How to Say Happy New Year in Chinese

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How to Say Happy New Year in Chinese

新年快乐 (xīnnián kuàilè) — plus 恭喜发财 and the festive wishes of Chinese New Year. Tap any phrase to hear a native speaker.

新年快乐
Quick answer
xīnnián kuàilè
“Happy New Year”

新年快乐 (xīnnián kuàilè) — “happy new year” — is a phrase worth knowing twice over, because in China the year turns twice: once on 1 January, and again, far more grandly, at Chinese New Year.

The festive season comes with its own warm, lucky greetings — most famously 恭喜发财 — plus red packets and reunion feasts. This guide covers the natural ways to say happy new year in Chinese, when to use which, and the customs behind them — tap any phrase to hear it spoken by a native voice, and use the flashcards to make them stick.

10 ways to say happy new year in Chinese

From the standard 新年快乐 to the festive 恭喜发财 — here are the ways to say happy new year in Chinese. Tap 🔊 on each.

Flashcard mode hides the meaning so you can test yourself — tap a card to reveal.
新年快乐
xīnnián kuàilè
Happy New Year
The standard — works for both Chinese and Gregorian new year.
Standard
春节快乐
chūnjié kuàilè
Happy Spring Festival
Specifically Chinese (Lunar) New Year.
CNY
恭喜发财
gōngxǐ fācái
Wishing you prosperity
The most iconic CNY greeting (Cantonese: gong hei fat choy).
Iconic
新年好
xīnnián hǎo
Happy new year (casual)
A friendly, everyday version.
Casual
万事如意
wànshì rúyì
May all go your way
A warm, all-purpose wish.
Wish
身体健康
shēntǐ jiànkāng
(Wishing you) good health
Especially for elders.
Wish
年年有余
niánnián yǒuyú
Abundance every year
A prosperity wish — a pun on 鱼 (fish), eaten at New Year.
Prosperity
大吉大利
dàjí dàlì
Great luck and fortune
A punchy wish for luck.
Luck
步步高升
bùbù gāoshēng
Rise step by step
A career-success wish for colleagues.
Success
恭喜发财,红包拿来
gōngxǐ fācái, hóngbāo ná lái
Prosperity — now hand over the red packet!
Playful — what children say to get their 红包.
Playful

Chinese New Year words

A few festive extras you’ll meet around 春节.

红包
hóngbāo
Red packet
春节
chūnjié
Spring Festival
拜年
bàinián
New Year visits
年夜饭
niányèfàn
Reunion dinner

You’ll also see the character (fú, “fortune”) hung upside-down — because 倒 (“upside-down”) sounds like 到 (“arrives”), so it reads as “fortune arrives”.

Good to know

新年快乐 or 恭喜发财?

新年快乐 (xīnnián kuàilè) is the literal “happy new year”. But the greeting you’ll hear most at Chinese New Year is 恭喜发财 (gōngxǐ fācái) — “wishing you wealth and prosperity” (you may know its Cantonese form, gong hei fat choy). Children often follow it with 红包拿来 (hóngbāo ná lái) — “now bring the red packet!”.

Red packets (红包) of lucky money, a big reunion dinner on New Year’s Eve, and lucky words everywhere are all part of 春节 (chūnjié), the Spring Festival. There’s far more to explore in Chinese New Year traditions.

Will, a native teacher, explaining how to say happy new year in Chinese
Will’s tip

恭喜发财 is the warmest, most festive thing to say at Chinese New Year — and if a child grins and adds 红包拿来, that’s your cue to hand over a red packet! For 1 January (the Gregorian new year), simply stick with 新年快乐.

Which New Year greeting, when?

SituationSayWhy
Any new year新年快乐The standard
Chinese New Year恭喜发财“Wishing you prosperity”
An elder身体健康Good health
A colleague步步高升“Rise step by step”
Replying to a wish你也是“You too”

Common mistakes to avoid

The little slips that trip up beginners saying happy new year in Chinese — and the natural fix for each.

Only using 新年快乐 at CNY

At Chinese New Year, 恭喜发财 (gōngxǐ fācái) is the festive greeting everyone actually says.

Mixing up 春节 and 元旦

元旦 (yuándàn) is 1 January; 春节 (chūnjié) is Chinese New Year — the lunar one.

Reading 恭喜发财 as “happy new year”

It actually means “wishing you wealth” — pair it with 新年快乐 for the full greeting.

Rushing the tones

恭喜发财 is gōngxǐ fācái (1·3·1·2) — keep each syllable clear and even.

Quick check

1. The most iconic Chinese New Year greeting is…

2. 恭喜发财 literally means…

3. What is a red packet called?

FAQs

新年快乐 (xīnnián kuàilè). At Chinese New Year, the most popular greeting is 恭喜发财 (gōngxǐ fācái), “wishing you prosperity”.
“Congratulations and be prosperous” — a wish for wealth in the new year. You may know its Cantonese form, gong hei fat choy.
元旦 (yuándàn) is 1 January, the Gregorian New Year. 春节 (chūnjié), the Spring Festival, is Chinese (Lunar) New Year — the big celebration.
你也是 (nǐ yě shì), “you too”, or the traditional 同喜 (tóngxǐ), “same to you”.
After 恭喜发财, they playfully add 红包拿来 (hóngbāo ná lái) — “now bring the red packet!”.
It follows the lunar calendar, falling between late January and mid-February each year — so the exact date shifts annually.
Will Zhang, founder of WillyChina
Written by
Will Zhang
Native Mandarin speaker · born in China, raised in Australia · 10+ years teaching
Every WillyChina guide is written and reviewed by Will and the team — real teaching experience, checked by a native speaker. More about Will →

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