Yes it is.
January 1
New Year's Eve is December 31 and New Year's Day is January 1.
Under the Gregorian calendar New Year's Day is January 1st.
1 January
The Julian calendar decreed that the new year would occur with January 1, and within the Roman world, January 1 became the consistently observed start of the new year.
New Year's Eve and New Year's Day are celebrated on December 31 and January 1 respectively. The new year begins on January 1 at 12 am Atlantic Standard Time (one hour ahead of New York City)
Neither. The New Year begins January 1st each year. The last day of the old year is December 31.
New Year Coffee - 2014 was released on: India: 1 January 2014 USA: 1 January 2014 (internet)
Celebrating the new year on January 1 is part of the modern Gregorian calendar, and January was established as a month in the Roman calendar. However, celebrating January 1 as the start of the new year is a tradition that's only about 200 years old. March 1 was celebrated as the start of the new year by Ancient Rome, the UK, and its colonies for hundreds of years.
January 1
On 1 January!
January 1