2026 United Kingdom local elections

2026 United Kingdom local elections

7 May 2026

  • 5,014 council seats[1]
  • 136 unitary, metropolitan, county, district and London councils in England
  • 6 directly elected mayors in England
 
Leader Keir Starmer Kemi Badenoch Ed Davey
Party Labour Conservative Liberal Democrats
Leader since 4 April 2020 2 November 2024 27 August 2020[n 3]
Current seats 5,860 seats[2]
2,196 up for election[3]
4,201 seats[2]
1,134 up for election
3,204 seats
663 up for election

 
Leader Nigel Farage Zack Polanski
Party Reform UK Green
Leader since 3 June 2024 2 September 2025
Current seats 974 seats
78 up for election
907 seats
170 up for election

  •   Unitary   Metropolitan borough
  •   London borough   District
  •   County   No election

The 2026 United Kingdom local elections are scheduled to take place on Thursday 7 May 2026 for 5,014 council seats across 136 English local authorities[1] (all 32 London borough councils, 32 metropolitan boroughs, 18 unitary authorities, 6 county councils, 48 district councils) and six directly elected mayors in England. Most of these seats in England were last up for election in 2022. Some of these elections were postponed from 2025.[5][6]

In December 2025, the government invited 63 councils to raise capacity concerns with ongoing local government reorganisation and request a postponement of their 2026 local election, after also postponing 6 combined authority mayoral elections that were scheduled to occur on the same day. This move prompted criticism from the Electoral Commission which questioned the credibility of the reasoning given and said that it caused "unprecedented" uncertainty. The commission stated that "There is a clear conflict of interest in asking existing Councils to decide how long it will be before they are answerable to voters". Opposition parties also criticised the decision, accusing Labour of denying people the right to vote.[7] By February 2026, the government confirmed 30 of the 63 council elections have been postponed.[8][9][10] However, following a legal challenge by Reform UK, who made major gains in the previous local elections, on 16 February 2026, the government withdrew its plans to delay elections, with all scheduled elections and delayed elections from 2025 taking place, after receiving legal advice that the move could be unlawful.[11]

These will be the second set of local elections during the premiership of Prime Minister Keir Starmer, and will take place amid unpopularity towards the governing Labour Party amid scandals including the relationship of Peter Mandelson and Jeffrey Epstein, with the Reform UK and Green Party opposition parties rising sharply in popularity polls.[12][13] After the election of Zack Polanski as leader, the Greens gained a council seat from Reform UK for the first time in a Derbyshire by-election in January 2026.[14] Hannah Spencer won the 2026 Gorton and Denton by-election after attracting left-leaning voters disgruntled by the Labour Government.[15] On 7 May 2026, there will also be devolved elections to the Senedd and the Scottish Parliament.

Background

The English Devolution White Paper on 16 December 2024 set out the Labour government's plans for local government reorganisation, involving the remaining two-tier counties of England being abolished with elections to new unitary authorities. Some of the elections scheduled for May 2025 were delayed by a year in order to allow reorganisation to take place.[5][16] At least 13 of the 21 county councils asked the government to delay their elections.[17] On 5 February 2025, the government announced that elections to nine councils (seven county councils and two unitary authorities) would not take place in 2025 to allow restructuring to take place, with elections to reformed or newly created replacement authorities taking place in 2026.[6]

By November 2025, it had been announced that Surrey County Council and the districts included in it would be replaced by new unitary authorities, but the government have said that other initially-scheduled 2025 elections will take place in the existing local government structure unless there is "strong justification otherwise", with the process of creating new unitary authorities delayed.[18][19] Four new combined authority mayoral elections — Greater Essex, Hampshire and the Solent, Norfolk and Suffolk, and Sussex and Brighton — were delayed to 2028, having been originally scheduled for 2026.[20]

London boroughs

Elections for all councillors in all thirty-two London boroughs will be held in 2026 in line with their normal election schedule. The previous elections to London borough councils were held in 2022, which saw Labour win its second-best result in any London election and the Conservatives return their lowest-ever number of councillors in the capital.

Council Seats Party control Details
Previous New
Barking and Dagenham 51 Labour Details
Barnet 63 Labour Details
Bexley 45 Conservative Details
Brent 57 Labour Details
Bromley 58 Conservative Details
Camden 55 Labour Details
Croydon 70 No overall control
(Conservative minority)
Details
Ealing 70 Labour Details
Enfield 63 Labour Details
Greenwich 55 Labour Details
Hackney 57 Labour Details
Hammersmith and Fulham 50 Labour Details
Haringey 57 Labour Details
Harrow 55 Conservative Details
Havering 55 No overall control
(HRA/Labour coalition)
Details
Hillingdon 53 Conservative Details
Hounslow 62 Labour Details
Islington 51 Labour Details
Kensington and Chelsea 50 Conservative Details
Kingston upon Thames 48 Liberal Democrats Details
Lambeth 63 Labour Details
Lewisham 54 Labour Details
Merton 57 Labour Details
Newham 66 Labour Details
Redbridge 63 Labour Details
Richmond upon Thames 54 Liberal Democrats Details
Southwark 63 Labour Details
Sutton 55 Liberal Democrats Details
Tower Hamlets 45 Aspire Details
Waltham Forest 60 Labour Details
Wandsworth 58 Labour Details
Westminster 54 Labour Details
All 32 councils 1,817

