Happy New Year! Watch live as locations around the world ring in 2026

Happy New Year!

Many countries around the world will switch their calendars to 2026, before most folks in the U.S. have even gotten out of bed.

But for those who are feeling a bit festive and looking to celebrate the new year a little earlier than America's celebrations kick off, USA TODAY has you covered.

Wearing glasses in the shape of the coming year, 1997, a New Yorker is surrounded by fellow confetti-waving celebrants after coming to Times Square to celebrate New Year's Eve, on Dec. 31, 1996. A reveler wears a pair of 2000 glasses in preparation for the new year, on December 31, 1999. People celebrate the new year in New York, on January 1, 2002. Revelers celebrate the coming of the new year at the New Years Eve party in Times Square, on December 31, 2004. Revelers gather in Times Square, on Dec. 31, 2006. Revelers celebrate in Times Square as the ball drops on Jan. 1, 2009, in New York. A girl wears People celebrate the new year in Times Square on December 31, 2010, in New York. Thousands of revelers gather in New York's Times Square to celebrate the ball drop at the annual New Year's Eve celebration, on Dec. 31, 2013. People wait for the ball to drop during as they celebrate New Year's Eve in Times Square on Dec. 31, 2014. Debbie Landry, from Texas, waits for the ball to drop to greet 2017, during New Year's Eve in Times Square, on Dec. 31, 2016. Revelers wait for the ball drop at New Year's Eve in Times Square, on Dec. 31, 2015. NEW YORK, NY - DECEMBER 31: A reveler wears 2018 glasses in Times Square ahead of the New Year's Eve celebration on December 31, 2017 in New York City. (Photo by Stephanie Keith/Getty Images) New Years Eve revelers are seen during the Times Square New Year's Eve 2019 Celebration, on Dec. 31, 2018. A police officer celebrates in Times Square during the New Year's Eve celebration, on Dec. 31, 2019. A woman in 2021 glasses takes a photo of the New Year's Eve numerals on display in Times Square on December 21, 2020 in New York. Revelers in masks and 2022 glasses attend the Times Square New Year's Eve 2022 Celebration, on Dec. 31, 2021. A person wears 2023 glasses as people gather to celebrate the new year and await the ball drop, in Times Square, New York City, on December 31, 2022. People wearing 2024 glasses wait for the New Year's Eve celebrations in Times Square on December 31, 2023 in New York. People participate in a New Year celebration at Times Square in New York, on Dec. 31, 2024. Celebrating 2026 in New York City's Times Square on Dec. 18, 2025.

See the evolution of New Year's Eve glasses

More news:Snow will drop with the ball for some on New Year's Eve. See where.

New Year's Eve celebrations around the world

Our live stream above will kick off as Australia rings in 2026 at 8 am ET, followed by these locations, which are more than several hours ahead of the U.S. and will ring in the new year before America:

  • Sydney, Australia

  • Seoul, South Korea

  • Beijing, China

  • Hong Kong

  • Taipei, Taiwan

  • Bangkok, Thailand

  • Doha, Qatar

  • Nairobi, Kenya

  • Edinburgh, Scotland

  • Berlin, Germany

  • Tokyo, Japan

Julia is a Trending reporter for USA TODAY and covers scientific studies and trending news. Connect with her onLinkedIn,X,Instagram, andTikTok: @juliamariegz, or email her at jgomez@gannett.com.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Watch New Year's Eve celebrations around the world live

Happy New Year! Watch live as locations around the world ring in 2026

Happy New Year! Many countries around the world will switch their calendars to 2026, before most folks i...
What to know about the mystery of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 as the search resumes

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia (AP) — More than a decade ago,Malaysia Airlines Flight 370vanished without a trace, sparking one of aviation's most baffling mysteries.

Despite years of multinational searches, investigators still do not know exactly what happened to the plane or its 239 passengers and crew.

On Wednesday, the Malaysian government said a vessel began a new search operation for the missing plane, reigniting hopes the aircraft might finally be found.

A previous, massive search in the southern Indian Ocean, where the jet is believed to have gone down, turned up almost nothing. Apart froma few small fragmentsthat washed ashore, no bodies or large wreckage have ever been recovered.

Here is what to know about the deadly aviation tragedy.

Flight goes missing

The Boeing 777 disappeared from air-traffic radar 39 minutes after departing Kuala Lumpur for Beijing on March 8, 2014.

"Good night, Malaysian Three Seven Zero," the pilot said in the last radio call to Kuala Lumpur and the final communication before the plane crossed into Vietnamese airspace and failed to check in with controllers there.

