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You鈥檝e probably got an idea of what Scotland鈥檚 traditional New Year鈥檚 Eve celebration on December 31 is all about. You鈥檇 better supersize those ideas.

This cuddly, Caledonian, cockeyed party is, in fact, a nearly week-long festival beginning shortly after Christmas and running long after the bells ring out at midnight on January 1.

History of Hogmanay

The reason Hogmanay has become the preeminent holiday in Scotland is simple. In 1640, during the Protestant reformation in 1640, a law was passed that made celebrating 鈥淵ule vacations鈥 illegal in Scotland 鈥 and Christmas celebrations remained legally banned for almost 300 years thereafter. There was no public holiday on December 25; punishments for violating the rules were harsh. Enter Hogmanay, then, to satisfy Scots鈥 need for a proper end-of-the-year party.

In the centuries since, the idea of Hogmanay has grown beyond any measure. Like St Patrick鈥檚 Day in Dublin, Mardi Gras in New Orleans or Carnival in Rio de Janeiro, the annual festivities have become a no-holds-barred celebration of Scottish culture in all its forms, with Edinburgh the ground zero for solid-gold frolics, street ceilidhs and single-malt whisky drinking. The Scots have embraced all this with gusto, regardless of how...creative some Hogmanay-related events might be. It definitely helps that the Scottish capital is such a good-looking place to hold a giant, week-long party in the first place. High spirits are guaranteed.

Fireworks over Edinburgh's city center for Hogmanay (New Year鈥檚 Eve) during the Edinburgh Festival and Edinburgh Military Tattoo.
Fireworks ring in the new year in Edinburgh 漏 jmimages / Getty Images

Experience Hogmanay in Edinburgh

The promise of a once-in-a-lifetime party is reason enough for thousands of visitors to annually make Edinburgh their number-one option to ring in the New Year. Record attendance was set in the mid-1990s, when more than 300,000 revelers took to the city center for the free-for-all street party. With this amount of people, though, advance planning in strongly recommended 鈥 and the smart move is to get organized months in advance.

To begin with, check your accommodation options. Everything from swank hotels to simple hostels and smart Airbnbs crank up their rates over the Hogmanay period, with the cheapest options often selling out more than a year in advance. You鈥檒l also want to book tickets for the main street party, the torchlit parade and any other headline events as soon as you鈥檝e confirmed your accommodation. Everyone wants to offload their bags in the Old Town, but it鈥檚 the priciest option; the likes of the West End, Stockbridge, Bruntsfield, Fountainbridge and Leith are just as attractive. Best of all, pubs and bars all over town become must-do sights in themselves 鈥 so there鈥檚 little to interrupt the serious business of partying.

The warm-up

The day before New Year鈥檚 Eve sees the city awash with fire and light as a torchlit procession celebrating Scotland鈥檚 pagan and Gaelic roots snakes its way through the Old Town to Holyrood Park. With a ticket, you鈥檒l be gifted a wax-based torch and be invited to join a family-friendly procession of like-minded firebugs.

A torchlight Hogmanay (New Year鈥檚 Eve) procession through the streets of Edinburgh
Torchlit processions are a staple of Hogmanay celebrations throughout Scotland 漏 Shutterlyn_Gallery / Shutterstock

The main event

Year鈥檚 end sees a 70,000-strong international tartan army cram onto Princes St to ceilidh and quaff whisky, before everyone pogos to bands and DJs from Waverley Bridge to the Mound. Then, to cap it all off, Edinburgh Castle lights up in a flurry of fireworks, while the masses sing 鈥淎uld Lang Syne鈥 and toast the midnight bells with yet more whisky.

Running parallel to this throughout the capital are various ticketed events, from themed ceilidhs to marquee folk and rock concerts to family fireworks shows held beneath Castle Rock in Princes Street Gardens. While some events are free, the corporate nature of Hogmanay nowadays means many are individually ticketed, with booking links available on the official .

Bear in mind that December tends to feature the worst weather of the Scottish year. So if you鈥檙e prepared for it to be wet, windy, dark and cold, with temperatures hovering around 0掳C (32掳F) at times, you won鈥檛 leave disappointed.

To make life easier and encourage responsible drinking, local operator Lothian Buses runs late-night services throughout Hogmanay, as does Edinburgh Trams, which connects Edinburgh Airport to Leith via Princes Street and St Andrew鈥檚 Square.

