New Year's Garden Flags
New Year garden flags — Lunar New Year, resolutions, and fresh start designs.
Every new year's garden flags below is designed specifically for the holiday — you won’t find generic flags with a date slapped on them. Double-sided, UV-fade resistant polyester, and ready to display three weeks before the holiday through cleanup.
Top 12 Most Popular New Year's Garden Flags
These are the bestselling new year's garden flags on our fulfillment partner's storefront, ordered roughly by recent sales volume.
Where new year's garden flags fit in your rotation
New Year's Garden Flags are a specific slice of the larger Garden-Flags.com catalog. Most yards rotate two or three complementary designs across the year — one for the current season, one for the closest upcoming holiday, and a third “always-on” welcome or theme design that stays up year-round. If you like this category, also browse Valentine's Day Garden Flags, St. Patrick's Day Garden Flags, Easter Garden Flags, and Memorial Day Garden Flags. Rotate with the calendar using our spring, summer, fall, and winter picks, or shop by date with Memorial Day, 4th of July, Halloween, and Christmas. For a wider overview, check the theme index, season index, and holiday index, or read our buyers' guides.
How to choose the right new year's garden flags
- ›Start displaying your new year's garden flags about three weeks before the season or holiday kickoff — early enough that neighbors notice, not so early that the flag looks out of place.
- ›Pair every new year's garden flags with a 40"–46" wrought-iron stand and a rubber flag stopper — a stopper alone saves you from losing flags in the first windstorm.
- ›Look for "double-sided" in the product description. A single-sided flag looks reversed from the back — usually fine on a porch, not fine on a yard walkway where people approach from both sides.
- ›Polyester holds color in direct sun for 1–3 years. Suede polyester is softer, more premium, and holds color noticeably longer.
What makes a great new year's garden flags
Size & materials
Standard garden flags are 12.5" x 18", printed double-sided on a polyester blend so the design reads correctly from either side. Look for reinforced stitched edges and fade-resistant ink rated for outdoor UV exposure — those two details drive how long a flag lasts through rain, sun and freeze-thaw cycles.
Best placement
Mount the flag on a garden flag stand roughly 10–15 feet from your front walk or door, where it’s visible from the street but not blocked by shrubs. Pair it with solar spotlights for evening visibility and it becomes a 24-hour curb-appeal upgrade.
Seasonal timing
Rotate new year's garden flags in two to three weeks before the target season or holiday so neighbors and delivery drivers see the change, and keep each flag up four to six weeks for maximum impact. Store rotated flags flat in a dry bin to preserve color.
Frequently asked questions
What size is a new year's garden flags?
Every new year's garden flags on Garden-Flags.com is the standard 12.5 inches wide by 18 inches tall — the dimension that fits every standard 40–46 inch garden flag stand. If you are looking for a larger porch-mounted size, those are called house flags and measure 28 inches by 40 inches.
Are new year's garden flags double-sided?
The vast majority of new year's garden flags in this collection are double-sided so the design reads correctly whether viewed from the driveway or the walkway. Single-sided flags do exist and are cheaper, but they read mirrored from the back. We flag single-sided designs on the individual product page.
How long does a new year's garden flags last outdoors?
A quality polyester new year's garden flags lasts one to three years of continuous outdoor display. Rotating flags seasonally, using a stopper to prevent wear at the pole, and bringing the flag inside during major storms will push that to four or five years.
When should I display a new year's garden flags?
New Year garden flags — Lunar New Year, resolutions, and fresh start designs shine Most homeowners rotate them three to four times per year to match the calendar.
How early should I put out a new year's garden flags?
Most Americans put out holiday garden flags two to three weeks before the holiday date. That gives neighbors time to notice and you time to enjoy the display before the event.
Related garden flags by holiday
Heart, love and Valentine garden flag designs for February 14th.
Shamrock, leprechaun, Irish and St. Patrick's Day garden flag designs.
Easter bunny, eggs, spring and faith-themed Easter garden flag designs.
Memorial Day garden flags — U.S. military, veterans, and remembrance designs.
Independence Day garden flags — USA 250, stars and stripes, Liberty, and patriotic designs.
Halloween garden flags with pumpkins, ghosts, witches, black cats, and Dia de los Muertos designs.











