Where and how to watch the NYC ball drop on New Year’s Eve
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Where and how to watch the NYC ball drop on New Year’s Eve
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Welcome 2026

Where and how to watch the NYC ball drop on New Year’s Eve


The ultimate guide to watching the Times Square ball drop 2025 live on TV, online, or in person


The New Year's Eve ball drop numerals for 2026 are displayed in Times Square.© Getty Images
Shirley GomezSenior Writer
DECEMBER 29, 2025 1:42 PM ESTDEC 29, 2025, 1:42 PM EST

Steering into the final hours of 2025 has its own kind of magic, and few moments sparkle brighter than the Times Square Ball Drop in New York City. It is not just a countdown. It is a shared global heartbeat. Millions pack into Midtown Manhattan, and millions more gather around TVs, phones, and laptops to watch one glittering crystal ball slide down a pole and officially open the door to 2026.

This year brings extra dazzle. The 2025 to 2026 transition kicks off the United States’ 250th anniversary year, and the Times Square ball is dressed in patriotic red, white, and blue lighting to mark the moment. Organizers have teased bigger visuals, extra confetti, and special flourishes that turn this into a history-soaked celebration with a futuristic glow.

© Getty Images
The New Year's Eve ball drop numerals for 2026 are lit up and displayed in Times Square on December 18, 2025, in New York City.

Whether you want to feel the pavement shake beneath your boots or sip something bubbly on your couch, here is your full, easy-to-follow guide to watching the NYC Ball Drop live.

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What Time Does the Ball Drop Happen

The magic is precise. At 11:59 p.m. Eastern Time, the ball begins its 60-second descent from the top of One Times Square. When it reaches the bottom, the clock strikes midnight, and 2026 officially begins. That final minute is when the city roars, the confetti cannons fire, and every wish you made during the year feels suddenly brand new.

© Getty Images
People watch as the New Year's Eve ball drop numerals for 2026 are lit up and displayed in Times Square.

If you are outside the Eastern Time zone, do a quick conversion so you do not miss it. On the West Coast, that iconic moment happens at 9 p.m. On most streaming platforms and TV networks, coverage runs for hours beforehand so you can soak in the buildup.

How to Watch the Ball Drop on TV

Television is still one of the easiest ways to experience the Ball Drop without worrying about buffering or frozen screens. ABC’s Dick Clark’s New Year’s Rockin’ Eve with Ryan Seacrest is the biggest show of the night. It starts in prime time and runs straight through midnight with celebrity performances, live crowd shots from Times Square, and the official countdown.

CNN also broadcasts live from Times Square with its New Year’s Eve special hosted by Anderson Cooper and Andy Cohen. It has become famous for mixing serious moments with unpredictable comedy, which feels pretty accurate for New Year’s Eve energy.

© Taylor Hill
Mariah Carey performs during Dick Clark's New Year's Rockin' Eve at Times Square.

Most live TV streaming services that carry ABC or CNN will also give you access, including Hulu + Live TV, Fubo, Sling, and similar platforms. If you already use one of those, you are all set.

How to Stream the NYC Ball Drop for Free

If cable is not your thing, you still have plenty of ways to watch. Times Square runs an official live webcast on its website every year. It typically begins around 6 p.m. Eastern Time and continues through the ball drop and into the first moments of the new year. The stream is commercial-free, includes captions, and often features American Sign Language interpretation, which makes it one of the most accessible ways to watch.

You can also find live streams on YouTube, Facebook, and X. Many of these offer multiple camera angles, crowd shots, and skyline views. It is a fun way to feel like you are hopping around Times Square without moving an inch.

Watching the Ball Drop in Times Square

Seeing the Ball Drop in person is a true bucket list experience, but it is not for the faint of heart. It is cold, crowded, and unforgettable. The main public viewing areas run along Broadway from about West 43rd Street to West 50th Street, and along Seventh Avenue up to around West 59th Street. Those areas give you a direct line of sight to One Times Square.

© Getty Images
Revelers celebrate moments after the ball dropped in New York's Times Square on New Years Eve.

People start lining up in the early afternoon, and once an area fills up, it closes. There are no bathrooms, no reentry, and no wandering off for snacks. You stand in your spot for hours. It sounds wild because it is. That is also part of the legend.

Security is tight. Bags are checked, and large backpacks, alcohol, and certain items are not allowed. Dress in layers, wear comfortable shoes, and bring a sense of humor.

VIP and Indoor Viewing Options

If standing for eight hours in the cold sounds less than dreamy, Times Square offers plenty of premium alternatives. Hotels, rooftops, restaurants, and lounges in the area sell special New Year’s Eve packages that include food, drinks, live DJs, and, most importantly, views of the ball. Some venues offer outdoor terraces while others provide giant windows or private balconies.

Prices range from a few hundred dollars to well over a thousand, depending on how close you are to the action and how fancy the party is. What you get in return is warmth, bathrooms, and champagne, which honestly feels like luxury on New Year’s Eve.

The Wishing Wall and Midnight Confetti

One of the most beautiful parts of the Times Square tradition is the Wishing Wall. Throughout December, people from around the world submit wishes, hopes, and dreams for the new year. At midnight, many of those wishes are turned into tiny pieces of confetti that rain down on the crowd.

It is poetic chaos. Your dream of more joy or better health, or a winning lottery ticket, floats through the air and becomes part of the celebration.

© Getty Images
Visitors write down wishes at the New Year's Eve Wishing Wall in Times Square.

Whether you are bundled up in Times Square, watching on TV with friends, or streaming on your phone while cooking late-night snacks, the NYC Ball Drop connects people across time zones and cultures. It is sixty seconds of shared anticipation followed by a burst of joy, noise, and flying confetti.

© Getty Images
Confetti falls on revelers at 10 pm as they wait in the rain for the ball to drop during New Year's Eve festivities in Times Square.

That is why it never gets old. One glowing ball, one global countdown, and a brand-new year waiting to be written. Welcome to 2026.

© ¡HOLA! Reproduction of this article and its photographs in whole or in part is prohibited, even when citing their source.

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