Austria: Poll by Peter Hajek from 10.11.2022

Polling data

SPÖ
27.0
-2.0
FPÖ
25.0
+3.0
ÖVP
22.0
±0.0
GRÜNE
10.0
±0.0
NEOS
10.0
±0.0
MFG
3.0
-2.0
Sonst.
3.0
+1.0
Development since the last election on 29.09.2019
Peter Hajek – 800 respondents – 07.11.2022-10.11.2022
Next election: 2024
The next parliamentary election in Austria is expected to take place in 2024.
Low number of respondents
Only 800 eligible voters were polled for this election poll.

Election poll results

Austria - The latest poll for the Parliamentary election in Austria from Peter Hajek shows the following results: SPÖ 27%, FPÖ 25%, ÖVP 22%, GRÜNE 10%, NEOS 10% and MFG 3%. If an election were held in Austria this Sunday, FPÖ might gain the most in voter favorability with +8.8 growth since the last election. ÖVP, on the other hand, would lose the most votes (-15.5) in the election barometer compared to the last election result.

Karl Nehammer is currently governing with a Coalition of the center from ÖVP and GRÜNE. With 34.0% of virtual seats, the government could fail to remain in office.

The election survey was collected by Peter Hajek. For this purpose, 800 persons were asked about their party preference in a period of 3 days (07.11.2022 - 10.11.2022).

Coalition possibilities

183
SPÖ
53
GRÜNE
19
NEOS
19
ÖVP
43
FPÖ
49
Majority requires 92 seats
SPÖ + FPÖ
102
SPÖ + ÖVP
96
FPÖ + ÖVP
92
SPÖ + NEOS + GRÜNE

Frequently asked questions about election polls

Election poll results

This election poll on the parliamentary election in Austria was conducted by Peter Hajek. The survey took place between 07.11.2022 and 10.11.2022 among 800 eligible voters. After this election poll would get SPÖ 27%, FPÖ 25%, ÖVP 22%, GRÜNE 10%, NEOS 10% and MFG 3%.

How reliable are election polls?

Election polls depict the current political mood and are not a forecast for the next upcoming election. Due to the polling method, the margin of error of each party's score is 1.5 to 3 percentage points, depending on the level of the score. For this reason, many polling institutes do not mention minor parties until values of around 3 percent are reached, as it is difficult to make serious statements below this level.

What should you look out for in election polls?

Pay attention to a sufficiently large sample size in polls. This should be at least 1000 respondents. Also pay attention to which institute is conducting the poll and who the clients are. Some institutes tend to rate certain parties too high or too low.