tet, also known as Lunar New Year festival, is one of the biggest traditional festivals in Viet Nam. Tet usually starts at the end of January and ends in early February. Tet has 3 main days; however, it often takes Vietnamese people a week to prepare beforehand. They clean their house and decorate it with flowers and trees such as a kumquat tree or peach blossom. A huge amount of food ingredients will be bought before Tet to make traditional dishes. Banh Chung, Gio cha, Banh Tet, Xoi Mut,… and candies are the foods that could be easily seen on Tet holidays. During the 3 main days of Tet, people visit their relatives’ houses and give them wishes. However, Vietnamese people believe that the first visitor a family welcomes in the year may affect their fortune for the entire year. Therefore, people never enter any houses on the first day of Lunar New Year without being invited first. Another traditional custom is giving lucky money, which is put into a red envelope as a symbol of luck and wish for a new age, to children and the elders. Besides, after the first 3 days, Vietnamese usually go to pagodas or temples to pray for wealth, health, success,… To Vietnamese, Tet is the happiest period of the year round because members in a family can gather and celebrate Tet together. Generally, Tet is all about going back home, being nice to others, enjoying the precious moment, and wishing for the best things to come.