About 65% of Americans prefer to celebrate New Year's Eve at home or in small gatherings of fewer than 20 people rather than attending large parties.
Most Americans Skip Big New Year's Parties
Picture New Year's Eve and you probably imagine Times Square packed with a million revelers, champagne-soaked nightclub parties, or glamorous galas. But here's the reality: most Americans want nothing to do with that chaos.
Survey after survey confirms that roughly 65% of Americans prefer celebrating the new year at home or in small gatherings with fewer than 20 people. The big, flashy parties? They're the exception, not the rule.
The Cozy Majority
There's something almost rebellious about choosing your couch over a crowded bar. Yet that's exactly what most Americans do. A typical New Year's Eve for the majority looks like:
- Staying home with family or a partner
- Hosting a small dinner party with close friends
- Watching the ball drop on TV in pajamas
- Going to bed before midnight (yes, really)
In fact, studies show that about one in four Americans doesn't even stay up until midnight. The pressure to have an epic, Instagram-worthy New Year's Eve? Most people have opted out entirely.
Why Small Beats Big
The reasons are practical and relatable. Large New Year's Eve events often mean expensive tickets, crowded venues, surge-priced rideshares, and amateur drinkers everywhere. The average American would rather skip the hassle.
There's also the expectation problem. New Year's Eve has a reputation as the most overhyped night of the year. When you're promised the party of a lifetime, reality rarely delivers. A quiet night with people you actually like? That's a celebration you can control.
The Economics of Staying In
Going out on December 31st is expensive. Cover charges at bars and clubs routinely hit $50-$100 or more. Restaurant prix fixe menus cost double their normal prices. Factor in drinks, transportation, and potentially a hotel room, and a couple can easily spend $500 on a single night out.
Compare that to a bottle of champagne, some appetizers, and streaming the countdown from your living room. The math isn't complicated.
A Generational Shift?
Interestingly, this isn't just older folks being homebodies. Millennials and Gen Z—despite their reputation for experiences over things—increasingly report preferring low-key New Year's celebrations. The pandemic accelerated this trend, but it was already underway.
Social media may have actually helped. When you can see that most New Year's Eve parties look awkward and overcrowded in real life (versus the curated posts), staying home loses its stigma.
So this December 31st, if you find yourself on the couch in comfortable clothes, snacks within reach, watching Anderson Cooper and Andy Cohen countdown to midnight—know that you're not missing out. You're in the majority.