What do you wish for in the New Year?
Every New Year’s Eve, people around the world cling to traditions that promise luck, love, and prosperity. One of the sweetest—and quirkiest—is the superstition of eating 12 grapes before the clock strikes midnight.
Some say you’ll attract a partner, others that you’ll enjoy a year of good fortune, but whatever the exact wish, the ritual is fun, challenging, and rooted in history.
The custom is known as Las doce uvas de la suerte, or The Twelve Grapes of Luck. Its origins date back to late 1800s Spain, and it became widely popular in the early 1900s.
At the time, grape farmers in the Alicante region faced overproduction and needed a creative way to sell their surplus. The result was a tradition that eventually turned into a national phenomenon.
Each of the 12 grapes represents one month of the year, and the goal is to eat them all in sync with the 12 chimes of midnight. If you succeed, it is said you will invite luck, success, and positive energy for the year ahead. Sounds easy? Think again. Eating a grape with every chime in just one minute is trickier than it looks.
In Spain, people often serve the grapes on skewers or in small bowls to make the timing easier. Some even wrap the grapes individually in paper while they ripen, a practice traditionally done with Aledo grapes, a Spanish variety protected for its uniquely sweet, thin-skinned flavor.
Whether you follow tradition down to the last grape or improvise with whatever is at hand, the essence of the ritual is the same: joy, hope, and a little playful suspense as the year flips over.
The tradition has traveled far beyond Spain. Crowds gather in iconic locations like Puerta del Sol in Madrid, cheering and counting down the chimes together. In the United States, even Times Square revelers have joined in on the grape-eating fun, proving that some customs are simply too delicious to ignore.
So this New Year’s Eve, will you join in? Will you dare to eat 12 grapes in 12 seconds, wish for love, luck, or success, and maybe even start the year with a little sweet magic? One thing is certain: it is a tasty tradition worth celebrating.