With Lunar New Year upon us, many celebrants are maximizing their chances for a prosperous year ahead—one that’s full of luck and good fortune.
Also known as Chinese New Year or Spring Festival, the New Year is China’s biggest and most important holiday. This year, it begins on Jan. 29, and it’s the Year of the Snake, one of 12 animals of the Chinese zodiac. The Lunar New Year is also celebrated in Vietnam (where it is known as Tet), Korea (called Seollal) and by people of Chinese descent in Malaysia, Thailand, Indonesia and all over the world.
While Chinese New Year celebrations are known for the firecrackers and food, the holiday is steeped in tradition and ceremony, with rituals invoking good luck and prosperity for the year ahead.
Read More: How to Wish Someone a ‘Happy New Year’ in Chinese
If you want to stay lucky this year, follow these Chinese traditions for the New Year.
Give your house a spring cleaning
In the run up to the Chinese New Year, it’s fortuitous to give your house a good clean. Decluttering and throwing away unwanted items gets rid of the stagnant energy that has accumulated during the previous year. But make sure to get the dusting done before the first day of Chinese New Year, as cleaning during the holiday brings bad luck according to old superstitions.
Decorate with red lanterns
In Chinese culture, red is the color of prosperity, and leading up to Chinese New Year, the color can be seen everywhere in Chinese cities: adorning doors, walls, office buildings and shopping malls. Hang red lanterns in your doorway, affix red cardboard decorations to your walls, and wear red to attract good energy and ward off the bad.
Offer red envelopes of money
Called hongbao in Mandarin, or lai see in Cantonese, these little red packets stuffed with cash are given to children, family, friends and employees during the Chinese New Year. But proper hongbao etiquette must be observed: the envelopes are usually given by married people or employers, the packet should contain new banknotes, the sum should be an even number, and never in denominations of four—because the Chinese word for four sounds like the word for death.
During the exchange of a hongbao, there are also auspicious greetings that the receiver should say. These greetings range from wishing them good health (shen ti jian kang) to wishing them good fortune (wan shi ru yi).
Red envelopes are also “fed” to the Chinese lions during traditional lion dances, which are popular during the Chinese New Year. Dance troupes visit offices and parade through the streets accompanied by a din of drums and firecrackers to drive away the energy of the old year and to manifest good energy for the next.

Watch a fireworks display
Fireworks are a Chinese New Year tradition that goes back thousands of years.
In Chinese lore, firecrackers were used to scare off the evil New Year spirit, Nian. On the first day of the New Year, the beast would wreak havoc in the villages.
One day, as the myth goes, an old man saved the villagers by telling them to put up red banners and bang drums to scare the Nian away. Today, those traditions can be seen in the red decorations and lion dances, but also in the form of firework displays. Fireworks are a huge part of New Year festivities, with impressive displays put on in major cities. A Chinese phrase for celebrating Chinese New Year is Guo Nian, literally, “overcome Nian,” or “the passing of the beast.”
Enjoy a feast with the family
Perhaps the most important part of the Chinese New Year is spending time with family. With schools and offices closed, hundreds of millions of people will make trips to see family. The annual travel rush is considered the largest movement of humans on Earth and about 9 billion trips are expected to be made within China between Jan. 28 and Feb. 22.
Central to family time is the New Year feast, also known as the “reunion dinner,” which takes place on the eve of Chinese New Year. Certain dishes are eaten for their symbolic meaning and some are part of traditions going back thousands of years. Though each household and region has its own traditions, there are some of the dishes that are considered essential.
Fish is a huge part of the reunion dinner as it symbolizes wealth. In Chinese, fish (yu) is a homonym of the word for “surplus” or “extra.” Spring rolls also symbolize prosperity as they are fancifully thought to look like little gold bars. They also take their name (chun juan) from the Spring Festival (chunjie)—Chinese New Year.
Dumplings are traditionally served on New Year’s Eve, especially in the north, as they represent the transition from the old year to the new.

Noodles, because of their length, are playfully said to signify a long life. A traditional (and fun) dish to eat during the New Year are Longevity Noodles, also known as chang shou mian. The noodles are commonly made from one piece of dough that’s stretched into many long strands. Eat them uncut and serve fried or with a broth.
In Singapore, a dish called yu sang (also known as yu sheng, lo hei and the prosperity toss) is a staple on the New Year’s dinner table. It’s a large platter full of carrots, radishes, pickles and raw fish. As the ingredients are added, diners will shout auspicious wishes for the year ahead and toss the salad upwards—the higher the toss, the more luck you bring yourself for that year.
In China’s south, niangao—a glutinous rice cake that’s eaten with stir-fried vegetables and meat, or as a dessert—is popular over the Chinese New Year. In Cantonese, the word sounds similar to the phrase “lofty year”—or a wish to achieve higher heights every year.
Mandarin oranges and tangerines can be seen on offer at market stalls all over China. Known as ‘Good Fortune Fruit,’ oranges are given in pairs and eaten during Chinese New Year to bring fullness and wealth.
—Updated in 2025 by Miranda Jeyaretnam.
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Write to Helen Regan at helen.regan@timeasia.com