Latest Opinion Poll for the Election in Spain (Target Point, November 19, 2025)

November 17, 2025 - November 19, 2025

1200 respondents

Next General election in Spain: 2027

The next General election in Spain is expected in 2027.

Incumbent Government in Spain Without a Majority

Based on the Target Point projection, the incumbent governing parties would currently secure 40.0% of the parliamentary seats.

Who is leading in the latest poll from Target Point?

A recent opinion poll for Spain's election, conducted by Target Point on November 19, 2025, reveals Partido Popular leading with 29.2%. Following are PSOE: 28.1%, Vox: 19%, Sumar: 6.1%, Podemos: 3.6% and Se Acabó La Fiesta: 2%. Other parties secure 12% of the votes.

Quality Check: How Reliable is the Target Point Projection?

Potential Majorities and Coalition Scenarios

Electoral Threshold

The electoral threshold for the election in Spain is 3%.

PSOE + Partido Popular
Centre
53.1%
Partido Popular + Ciudadanos + Vox
Centre-Right
52.3%
PSOE + Ciudadanos
Centre-Left
49.4%
PSOE + Unidos Podemos
Left
47.7%
Partido Popular + Ciudadanos
Centre
46.6%

Projected Parliamentary Composition (Source: Metroscopia)

According to data from Metroscopia, 5 parties are projected to surpass the electoral threshold and enter the Spain parliament: PSOE with 98 representatives, Partido Popular with 88 representatives, Ciudadanos with 75 representatives, Unidos Podemos with 69 representatives and Vox with 20 representatives.

The Electoral System in Spain

Spain's Parliament, the Cortes Generales, comprises two chambers: the Congress of Deputies (Congreso de los Diputados) and the Senate (Senado). The Congress of Deputies, with 350 members, is elected through a closed-list proportional representation system. The country is divided into 52 constituencies, corresponding to its provinces and the autonomous cities of Ceuta and Melilla. Seat allocation follows the D'Hondt method. In practice, as many provinces elect only a few deputies, the system often functions more like a majoritarian one, favoring large national parties and robust regional parties.

Electoral Thresholds

To enter the Spanish Congress of Deputies, a 3% electoral threshold applies. However, this hurdle is applied at the constituency level, not nationwide. In practice, this 3% threshold holds little sway in most provinces, where the small number of seats available effectively demands a much higher vote share (often exceeding 10% or 15%) to secure a mandate. Only in large constituencies like Madrid or Barcelona does the 3% clause genuinely impact smaller parties.

Government Formation and Traditions

Forming a government in Spain requires the confidence of the Congress of Deputies. Following consultations with party leaders, the King proposes a candidate for Prime Minister (Presidente del Gobierno). In the first vote, the candidate needs an absolute majority (176 votes). If this fails, a simple majority (more 'yes' than 'no' votes) suffices 48 hours later. While single-party governments long dominated, Spain has evolved into a multi-party system since 2015, necessitating complex coalitions or minority governments with shifting parliamentary support.

Data Sources and Methodology

PolitPro

PolitPro bridges the gap between scientific research and current polling. We supplement leading datasets with our own proprietary research and algorithms to make complex political contexts tangible and accessible. Powered by AI.

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