Institut Wahlkreisprognose
N/A
These symbols illustrate a party's political orientation to facilitate quick comparison. These categories offer a broad classification; for detailed policy positions, please visit the individual party pages.
N/A
1100 respondents
The next General election in Bavaria is expected in 2028.
Based on the Institut Wahlkreisprognose projection, the incumbent governing parties would currently secure 57.2% of the parliamentary seats.
In the latest opinion poll for the Bavarian election, conducted by Institut Wahlkreisprognose on May 24, 2023, CSU leads with 41%. Trailing are Grüne: 12.5%, AfD: 12%, Freie Wähler: 12%, SPD: 10%, FDP: 6% and Die Linke: 1.5%. Other parties secure 5% of the votes.
Institut Wahlkreisprognose achieved a PolitPro Score of 87 out of 100.
On average, Institut Wahlkreisprognose's figures deviate by 1.1 percentage points between their final pre-election polls and actual election results.
In 26% of polls, Institut Wahlkreisprognose rated SPD higher than the PolitPro Election Trend (average of all institutes).
In 22% of polls, Institut Wahlkreisprognose rated BSW lower than the PolitPro Election Trend (average of all institutes).
In 21% of polls, Institut Wahlkreisprognose rated Grüne lower than the PolitPro Election Trend (average of all institutes).
The electoral threshold for the Bavarian election is 5%.
According to Civey, 5 parties are projected to surpass the electoral threshold and enter the Bavarian parliament: CSU with 83 representatives, AfD with 37 representatives, Grüne with 24 representatives, Freie Wähler with 22 representatives and SPD with 14 representatives.
Bavaria operates under an 'enhanced proportional representation' electoral system. A key feature is the aggregation of both first and second votes to determine seat allocation (total votes). Furthermore, voters can specifically select individual candidates from a party list with their second vote, directly influencing the ranking of elected representatives. This system significantly bolsters the personal mandate component over a pure party-list approach.
In the Free State of Bavaria, the five-percent threshold applies to the total votes cast statewide. Crucially, no basic mandate clause is in place. Historically, this has meant that parties winning direct constituencies can still fail to enter the Landtag if their statewide vote falls below 5% – a significant barrier, particularly for regional parties or smaller political groups.
For decades, Bavaria was defined by single-party rule under the CSU. Today, coalitions are the norm, typically involving the Freie Wähler (Free Voters) as a conservative partner. A distinct Bavarian characteristic is the CSU's categorical distancing from both the Greens and the AfD, which severely restricts the scope for coalition-building to the conservative bloc.