New Year's Day in Australia is celebrated on January 1 each year in all states and territories. New Year’s Day is a national public holiday in Australia. If January 1 is a Saturday or Sunday, the first working day following it, is considered to be an official holiday.
The celebrations for New Year’s Day actually start on New Year’s Eve when people come together and remember the past year and prepare for the countdown to the New Year. At 12 o clock midnight bottles of Champaign are popped to toast on the New Year, fireworks are lit and people hug and kiss to wish each other a Happy New Year. See below the dates of New Year’s Day in Australia for 2014 and onwards.
Holiday | Date | Week number | Days to go |
---|---|---|---|
New Year's Day 2010 | January 1, 2010 Friday | 53 | - |
New Year's Day 2011 | January 3, 2011 Monday | 01 | - |
New Year's Day 2012 | January 2, 2012 Monday | 01 | - |
New Year's Day 2013 | January 1, 2013 Tuesday | 01 | - |
New Year's Day 2014 | January 1, 2014 Wednesday | 01 | - |
New Year's Day 2015 | January 1, 2015 Thursday | 01 | - |
New Year's Day 2016 | January 1, 2016 Friday | 53 | - |
New Year's Day 2017 | January 2, 2017 Monday | 01 | - |
New Year's Day 2018 | January 1, 2018 Monday | 01 | - |
New Year's Day 2019 | January 1, 2019 Tuesday | 01 | - |
New Year's Day 2020 | January 1, 2020 Wednesday | 01 | - |
New Year's Day 2021 | January 1, 2021 Friday | 53 | - |
New Year's Day 2022 | January 3, 2022 Monday | 01 | - |
New Year's Day 2023 | January 2, 2023 Monday | 01 | - |
New Year's Day 2024 | January 1, 2024 Monday | 01 | - |
DEC
05
Thursday 05
December 2024
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