Minutes later, the aircraft's transponder stopped broadcasting its location. Military radar showed the jet turn back over the Andaman Sea. Satellite data suggested it continued flying for hours, possibly until fuel exhaustion, before crashing into a remote section of the southern Indian Ocean.

Theories about what happened range from hijacking to cabin depressurization or power failure. There was no distress call, ransom demand, evidence of technical failure or severe weather.

Malaysian investigators in 2018 cleared the passengers and crew but did not rule out "unlawful interference." Authorities have said someone deliberately severed communications and diverted the plane.

The passengers came from around the world

MH370 carried 12 crew members and227 passengers, including five young children. Most passengers were Chinese, but there also were citizens of the United States, Indonesia, France, Russia and elsewhere.

Among those aboard were two young Iranians traveling on stolen passports, a group of Chinese calligraphy artists, 20 employees of U.S. tech firm Freescale Semiconductor, a stunt double for actor Jet Li and several families with young children.

Many families lost multiple members.

The search covered a vast area

Search operations began in the South China Sea between Malaysia and Vietnam before expanding to the Andaman Sea and the southern Indian Ocean.

Australia, Malaysia and China coordinated the largest underwater search in history, covering roughly 120,000 square kilometers (46,000 square miles) of seabed off western Australia. Aircraft, vessels equipped with sonar and robotic submarines scoured the ocean for signs of the plane.

Signals thought to be from the plane's black box turned out to be from other sources and no wreckage was found. The first confirmed debris was a wing fragment, known as a flaperon, discovered on remote Réunion Island in July 2015, withadditional fragments later foundalong the east coast of Africa.

The search was suspended in January 2017.

In 2018, U.S. marine robotics company Ocean Infinity resumed the hunt, under a "no-find, no-fee" agreement, focusing on areas identified through debris drift studies. The effort ended without success.

The search faced enormous challenges

One reason why such an extensive search failed to turn up clues is that no one knows exactly where to look.

The Indian Ocean is the world's third largest and the search was conducted in a difficult area where searchers encountered bad weather and average depths of around 4 kilometers (2.5 miles).

It's not common for planes to disappear in the deep sea, but when they do remains can be very hard to locate. Over the past 50 years, dozens of planes have vanished, according to the Aviation Safety Network.

The hunt is renewed

Malaysia's governmentgave the green light in Marchfor another "no-find, no-fee" contract with Ocean Infinity toresume the seabed search operationat a new site stretching over 15,000 square kilometers (5,800 square miles) of water. Ocean Infinity will be paid $70 million only if wreckage is discovered.

However, the search was suspended in April due to bad weather. The government said Wednesday that Ocean Infinity will resume the search intermittently from Dec. 30 for 55 days in targeted areas believed to have the highest likelihood of finding the missing aircraft.

It is unclear if Ocean Infinity has new evidence of the plane's location. The company has said it would utilize new technology and has worked with many experts to analyze data and narrow the search area to the most likely site.

What to know about the mystery of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 as the search resumes

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia (AP) — More than a decade ago,Malaysia Airlines Flight 370vanished without a trace, sparking one o...
New Year's brings new rainfall and flood threat to California

Another series of atmospheric river-enhanced storms is set to soak California as the new year begins, bringing a flood threat back to the state just days after a destructive Christmas-week storm leftrivers high and soils waterlogged.

The midweek storm lacks the extreme ingredients of last week's flooding, but it arrives in a state already pushed to its limits. With little room for additional water, rainfall rates rather than totals will determine where problems emerge as California rings in the new year under another active weather pattern.

The first low-pressure system is expected to reach Southern California late New Year's Eve, then spread north through much of the state into New Year's Day. The Weather Prediction Center has placed much of Southern California in a Level 2 of 4 flood threat Wednesday and Thursday.

Coastal and valley areas such as downtown Los Angeles could see 1 to 2 inches of rain, with 2 to 4 inches possible in foothills and mountains. Even moderate bursts of rain could trigger flooding, mudslides or debris flows, especially near burn scars and steep terrain.

Evacuation warnings are in effect for parts of Los Angeles County near recent burn scars as rain moves in Wednesday night. The voluntary warnings begin at 11 a.m. PT and are meant to give residents time to prepare for possible mud or debris flows.

The Wrightwood area in San Bernardino County,devastatedby Christmas Eve flooding in the Bridge Fire burn scar, is again under an evacuation warning as the threat of mud and debris flows returns.

