Celebrating a brand new year can be fun for the whole family when you host a kids’ New Year’s Eve party.
“Going into the new year as a family starts families on the path of making family connection a priority,” Laura Linn Knight, author of “Break Free from Reactive Parenting“ tells TODAY.com
Knight shares that New Year’s Eve is a great time for setting goals as a family.
Knight tells TODAY.com that children benefit “every time we make space for them to be involved in traditions and celebrations.”
Children benefit “every time we make space for them to be involved in traditions and celebrations.”
Laura Linn knight, “break free from reactive parenting”
“Although New Year’s Eve may seem unimportant to some or a time to celebrate without the kids, I encourage families to take some time on New Year’s Eve — even if parents go out later — to come together,” she says.
To set the mood to ring in the New Year, Knight suggests making a gratitude flower with everyone in the home.
In the center of the flower, each person will write their name. Then, take turns writing or drawing something that you appreciated about each person in the last year in one of the petals. At the end of the activity, each person will have their own flower to show their family’s love for them this past year.
No matter what activity your family chooses to ring in the new year, Knight encourages doing it together.
“Children who have special time with their family, create meaningful traditions and feel valued within the home are more likely to thrive emotionally and socially,” she says.
And just remember — if your kids can’t tell time yet, you can make the new year happen whenever you want with on-demand countdown programming.
30 Ways To Celebrate New Year’s Eve With Kids
Ready to celebrate New Year’s Eve? Enjoy these 30 family-friendly activities to ring in 2023:
- Create a gratitude flower.
- Participate in a Rose, Bud and Thorn activity for what went well in 2024 (rose), what you are looking forward to in 2025 (bud), and what you didn’t like that happened in 2024 but learned from or were able to feel better about later (thorn).
- Try out a new recipe for dinner.
- Watch the last sunset of the year.
- Plan a family hike.
- Bake countdown cookies in the shape of numbers.
- Make homemade holiday play dough.
- Have everyone share their favorite memory of the year.
- Create a time capsule.
- Have a joke-writing competition.
- Make a list of goals for the new year.
- Have a DIY ice cream sundae bar with unlimited toppings.
- Pop a balloon every hour until midnight — or bedtime.
- Bake a clock cake.
- Deliver treat bags to neighbors with New Year’s Eve wishes tucked inside.
- Set personal and family resolutions.
- Plan a trip for the new year.
- Make DIY pizzas for dinner. Bonus points if you make it into a clock using toppings!
- Create a playlist and host a dance-off.
- Toast to the new year with sparkling cider.
- Make a blanket fort in the living room.
- Go for a family walk.
- Prepare good luck food for New Year’s Day.
- Host a game night with friends and neighbors.
- Make a scavenger hunt around the house.
- Have everyone write new year wishes on a piece of paper and store them in a jar. Open them up next year!
- Read a book together.
- Write out a 2025 family bucket list.
- Spend the whole day watching each family member’s favorite movie.
- Quiz each other with trivia for kids.