2026 national electoral calendar
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This national electoral calendar for 2026 lists the national/federal elections scheduled to be held in 2026 in all sovereign states and their dependent territories. By-elections are excluded, though national referendums are included. Specific dates are given where these are known.
January
- 11 January:
- 15 January: Uganda, President and Parliament[3]
- 18 January: Portugal, President (1st round)[4][5]
- 25 January: Myanmar, Parliament (3rd phase)[6]
February
- 1 February: Costa Rica, President and Parliament[7]
- 6 February: Tokelau, Parliament[8]
- 8 February:
- 11 February: Barbados, House of Assembly[12]
- 12 February: Bangladesh, Parliament and Constitutional referendum[13]
- 22 February: Laos, Parliament[14]
March
- 5 March: Nepal, House of Representatives[15]
- 8 March:
- 15 March:
- 22 March: Slovenia, National Assembly[22]
- 22–23 March: Italy, Constitutional referendum[23]
- 24 March: Denmark, Parliament[24]
- 26 March: Faroe Islands, Parliament[25]
April
- 4 April: Maldives, Constitutional referendum[26]
- 10 April: Djibouti, President[27]
- 12 April:
- 12–13 April: Peru, President (1st round), Chamber of Deputies and Senate[30]
- 19 April: Bulgaria, Parliament[31]
- 30 April: Antigua and Barbuda, House of Representatives[32]
May
- 2 May: Niue, Parliament[33]
- 12 May: Bahamas, House of Assembly[34]
- 17 May: Cape Verde, Parliament[35]
- 24 May: Cyprus, Parliament[36]
- 30 May: Malta, Parliament[37]
- 31 May:
June
- 1 June: Ethiopia, House of Peoples' Representatives[40]
- 7 June:
- 14 June: Switzerland, Referendums[43]
- 21 June: Colombia, President (2nd round)[44]
- 28 June: New Caledonia, Parliament[45]
July
- 2 July: Algeria, People's National Assembly[46]
- 4 July: Slovakia, Referendum
- 19 July: São Tomé and Príncipe, President[47]
August
- 13 August: Zambia, President and Parliament[48]
- 29 August: Iceland, Referendum[49]
- 30 August: Haiti, President, Chamber of Deputies and Senate[50]
September
- 13 September: Sweden, Parliament[51]
- 20 September: Russia, State Duma[52]
- 23 September: Morocco, House of Representatives[53]
- 24 September: Isle of Man, House of Keys[54]
- 27 September:
October
- 3 October: Latvia, Parliament[55]
- 4 October:
- 9–10 October: Czech Republic, Senate (1st round)[58]
- 27 October: Israel, Knesset[59]
November
- 3 November: United States, House of Representatives and Senate[60]
- 7 November: New Zealand, Parliament[61]
- 8 November: Bulgaria, President[62]
- 15 November: Cape Verde, President[35]
- 29 November: Switzerland, Referendums
December
- 5 December: Gambia, President[63]
- 6 December: Guinea-Bissau, President and Parliament[64]
- 13 December: Transnistria, President[65]
- 22 December: South Sudan, President, Assembly and Council of States[66]
Unknown date
- Cameroon, Parliament[67]
- Cook Islands, Parliament[68]
- Fiji, Parliament[69]
- Kazakhstan, Kurultai[70]
- Nauru, Constitutional referendum[71]
- Somalia, Parliament[72]
Indirect elections
- 3–8 March: Iran, Supreme Leader[73]
- 16 March, 18 June, TBD November: India, Council of States[74]
- 22 March: North Korea, President of the State Affairs[75]
- 23 March: Laos, President[76]
- 30 March: Myanmar, President
- 3 April: Myanmar, Vice President[77]
- 7 April: Vietnam, President
- 11 April: Iraq, President[78]
- 2 September: Estonia, President[79]
- September: France, Senate (series 2)
- Kosovo, President[80]