California Gov. Gavin Newsom announced the state has prepositioned crews and equipment in Los Angeles and Ventura counties ahead of the rain.

The first wet Tournament of Roses Parade in two decades

The timing raises the stakes, especially in Southern California, where the 137th Tournament of Roses Parade takes place Thursday morning in Pasadena. Rain arriving Wednesday night will affect parade-goers camping along the route, with downpours continuing into Thursday morning. This is expected to be the first wet Rose Parade since 2006, according to the National Weather Service.

The City of Burbank

This system is only the first of three in a conga line that could affect the waterlogged state through early next week. Conditions change late Friday into Saturday as colder air drops snow levels below major passes, including Interstate 80 through Donner Pass. Over a foot of snow is likely at Sierra Nevada ski resorts, though exact totals remain uncertain and could make mountain travel hazardous.

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New Year’s brings new rainfall and flood threat to California

Another series of atmospheric river-enhanced storms is set to soak California as the new year begins, bringing a flood th...
Image: AUSTRALIA-NEWYEAR-2026 (Saeed Khan / AFP - Getty Images)

The world has begun to close out 2025, toasting the end of a year that brought anAmerican pope, precariouspeace talksand a president whose impact was felt across the globe.

The island nation of Kiribati in the Pacific Ocean was the first to ring in 2026 at 5 a.m. ET, with celebrations planned in major cities — from Beijing to New York — throughout the day.

Sydney, considered the New Year capital of the world, will hold a defiant if more subdued celebration in the wake of theterrorist attackat a Hanukkah event on Bondi Beach that killed 15 people.

Security will be tight, and before the traditional midnight fireworks the iconic Harbor Bridge will be illuminated in white as a symbol of peace and unity. The Australian city will also pause for a moment of silence for the victims.

Trump, truces and tariffs

The year began with President Donald Trump's return to the White House, promising to make peace and remake the global economic order.

Trump ruffled feathers early in 2025 with his ambitions over the Arctic island ofGreenland, an autonomous Danish territory, as well as Canada and the Panama Canal. He then unleashed sweeping tariffs on U.S. trading partners around the world, including on China, whichretaliatedbefore the world's two largest economies pulled back.

Trump helped broker ahistoric ceasefire in Gazain October, ending two years of bloodshed in the Palestinian enclave. His peace plan has seen all but one of the Israeli hostages released, but the truce remains unstable with hundreds killed in Gaza and uncertainty over each side's commitment to thecomplex second phase.

Image: BESTPIX - TOPSHOT-PALESTINIAN-ISRAEL-CONFLICT (Bashar Taleb / AFP - Getty Images)

Trump has also claimed a role in halting numerous conflicts, including thewar between Thailand and Cambodia. The ceasefire he helped to broker there has also been shaky, but the year ended with arenewed truce.

Russia and Ukraine will enter 2026 still at war, approaching four years since theKremlin's full-scale invasion of its neighbor.

Trump promised to end the war in a day, but a deal has evaded the president despite months of intense diplomacy — including aspectacular shouting matchwith Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy in the Oval Office, ared-carpet welcomefor Russia's Vladimir Putin in Alaska, and aproposed peace planthat has fueled a mix of hope, dismay and uncertainty across Europe.

There will be no public New Year celebrations in Kyiv, as many Ukrainians again spend long hours in the dark under Moscow's unrelenting attacks.

Image: VIETNAM-NEWYEAR-2026 (Nhac Nguyen / AFP - Getty Images)

Aside from the conflicts dominating the news in 2025, the world also watchedAmerican-born Cardinal Robert Francis Prevostbecome the next pope in May, taking the name Pope Leo XIV. He replacedPope Francis, who died at the age of 88 in April.

TheLouvre heistcaptured the world's attention, and the year ends with the priceless jewels still not recovered after the daring daylight robbery. Hong Kong, meanwhile, has canceled its traditional firework display after adevastating apartment firekilled more than 160 people in the Chinese territory.

Next year will see the U.S. vote in the 2026 midterm elections, a chance for the public to signal its feelings about the second Trump administration.

The year will also bring two major sporting events —the Winter Olympics in Milanin February and the biggest-ever men's soccerWorld Cup, jointly hosted by the U.S., Canada and Mexico this summer.

World rings in 2026 and waves goodbye to year of Trump, a new pope and hopes for peace

The world has begun to close out 2025, toasting the end of a year that brought anAmerican pope, precariouspeace talksand a president whose ...
Latest deep-sea search for missing Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 gets underway

HANOI, Vietnam (AP) — A deep-sea search forMalaysia Airlines Flight 370began in the Indian Ocean on Wednesday, reviving efforts to solve one of aviation's greatest mysteries more than a decade after the jet vanished with 239 people on board.

