New Year's Eve traditions you probably didn't know about

Luggage for a future trip
Ecuador: dolls on fire
New Year's Eve in Mexico: Money in a shoe
Broken plates in Denmark
Brazil dresses in white
Copacabana to receive the new year
Jump seven waves
Pomegranate seeds
Mexico: shots fired
Lucky underwear!
Going up the stairs
Songs in the United States
A kiss to begin the year
Water to welcome the year in Uruguay
Cleaning up to make a good new year
Italians eat lentils
English punctuality
Go quickly to a relative's house
Love in Puerto Rico
Cleaning away the bad vibes in the house
Burn wishes in El Salvador
Another custom in El Salvador
New Year's Eve in Asian countries
Fabrics and money in the Philippines
But not everyone celebrates
New Year's Eve in Japan
Family holidays in Japan
Going to the temple in Japan
Latin America and Spain: counting down with grapes
You have to finish them all!
To a new year of love and success
Luggage for a future trip

In several Latin American countries, it is customary for people who wish to travel abroad to fill their suitcases with clothes and hit the streets as quickly as possible before the last bell of the old year.

Ecuador: dolls on fire

In Ecuador, one of the most common traditions is to burn a 'monigote'. It's a doll that represents the past year. Among the most common dolls are politicians, football players, and superheroes.

Photo: Alexander Schimmeck / Unsplash

New Year's Eve in Mexico: Money in a shoe

When celebrating an achievement, Mexicans sometimes throw their shoes across an electricity cable. However, when the new year starts, they do something else. In the hopes of an economic bonanza, some Mexicans put bills inside their shoes all night long on New Year's Eve.

Broken plates in Denmark

In Denmark, after the New Year's Eve dinner, everyone breaks the plate on which their meal was served. These dishes must be broken at the doors of the people they love most, as a symbol of good luck.

Image: Chuttersnap / Unsplash

Brazil dresses in white

In Brazil, most of the residents dress in white at the end of the year to ensure that the new year is one of peace and tranquility.

Photo: Rafael Alcure / Unsplash

Copacabana to receive the new year

The Copacabana beach in Rio de Janeiro becomes a beautiful setting where the sky lights up with colors.

Jump seven waves

It's very common for Brazilians to go to the seashore and jump over seven waves or leave offerings there, such as champagne or flowers.

Photo: Guy Kawasaki / Unsplash

Pomegranate seeds

For those who do not live close to the sea in Brazil, a rather peculiar ritual consists of sucking seven pomegranate seeds before the last bell rings in the new year at midnight.

Photo: Sahand Babali / Unsplash

Mexico: shots fired

In the old days in Mexico, some communities fired bullets in the open air to drive away evil spirits. Nowadays, they launch fireworks.

Photo: Jezael Melgoza / Unsplash

Lucky underwear!

In Venezuela, some people wear their underwear backward on New Year's Eve. They believe this ritual attracts abundance and keeps bad luck away. Moreover, in Colombia, Peru, Ecuador, Bolivia, Mexico, and Venezuela, the tradition is to wear red or yellow underwear. Red is for love in the new year, yellow is for wealth.

Image: Bruce Christianson / Unsplash - edited for this article by Showbizz Daily

Going up the stairs

In a tradition practiced in Venezuela during the last bells of the old year, people climb stairs to encourage the achievement of their goals for the new year.

Songs in the United States

In some places in the United States, people gather to sing 'Auld Lang Syne', an Irish song that says goodbye to the old year.

A kiss to begin the year

Americans have a tradition for New Year's Eve: they kiss another person at midnight to avoid being lonely in love in the following year. The New Year's kiss is a known trope in romantic movies. For example, the legendary 'When Harry Met Sally' (image) includes the special ritual.

Water to welcome the year in Uruguay

In Uruguay, people throw buckets of water on the roads to eliminate obstacles to the new year.

Cleaning up to make a good new year

Furthermore, in many Latin American cultures, washing the sidewalk with water is believed to help clean bad energy along with waste.

Italians eat lentils

Italy has a tradition that is supposed to incite abundance in the new year. After the bells announce the new year, Italians put a few spoonfuls of lentils in their mouths. The more one eats, the more they will own in the next year.

English punctuality

England has a tradition of punctuality. "First footing" is the name given to this curious tradition.

Go quickly to a relative's house

The tradition consists of being the first one after the first bells of the new year to arrive at the house of some relative. You will be well received if you make it first because you will be considered as the carrier of good luck and gifts for the owners of the house.

Love in Puerto Rico

Puerto Rico has a tradition designed to preserve your romantic relationship. Puerto Rican couples exchange a piece of clothing with their partner to have a good connection and communication for the next year.

Photo: Ana Toledo / Unsplash

Cleaning away the bad vibes in the house

Some residents of Puerto Rico clean their entire house to leave all the bad things behind and receive the new year tidily.

Burn wishes in El Salvador

In El Salvador, people write their wishes on a sheet of paper and then burn the sheet to symbolize the realization of those goals.

Another custom in El Salvador

Salvadorans usually pour a whole egg into a glass or container at midnight and leave it near a window. The next morning, they check the egg and interpret what image the egg displays. This image represents the fortune they will have in the new year.

Photo: Mario Verduzco / Unsplash

New Year's Eve in Asian countries

The Asian continent also has its traditions.

Fabrics and money in the Philippines

In the Philippines, people fill the streets with polka-dotted fabrics that represent coins. They also carry their pockets full of coins and make a clinging sound with them after the bells of the new year.

Image: Faisal Waheed / Unsplash

But not everyone celebrates

In many Asian countries, the New Year is not celebrated on January 1st. Exceptions are South Korea and Japan (image).

New Year's Eve in Japan

Japan, with a population of approximately 127 million people, is one of the countries awaiting the arrival of the new year on December 31.

Family holidays in Japan

It's amazing to think that a country like Japan is almost paralyzed for three days to celebrate New Year, one of its most important holidays of the year. For the Japanese, it is essential to spend the end of the year with their families.

Going to the temple in Japan

In Japan, people meet on December 31st at midnight to see the year arrive and wish each other a happy new year. On January 1st, they make a pilgrimage to the temples to give thanks and pray for a good year. Before leaving their houses, they select the things they will no longer use in the new year and burn them in the temples.

Latin America and Spain: counting down with grapes

One tradition that is counted as Spanish but has spread to other countries (especially in Latin America) is that of eating 12 grapes along with each of the bell rings counting down to the new year.

You have to finish them all!

In countries like Ecuador, Colombia, Venezuela, Puerto Rico, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Mexico, Peru, and El Salvador, people eat 12 grapes and/or 12 cherries, each representing a wish for the following year. The goal is to eat these fruits as quickly as possible before the last bell announces the new year.

To a new year of love and success

In Argentina and Mexico, people wear pink or red underwear to attract love in the new year. In addition, after the last bell rings in the new year, they start a walk where the first foot out will have to be the right one.