Opinion poll results

PP
PSOE
Vox
Sumar
POD
SALF
ERC
Bildu
33.4
26.2
17.4
7.5
2.8
2.3
1.9
1.4
-0.3
-1.0
+0.5
+0.9
-0.7
+0.6
+0.1
+0.2

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

12/05/2025 - 12/07/2025

1100 respondents

Next Election: 2027

[polls.trend.election.year.body]

Government would likely lose its majority

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

SocioMétrica at a glance

Coalition options

Electoral threshold

3% threshold per constituency.

Who could enter parliament?

In the current election trend, 5 parties could enter parliament: Partido Popular with 129 MPs, PSOE with 104 MPs, Vox with 67 MPs, Sumar with 33 MPs and Podemos with 17 MPs.

The electoral system in Spain

The Spanish Parliament (Cortes Generales) is bicameral, consisting of the Congress of Deputies (Congreso de los Diputados) and the Senate (Senado). The Congress has 350 members elected via proportional representation with closed lists. The country is divided into 52 constituencies (the provinces plus the autonomous cities of Ceuta and Melilla). Seats are allocated using the D'Hondt method. Because many provinces elect only a small number of deputies, the system effectively behaves like a majoritarian one in rural areas, favoring large national parties and strong regionalist movements.

Electoral threshold and entry barriers

To enter the Spanish Congress of Deputies, a party must secure a minimum of 3% of the valid votes. Crucially, this threshold is applied at the constituency level, not nationally. In practice, this 3% rule is often irrelevant in smaller provinces, where the limited number of seats means the effective threshold to win a mandate is much higher (frequently exceeding 10% or 15%). The 3% clause only becomes a significant factor for smaller parties in large constituencies like Madrid or Barcelona.

Government formation and coalition traditions

Government formation in Spain centers on the Congress of Deputies. After consulting party leaders, the King nominates a candidate for Prime Minister (Presidente del Gobierno). In the first round of voting, the candidate needs an absolute majority (176 votes). If not achieved, a second vote is held 48 hours later, requiring only a simple majority (more "yes" than "no" votes). While Spain was traditionally dominated by a two-party system, it has shifted since 2015 toward multi-party dynamics requiring complex coalitions or minority governments supported by various parliamentary groups.
Partido Popular + PSOE
Centre-right
66.6%
Partido Popular + Vox
Right
56.0%
PSOE + Sumar + Podemos
Centre-left
44.0%

Important political parties in Spain

Key players in parliamentary competition

This overview shows all parties that, based on current polling, have a realistic chance of entering parliament in Spain or significantly shape the political debate. Classifying their political orientation is essential for understanding bloc formation and the mathematically possible majorities in the next parliament.

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.