Malaysia's Transport Ministry said Wednesday that a search vessel, the Armada 86 05, arrived at a designated search area with two autonomous underwater vehicles.

The location of the search area was not disclosed in the statement. It said the vessel had prepared for the search in Fremantle Port in Western Australia.

The government did not specifically mention Ocean Infinity, the company that helmed a previous search and had long beenslated to lead the new one. But the craft that the government specified by number has been widely identified by maritime and aviation websites as belonging to Ocean Infinity.

Earlier in December, the Malaysian government said that the Texas-based marine robotics firm would begin searching targeted areas of the seabed undera renewed "no-find, no-fee" agreement.

Ocean Infinity has confirmed it was resuming the search for MH370 but refused to comment further, citing the "important and sensitive nature" of the operation.

Ocean Infinity previously searched the seabed in 2018, under a similar contract butfound no trace of the plane. The company has said it has since upgraded its technology and refined its analysis. Its CEO Oliver Plunkett said last year the firm was working with multiple experts and had narrowed the search zone to what it believes is the most probable crash site.

Earlier this year, Ocean Infinity brieflyrestarted seabed search operationsin a new 15,000-square-kilometer (5,800-square-mile) area of the southern Indian Ocean after receiving approval from Malaysia, but the effort was suspended in April because of poor weather.

The Malaysia Airlines plane disappeared from radar shortly after taking off from Kuala Lumpur for Beijing on March 8, 2014. Satellite data later showed the aircraft veered from its planned route and flew south toward the remote southern Indian Ocean, where investigatorsbelieve it crashed. There has never been an explanation for the course change.

A costly and protracted multinational search effort failed to locate the aircraft, though pieces ofdebrisbelieved to be from the plane later washed up along the East Africa coast and on Indian Ocean islands. No main wreckage or bodies have ever been recovered.

Nuga reported from Bangkok.

Latest deep-sea search for missing Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 gets underway

HANOI, Vietnam (AP) — A deep-sea search forMalaysia Airlines Flight 370began in the Indian Ocean on Wednesday, reviving e...
Pacifist Japan has slowly transformed from exclusively self-defense to a military buildup

TOKYO (AP) — Japan is barreling forward with efforts to significantly boost its military capabilities to stand up toChina's growing threatsbydoubling annual arms spending. The goal comes as Tokyo's main ally, the United States, pushes for more military assistance in Asia and a military hawk and ultra-conservative takes over Japan's leadership.

Japan says it is still a peaceful nation and the buildup is necessary for a more self-reliant military that can better deter China. But Beijing and other critics see Japan as deviating from its postwar peace pledge, pointing to Prime MinisterSanae Takaichi'sstatement soon after taking office that any Chinese military action against Taiwan could be grounds for a Japanese military response.

Japan's transformation into one of the world's major defense spenders has developed over decades and raises the question of whether the ongoing buildup is a violation of its pacifist constitution.

Here is a closer look.

Japan's constitution has been hollowed out

After World War II, Japan was not supposed to have a military.

During the 1945-1952 U.S. occupation, American officials wanted to stamp out the militarism that led to Japanese aggression across Asia before and during the war.

Under Article 9 of the U.S.-drafted 1947 constitution, Japan renounced the use of force to settle international disputes, and the right to maintain land, sea and air forces for that purpose.

The U.S. changed its mind about Japanese militarism when the Korean War started in 1950. Japan became an ally, not a threat, leading to the creation of the Japanese Self-Defense Forces in 1954. Article 9 is now widely seen as the legal basis for Japan to have a sufficient military to defend itself.

Japan has since repeatedly stretched the definition of self-defense, allowing overseas dispatches of its troops as part of international peacekeeping operations, though mostly avoiding combat missions.

A big change came in 2014, under former Prime MinisterShinzo Abe, who wanted Japan to have a normal military. Abe newly interpreted Article 9 as legalizing collective defense. The following year,a security lawallowed Japan to use force if the United States or other friendly nations come under enemy attack, even if Japan is not being attacked.

This was Abe's attempt to have a normal military without formally changing the constitution.

Takaichi angered China by giving a hypothetical example of such a situation, a deviation from former leaders' strategic ambiguity.

Tensions with China worsen

The flap with Beijing escalated in December whenChinese aircraft locked their radars, considered possible preparation for firing missiles, on Japanese planes during Chinese aircraft carrier drills near southwestern Japan.

