Each year, as the world prepares to bid farewell to the calendar and welcome a new beginning, there is a question that sparks global curiosity: What is the first country to celebrate the New Year? The answer is shared by Samoa and Kiribati, two island nations in the Pacific that, due to their geographical location, are the first to receive the date change.
Both territories are located near the international date line, an artificial boundary established in 1884 that separates two consecutive days on the calendar. Thanks to their position near the western side of this line, which roughly follows the 180° meridian, although with multiple deviations, Samoa and Kiribati are ahead of the rest of the world, even countries like New Zealand and other Pacific islands. The International Date Line runs around the planet from pole to pole, but it doesn't do so in a straight line. Its course zigzags to adapt to political borders and island territories, such as the easternmost part of Russia, the Aleutian Islands of Alaska, and several islands in the Pacific Ocean. When crossing it westward, one day is gained; when doing so in the opposite direction, one goes back in the calendar, a particularity that the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration of the United States (NOAA) describes as a kind of "time travel".