Two men and two children in tartan tams wade into the water for the Annual Loony Dook on New Year鈥檚 Day (after Hogmanay) in South Queensferry, Edinburgh
The day after Hogmanay, Edinburgh revelers treat their hangovers with a frigid New Year鈥檚 dip at the Annual Loony Dook 漏 Ian Melvin / Shutterstock

The day after

Hungover? You might well be. If so, do what around 1000 Scots do each year and join the Loony Dook. It鈥檚 a bum-numbing fancy dress swim that sees those who haven鈥檛 yet gone to bed hurl themselves into the freezing waters of South Queensferry, beneath the iconic Forth Rail Bridge. It鈥檚 where a heroic feat of engineering meets heroic acts of stupidity. Good thing it鈥檚 all for charity.

Getting to and around Edinburgh

The Scottish capital swells with visitors over the festive period, so book accommodation long in advance. Date-wise, the Hogmanay festival takes place from December 28/29 through January 1/2.

Hogmanay ticket costs

Tickets cost from 拢25 (for access to the main December 31 street party on Princes St) to 拢50 (for marquee DJs and chart bands in the adjacent Princes Street Gardens).

Hogmanay in the rest of Scotland

Undoubtedly, Edinburgh is Scotland鈥檚 top spot for New Year revelry, yet prices are cheaper and queues shorter elsewhere. In Glasgow, for instance, tradition dictates that Hogmanay is a smaller if equally raucous affair, with a similar turned-up-to-11 party vibe and pub time followed by dancing at the ticketed event on George Square beside Queen St Station. Failing that, you鈥檒l have an equal amount of fun on the surrounding streets with a 鈥渃arry oot鈥 from the off-license (to fit in, note that Buckfast is the Glaswegian tipple of choice). A late night means a late breakfast, then a cobweb-clearing stroll around Glasgow Cathedral and the Necropolis or a saunter through Kelvingrove Park in the West End. Then, it鈥檚 a New Year鈥檚 Day sharpener in the Merchant City or Finnieston, both of which are full of lively pubs and eclectic bars.

Likewise, Aberdeen, Dundee, Perth and Inverness offer similar street-party affairs, with bands, DJs, ceilidhs and messily sung countdowns to the 12 o鈥檆lock bells. Yet for something completely different, consider Shetland.

Up Helly Aa, held at the end of January, might come well after traditional New Year festivities, yet Europe鈥檚 largest fire festival both signals the end of the Yule season and taps into the island鈥檚 Norse heritage. The highlight in Lerwick is the after-dark Jarl squad parade, when an army of ax-wielding Vikings, followed by a boozy parade of 1000 men in fancy dress and fake bosoms, set fire to a replica longboat.

A torchlit procession with a Viking longboat is the culmination of Up Helly Aa festivities in Shetland, Scotland
Help to celebrate the end of the Yule season at the end of January, Up Helly Aa in Shetland combines Scottish and Norse traditions, and is Europe鈥檚 largest fire festival 漏 konstantin belovtov / Shutterstock

First footing and other Hogmanay traditions

Traditionally, the first person to enter a house after midnight is a bearer of good fortune for the year ahead, and gifts representing food, flavor and warmth are shared. If invited to a party, bring shortbread, whisky or a lump of coal.

Torchlit processions and fire displays also typify the nation鈥檚 Hogmanay traditions. While Edinburgh has its flame procession along the shadow-filled High Street, it鈥檚 Stonehaven鈥檚 utterly unique Fireball Ceremony that most memorably marks the turn of the year. In most other cities around the world, swinging a fiercely flaming ball around your head would land you in prison, but in this Aberdeenshire harbor town it鈥檚 actively encouraged. Pyromaniacs will fit right in.

Perhaps it鈥檚 the lyrical message of universal forgiveness and kindness (鈥淲e鈥檒l tak a cup o鈥 kindness yet鈥). Or perhaps it鈥檚 just the excuse to gather en masse, arms linked and hands clasped like a wobbly football crowd. But Scotland鈥檚 love of singing Robert Burns鈥 鈥淎uld Lang Syne鈥 at Hogmanay is simply unrivaled anywhere in the world. The Scots-language poem turned folk tune is the soundtrack to every pub and party, and the singing 鈥 and swaying 鈥 gets wilder as the ditty pushes towards its climax.

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