Two Chinese aircraft carriersalso were spotted in June operating near the southern Japanese island of Iwo Jima for the first time. This led to worry in Tokyo about Beijing's rapidly expanding military activity far beyond its borders and in areas around islands claimed by both countries.

Takaichi's Cabinet last week approveda record defense budget plan. It exceeds 9 trillion yen ($58 billion) for the coming year and aims to fortify its strike-back capability and coastal defense with cruise missiles and unmanned arsenals.

In Beijing later that day, Foreign Ministry spokesperson Lin Jian criticized the Takaichi government for accelerating the pace of its military buildup and expansion, and added: "Japan is deviating from the path of peaceful development it has long claimed to uphold and is moving further and further in a dangerous direction."

China, which spends a huge amount on its own defense, may also see Takaichi as a defender of Japanese wartime aggression. Before taking office, she was a regular atTokyo's Yasukuni Shrine, which honors Japan's 2.5 million war dead, including convicted war criminals. Victims of Japanese aggression, especially China and the Koreas, see visits to the shrine as tantamount to a lack of remorse about Japan's wartime past.

Takaichi stayed away from Yasukuni in 2025 and sent a religious ornament marking the Aug. 15 anniversary of Japan's defeat as a personal gesture instead of praying at the shrine.

Japan takes on more offensive roles

A fundamental change came in December 2022 when former Prime Minister Fumio Kishida's government adopteda security strategystating the need for Japan to acquire strike-back capability with long-range missiles, a major break from Japan's self-defense-only policy.

The strategy names China as Japan's biggest strategic challenge and calls for a more offensive role for Japanese troops under its security alliance with the U.S as the allies work more closely together.

Masahiro Sakata, former head of the Cabinet Legislative Bureau, described the move as "the death of Article 9."

After the war, Japan long prioritized economic development over defense while relying largely on the U.S. by hosting about 50,000 American troops who also serve the region.

Japan maintained a defense spending cap of 1% of GDP until the annual defense budget started to rise under Abe's nearly decade-long leadership, to about 1.1%.Takaichiis certain to achieve a 2% target by March, two years earlier than planned, and is expected to push for more spending in coming years as Japan is under growing pressure after NATO adopted a new target of 5%.

Japan plans to promote defense industry

Takaichi's revised security and defense policy would aim to further bolster Japan with unmanned combative weapons and long-range missiles. It is expected to scrap remaining restrictions on arms exports to promote the development of Japan's defense industry and cooperation with friendly nations.

Japan has long banned arms exports but has significantly eased restrictions in recent years and is now developing next-generation fighter jets with the UK and Italy while finalizing a deal to sell frigates to Australia. Japan also will to provide support for construction and maintenance for U.S. warships.

A government-commissioned panel has proposed Japan consider developing a nuclear submarine to achieve a more long-distance deterrence capability, a controversial idea for a country that has long maintained non-nuclear principles.

Japan has requested Washington ensure protection through the extended deterrence of nuclear weapons. A number of officials recently expressed support for Japan's nuclear possession, which has led to criticism from Japanese atomic bomb survivors and other pacifist groups.

Japan stands by its three non-nuclear principles of not possessing, not producing and not allowing its presence, according to Defense Minister Shinjiro Koizumi, although he said Japan is considering all options for a possible new submarine.

Pacifist Japan has slowly transformed from exclusively self-defense to a military buildup

TOKYO (AP) — Japan is barreling forward with efforts to significantly boost its military capabilities to stand up toChina...
Channel Tunnel power malfunction fixed, but rail delays may linger

PARIS (AP) — The Channel Tunnel's operator said trains through the undersea link between continental Europe and the United Kingdom were running again Wednesday in both directions aftera day of travel chaoscaused by a power malfunction.

Eurostar, which runs passenger trains through the tunnel, said its services were operating again but warned that "knock on impacts" following the disruptions on Tuesday could still cause delays and cancellations.

The power supply problem in the 50-kilometer (32-mile) Channel Tunnel was fixed overnight Tuesday, its operator, Eurotunnel, said in a short statement that didn't detail the fault's cause.

Tuesday's hours-long interruption of cross-Channel train services upendedtravelers' end-of-year getaway plansand provoked scrambles for flights and buses.

Channel Tunnel power malfunction fixed, but rail delays may linger

PARIS (AP) — The Channel Tunnel's operator said trains through the undersea link between continental Europe and the U...

 

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