Latest Opinion Poll for the Croatia Election (Ipsos, April 27, 2026)

April 27, 2026

990 respondents

Next General Election in Croatia: 2028

The next General Election in Croatia is expected in 2028.

Croatia's Incumbent Government Lacks Majority

Based on the Ipsos projection, the incumbent governing parties would currently secure 41.7% of the parliamentary seats.

Who is leading in the latest poll from Ipsos?

According to the latest national poll in Croatia by Ipsos, HDZ leads with 32.5%. They are followed by SDP: 23.3%, Možemo!: 14.1%, Most: 8.6%, DP: 3.1%, Hrvatski suverenisti: 2.6%, DOMiNO: 2.5%, HSU: 2.5%, IDS: 1.5%, Drito: 1.3%, Pravo i Pravda: 1.3%, Centar: 1.2%, HSS: 1.1%, HNS: 0.2% and Nezavisna platforma Sjever: 0.2%. Other parties secure 3.5% of the votes.

Quality Check: How Reliable is the Ipsos Projection?

Potential Majorities and Coalition Scenarios

Electoral Threshold

The electoral threshold for the election in Croatia is 5%.

HDZ + SDP
Centre
71.5%
HDZ + Most
Centre-Right
52.3%
SDP + Možemo!
Centre-Left
47.7%

Projected Parliamentary Composition (Source: Ipsos)

According to Ipsos data, 4 parties are projected to surpass the electoral threshold and enter the Croatian parliament: HDZ with 63 representatives, SDP with 45 representatives, Možemo! with 27 representatives and Most with 16 representatives.

The Electoral System in Croatia

Croatia's Parliament, the Sabor, comprises 151 members elected through a mixed proportional representation system. The country is divided into ten geographical constituencies, each allocating 14 seats. Two additional special constituencies exist: one provides three seats for the Croatian diaspora (voters residing outside Croatia), while the other reserves eight seats for national minority representatives. Voters cast their ballots for party lists but can influence the selection of a specific candidate within a list via a preferential vote.

Electoral Thresholds

To enter Croatia's Parliament, parties face a 5% electoral threshold applied at the constituency level. Since votes are not nationally aggregated, parties or coalitions must individually clear this hurdle in each of the ten geographical constituencies to participate in seat allocation via the D'Hondt method. An exception applies to national minority seats, which are allocated by a majority principle in a special nationwide constituency. This structure often favors regionally strong parties and stabilizes minority representation in the Sabor.

Government Formation and Traditions

Forming a government in Croatia requires an absolute majority of at least 76 out of 151 seats in the Sabor. As the electoral system frequently prevents any single party from achieving this majority alone, coalitions are the norm. Following an election, the President of the Republic conducts consultations with parties and tasks the individual who can credibly demonstrate parliamentary majority support with forming the government. The eight representatives of national minorities often serve as crucial kingmakers in forging stable governing alliances.

Data Sources and Methodology

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