Opinion poll results

GERB
PP
V
DPS
MECh
BSP
VEL
ITN
24.1
20.8
13.2
12.9
7.5
6.7
3.7
3.1
-3.4
+20.8
-0.9
+0.4
+3.9
-1.0
+3.7
-1.7
APS
1.7
-5.1
Other
6.3
-16.7

Political orientation of parties

What do the symbols mean?
To make parties easier to compare, the symbols indicate a party’s political orientation. These categories provide a quick overview. More detailed information on political positions can be found on the party subpages.
Far left
Left
Centre-left
Centre
Transversal
Unknown
Centre-right
Right
Far right
Liberal
Environment & climate
Regional
Animal rights
Satirical

12/03/2025 - 12/07/2025

1009 respondents

Next Election: 2027

[polls.trend.election.year.body]

Government would likely lose its majority

Based on the poll by Market LINKS, the governing parties reach 43.7% of the seats.

Market LINKS at a glance

Coalition options

Electoral threshold

4% threshold nationwide.

Who could enter parliament?

In the current election trend, 9 parties could enter parliament: GERB with 71 MPs, Vŭzrazhdane with 33 MPs, DPS with 33 MPs, PP with 31 MPs, BSP with 22 MPs, APS with 15 MPs, ITN with 13 MPs, MECh with 12 MPs and Velichie with 10 MPs.

The electoral system in Bulgaria

The National Assembly of Bulgaria (Narodno Sabranie) is composed of 240 members elected for a four-year term. The country utilizes a proportional representation system with candidate lists across 31 multi-member constituencies. A notable feature of the Bulgarian process is the extensive use of voting machines in larger polling stations, implemented to enhance transparency and reduce errors associated with manual counting. Seats are allocated nationally using the Hare-Niemeyer method, ensuring that the parliamentary composition accurately reflects the total share of votes received by each party.

Electoral threshold and entry barriers

To enter the National Assembly, political parties and coalitions must clear a nationwide electoral threshold of 4% of the valid votes. This requirement remains the same for both individual parties and electoral alliances. The primary purpose of this threshold is to maintain parliamentary stability and prevent excessive fragmentation, which can complicate the formation of a functioning executive. Votes cast for parties that do not meet this 4% minimum are excluded from the final seat distribution process.

Government formation and coalition traditions

Forming a government in Bulgaria requires an absolute majority of the members present in the National Assembly. The President grants the mandate to form a cabinet sequentially to the three largest parliamentary groups if initial attempts fail. Given the proportional nature of the elections, single-party governments are rare, making coalitions or parliamentary support agreements the standard. Negotiations often center on key national priorities such as judicial reform, economic stability, and deeper integration into European structures like the Eurozone and the Schengen Area.
GERB + DPS + Vŭzrazhdane
Centre-right
57.1%
GERB + DPS + PP
Centre-right
56.3%
GERB + Vŭzrazhdane + PP
Centre-right
56.3%
GERB + DPS + APS + ITN
Centre-right
55.0%
GERB + DPS + APS + MECh
Centre-right
54.6%
GERB + PP + APS + ITN
Centre-right
54.2%
GERB + DPS + ITN + MECh
Centre-right
53.8%
GERB + PP + APS + MECh
Centre-right
53.8%

Important political parties in Bulgaria

Sources of data and information

PolitPro

PolitPro brings together scientific data and current poll results to make politics tangible for everyone. We use datasets from leading research projects and complement them with our own research, analyses, and algorithms. This allows us to make complex political contexts accessible and easy to understand. Supported by AI.

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