    At the mid-morning hour, the cemetery where American service members from the Civil War onward are interred was reverentially still.

    Every few minutes a figure would appear on the sloping lawn, moving slowly through the lines of gravestones.

    Ruth Pico, a Navy veteran, moved sideways, stopping at each marker for a few seconds. She wore a T-shirt commemorating her godson Hunter Lopez, killed in action on Aug. 26, 2021, in a suicide bombing at the Kabul airport in Afghanistan. She said she couldn’t make the trip to Riverside to honor his grave and so came to pay respects to those she didn’t know.

    “I like to go and read their names and thank them for their service and go on to the next one,” she said, keeping an eye on her son Nathan, who was cavorting on the grass.

    Pico said she has brought her son to the cemetery every year since he was a baby to imbue him with an understanding of service. She also thinks those buried there appreciate his presence.

    “For a little bit I let him play and laugh,” she said. “In my head, the veterans can hear the happiness and the joy of his laughing.”

    Pico had come with a bag of paper poppies and distributed them one to a headstone along with a penny to show family members that someone had been there.

    While U.S. flags come out on Memorial Day, the other major holiday dedicated to service members, poppies are more identified with Veterans Day. Originally called Armistice Day and commemorating the Nov. 11, 1918, armistice that ended the fighting in World War I, the date is linked internationally to the opening lines of the haunting war poem “In Flanders Fields:”

    In Flanders fields the poppies blow/Between the crosses, row on row.

    The commemoration became a U.S. national holiday in 1935 and was renamed in 1954.

    Unlike Memorial Day, a holiday dating from the end of the Civil War and honoring those who died while serving in the armed forces, Veterans Day honors all veterans.

    Formal Veterans Day events were held Saturday at Forest Lawn—Hollywood Hills and the Bob Hope Patriotic Hall near downtown, where Arnold Schwarzenegger was a special guest.

    As the morning wore on, though, the National Cemetery remained a place for quiet reflection.

    Kathy Collins, daughter and niece of World War II veterans, laid pennies on the headstones as she does every Veterans Day and Memorial Day.

    Collins thinks it is important to sustain the memory of what her father’s generation did.

    “A lot of kids grow up and don’t know veterans and what they did,” she said. “And that’s kind of sad.”

    Among the more than 80,000 graves, Collins said she tries to connect with individuals.

    “You look at their age, like a guy today killed in action in Iraq—thinking about the younger veterans. We don’t know that many of them because the military is so much smaller, proportionally.”

    Collins said she places pennies on headstones where there are flowers because that means there’s still a family connection. When they return, they will know a stranger cared.

    As he surveyed the gravestones with his son, Zeier said he hoped the experience had broadened Wilson’s understanding.

    “When you come to a place like this it can be very moving, very emotional,” he said.

    “He hasn’t been to cemeteries before,” Zeier said. “For us it’s just walking around a little bit today, talking about the people that are buried here and also to introduce death, so he kind of understands what it is.”

    Navy veteran Ruth Pico and her son Nathan Pico, 8, left flower stems on the tombstones on Veterans Day at Los Angeles National Cemetery in Westwood.

    (Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times)

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    Doug Smith

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