How accurate are polling institutes in Lithuania?

Election accuracy
Very accurate
Very inaccurate
0

Highly reliable

0 institutes showed only small differences between election results and pre-election polls.
1

Solid results

1 institutes deviated moderately from the election result on average.
0

Clear deviations

0 institutes showed noticeable differences between pre-election polls and election results.
0

Very large deviations

0 institutes missed the election result by a wide margin in their pre-election polls.
2

No data available

No election comparisons are available yet for 2 institutes.

Polling institutes in Lithuania

Party is often overestimated
Party is often underestimated

64
Spinter tyrimai

Election accuracy: 1.7
Very accurate
Very inaccurate

Party deviations

DSVL
LS
LSDP
LVŽS
NA
NA
TS-LKD
What is the PolitPro Score?
The PolitPro Score evaluates the reliability of polling institutes through an objective comparison of their data with actual election results and the calculated polling trend. A high score represents a precise reflection of the political climate without systematic bias. If an institute’s results for specific parties consistently deviate significantly from the overall trend, points are deducted. Such differences may indicate so-called "house effects"—methodological peculiarities in weighting that systematically over- or under-represent certain parties. The score thus provides transparent guidance on which polls mirror reality most accurately. The maximum score is 100.
How do we calculate election accuracy?
Election accuracy shows how close pre-election polls were to the actual election result. We compare an institute’s pre-election polls with the final election outcome. For each election, we calculate the average deviation of party results and then compute an overall average. Only parties with an election result of 3% or higher are included. Opinion polls generally have a margin of error of 2–3 percentage points. Average deviations of up to 1 percentage point are rated as very good (green), up to 2 percentage points as good (yellow). Deviations of up to 3 percentage points are rated as ok (orange) but already show clear outliers for some parties. Average deviations above 3 percentage points indicate weaknesses in accuracy and reliability and are rated as poor (red).
How do we calculate party deviations?
Party deviation measures how often an institute’s results differ significantly from the election trend. Frequent deviations for individual parties may indicate systematic bias. We calculate an institute’s deviation based on party results in election polls by comparing each party’s value with the PolitPro election trend, which represents a weighted average of current opinion polls. If a party’s value is within ±1 percentage point of the trend, it is rated as equal. If it is lower, it is rated as lower; if higher, as higher. Across all polls, we then calculate how often an institute rates a party higher or lower than the trend. Deviations of up to 20% are considered normal. If deviations exceed 20%, we highlight the party accordingly. Note: We recommend always interpreting party deviations together with election accuracy.

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.

Found a mistake?

Political data changes every day. If you notice an error, feel free to send us an email. A short source reference helps us review the information.