Celebrating Chinese New Year

Feb. 4, 2026

What is Chinese New Year, and when is it celebrated?

Chinese New Year, or Lunar New Year, is a festival celebrating the new year across Asia and some other continents. It usually occurs from late January to late February, this year falling on 17th February, starting the Year of the Horse.

Each year, is named from one of the 12 animals in the Chinese Zodiac: rat, ox, tiger rabbit, dragon, snake, horse, goat, monkey, rooster, dog and pig. You and your pupils can find out which animal is linked to the year they were born here (2Simple is a Rabbit, if you were wondering! 🐇 ).

Chinese New Year 2026

Planning to celebrate Chinese New Year with your class? Use some of Purple Mash’s huge variety of resources and activities in your classroom to ensure your pupils learn about the importance of this festival for many cultures across the world.

Here, we have mapped out a whole day of celebratory lessons for you! Purple Mash users can access all these resources as part of their subscription. Don't yet have a subscription? Get a free trial using the button below.

Chinese New Year Morning Work Activities

When your class arrive in the morning, why not use some of our printables to get them in the celebratory mood? They could:

You could also set up some tablets for them to have a go at these activities:

English Lessons for Chinese New Year

Plan a whole lesson in English, researching and writing about Chinese New Year. Set your pupils the Chinese New Year Research activity for them to find and discover interesting facts, and then you can write a newspaper front page or leaflet all about the traditions surrounding the day.

Maths Lessons for Chinese New Year

Spend some time in your math lesson by learning how to write the numbers 1-10 with our Write Chinese numbers. Open up the discussion to other ways of writing and representing numbers (think Roman Numerals, Deines etc!) and see how many your class can show you.

Cross-Curricular Learning for Chinese New Year

Fill your afternoon in the classroom with some cross-curricular learning. Explore our Shang Dynasty resources:

Or, continue the research with a geography emphasis with our China Fact File.

Chinese New Year for Younger Learners or EYFS

For those in Nursery and EYFS, you can still get involved in the fun through Mini Mash! Use our labels alongside these pictures to play a fun matching quiz game. For a Funky Fingers activity, why not use our Time Savers templates and cut around the pictures to make finger and stick puppets, or even use them for labels and badges!

There’s also a wide selection of themed jigsaws and pairs games to complete and they’re all complemented by slideshows and worksheets.

Mini Mash is included in every subscription of Purple Mash, which you can get a free trial of here.

However you celebrate Chinese New Year, we’d love to see what you come up with. You can share your work with us via our Twitter and Facebook profiles.

新 年 快 乐

Xīn nián kuài lè!

(Happy New Year!)