Latest Opinion Poll for Germany (Forschungsgruppe Wahlen, November 6, 2025)

November 4, 2025 - November 6, 2025

1322 respondents

Next General election in Germany: 2029

The next General election in Germany is expected in 2029.

Germany's Incumbent Government Lacks Majority

Based on the Forschungsgruppe Wahlen projection, the incumbent governing parties would currently secure 45.4% of the parliamentary seats.

Quality Check: How Reliable is the Forschungsgruppe Wahlen Projection?

Potential Majorities and Coalition Scenarios

Electoral Threshold

The electoral threshold for the Bundestag election is 5%.

CDU/CSU + Grüne + SPD
Centre-Left
64.3%
CDU/CSU + Grüne + FDP
Centre
57.9%
CDU/CSU + AfD + FDP
Right
53.7%
CDU/CSU + SPD + FDP
Centre
51.6%
CDU/CSU + Grüne
Centre
49.5%
Grüne + SPD + Die Linke
Left
46.3%
CDU/CSU + AfD
Right
45.2%
Grüne + SPD + FDP
Left
44.3%

Projected Parliamentary Composition (Source: Forschungsgruppe Wahlen)

According to :institute data, 6 parties are projected to surpass the electoral threshold and enter the German Bundestag: CDU/CSU with 179 representatives, Grüne with 133 representatives, AfD with 106 representatives, SPD with 93 representatives, Die Linke with 66 representatives and FDP with 53 representatives.

Germany's Electoral System

Germany's Bundestag elections operate under a system of personalized proportional representation. Voters cast two ballots: the first determines a direct mandate in their constituency, while the second is crucial for a party's overall strength in parliament. Following the 2023 electoral reform, the Bundestag's size is capped at 630 members. A key feature is that direct mandates are now only allocated if they align with the party's second vote result. This change eliminates overhang and compensatory mandates, ensuring a transparent allocation of seats.

Electoral Thresholds

To enter the Bundestag, parties in Germany must clear a five-percent threshold. They need at least 5% of the valid second votes nationwide to qualify for seat allocation. A crucial exception is the basic mandate clause: a party securing at least three direct mandates gains entry to the Bundestag, reflecting its second vote share, even if it falls short of the 5% threshold. This rule ensures parliamentary representation for regionally strong parties and was largely affirmed by the Federal Constitutional Court in 2024.

Government Formation and Traditions

German government formation typically hinges on forging stable coalition majorities, as no single party usually secures an absolute majority of seats. Post-election, parties engage in exploratory talks and formal coalition negotiations, culminating in a coalition agreement. A defining feature of the current political landscape is the 'Brandmauer' (firewall) principle: established centrist parties categorically rule out coalitions with far-right forces, notably the AfD. This often necessitates three-party alliances, like 'Jamaica' or 'Kenya' coalitions, to build a viable governing majority outside the political extremes.

Data Sources and Methodology

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