Opinion poll results

AD
PS
CH
L
IL
CDU
PAN
BE
32.4
23.8
21.9
6.1
5.9
3.2
2.0
1.3
+6.5
+0.2
-4.9
-0.4
-0.3
+0.1
+0.3
-1.1
Other
3.4
-0.4

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

10/23/2025 - 10/27/2025

570 respondents

Next Election: 2029

[polls.trend.election.year.body]

Government would likely lose its majority

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

Aximage at a glance

Coalition options

No electoral threshold

There is no electoral threshold in Portugal.

Who could enter parliament?

In the current election trend, 8 parties could enter parliament: Aliança Democrática with 78 MPs, Partido Socialista with 57 MPs, Chega with 53 MPs, LIVRE with 14 MPs, Iniciativa Liberal with 14 MPs, CDU with 7 MPs, PAN with 4 MPs and Bloco de Esquerda with 3 MPs.

The electoral system in Portugal

The Portuguese Parliament, known as the Assembleia da República, consists of 230 members elected for a four-year term. The electoral system is based on proportional representation across 22 constituencies (corresponding to the mainland districts, the autonomous regions of Azores and Madeira, and two overseas constituencies). Seats are allocated using the D'Hondt method. Portugal utilizes closed lists, meaning that voters cast their ballot for a party list as a whole and cannot change the ranking of individual candidates.

Electoral threshold and entry barriers

A distinctive feature of the Portuguese electoral system is the absence of a formal legal threshold (such as a 5% rule) at the national level. The effective hurdle to enter parliament is determined by the size of each constituency and the number of mandates available there (the natural quorum). In high-population districts like Lisbon or Porto, smaller parties have a realistic chance of winning a seat, whereas in smaller inland districts, only the strongest political forces typically secure representation.

Government formation and coalition traditions

In Portugal, the President of the Republic appoints the Prime Minister after consulting with the parties represented in parliament and considering the election results. As absolute majorities are rare, coalition governments or minority administrations are common. A notable model is the "Geringonça" (an informal arrangement where a minority government is supported by left-wing parties). The government does not need to win a formal vote of confidence to take office, but it can be dismissed if its program is rejected or if parliament passes a motion of no confidence.
Aliança Democrática + Partido Socialista
Centre-right
58.7%
Aliança Democrática + Chega
Right
57.0%
Partido Socialista + LIVRE + Iniciativa Liberal + CDU + PAN + Bloco de Esquerda
Centre
43.0%

Important political parties in Portugal

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.