Metropolitan boroughs

There are thirty-six metropolitan boroughs, which are single-tier local authorities. Thirty-two of them have an election in 2026 (Doncaster, Liverpool, Wirral and Rotherham do not). Of these, Birmingham City Council and St Helens Council hold their elections on a four-year cycle from 2022, so are due to hold an election in 2026. In 2025 Barnsley Council held a public consultation regarding the permanent adoption of the whole council election cycle, which has since been confirmed.[21] Barnsley is going to hold its elections on a four-year cycle starting from 2026.

The remaining twenty-nine councils generally elect a third of their councillors every year for three years with no election in each fourth year, on the same timetable which includes elections in 2026. Thirteen of these metropolitan borough councils have all of their councillors up for election in 2026 rather than the usual one-third, following ward boundary changes from their LGBCE electoral review. All thirteen will likely be reverting to thirds in 2027, 2028 and 2030.

Elections for all councillors

Council Seats Party control Details
Previous New
Barnsley 63 Labour Details
Birmingham 101 Labour Details
Bradford 90 Labour Details
Calderdale 54 Labour Details
Coventry 54 Labour Details
Gateshead 66 Labour Details
Kirklees 69 Labour Details
Newcastle upon Tyne 78 No overall control (Labour minority) Details
Sandwell 72 Labour Details
Sefton 66 Labour Details
Solihull 51 Conservative Details
South Tyneside 54 Labour Details
St Helens 48 Labour Details
Sunderland 75 Labour Details
Wakefield 63 Labour Details
Walsall 60 Conservative Details
16 councils 1,064

Elections for one third of councillors

Council Seats Party control Details
up of Previous New
Bolton 20 60 No overall control (Labour minority) Details
Bury 17 51 Labour Details
Dudley 25 72 Conservative Details
Knowsley 15 45 Labour Details
Leeds 33 99 Labour Details
Manchester 32 96 Labour Details
North Tyneside 20 60 Labour Details
Oldham 20 60 No overall control (Labour minority) Details
Rochdale 20 60 Labour Details
Salford 21 60 Labour Details
Sheffield 28 84 No overall control (Labour minority) Details
Stockport 21 63 No overall control (Lib Dem minority) Details
Tameside 19 57 Labour Details
Trafford 21 63 Labour Details
Wigan 25 75 Labour Details
Wolverhampton 20 60 Labour Details
16 councils 355 1,065

Unitary authorities

Most of these unitary authorities elect councillors in thirds, with councillors elected in 2022 up for reelection in 2026. Swindon and Milton Keynes elect councillors by thirds, but have all seats up in 2026 due to new ward boundaries. Thurrock and Isle of Wight both have all-up elections delayed from 2025. East Surrey and West Surrey are both newly-created councils with all councillors to be elected.

Elections for all councillors

Council Seats Party control Details
Previous New
East Surrey 72 New council Details
Isle of Wight 39 No overall control Details
Milton Keynes 60 Labour Details
Swindon 57 Labour Details
Thurrock 49 Labour Details
West Surrey 90 New council Details
6 councils 367

Elections for one third of councillors

Council Seats Party control Details
up of Previous New
Blackburn with Darwen 17 51 Labour Details
Halton 18 54 Labour Details
Hartlepool 13 36 Labour Details
Hull 19 57 Liberal Democrats Details
North East Lincolnshire 15 42 No overall control (Conservative minority) Details
Peterborough 18 60 No overall control (Labour minority) Details
Plymouth 19 57 Labour Details
Portsmouth 14 42 No overall control (Lib Dem minority) Details
Reading 16 48 Labour Details
Southampton 17 51 Labour Details
Southend-on-Sea 17 51 No overall control (Labour/independent/Lib Dem coalition) Details
Wokingham 18 54 Liberal Democrats Details
12 councils 201 603

Mayors

Local authorities

Council Mayor before Elected mayor Details
Croydon Jason Perry (Con) Details
Hackney Caroline Woodley (Labour Co-op) Details
Lewisham Brenda Dacres (Labour Co-op) Details
Newham Rokhsana Fiaz (Labour Co-op) Details
Tower Hamlets Lutfur Rahman (Aspire) Details
Watford Peter Taylor (Lib Dem) Details

County councils

All of these elections were delayed from 2025.

Council Seats Party control Details
Previous Result
East Sussex 50 No overall control Details
Essex[a] 78 Conservative Details
Hampshire 78 Conservative Details
Norfolk[a] 84 Conservative Details
Suffolk[a] 70 Conservative Details
West Sussex 70 Conservative Details
6 councils 430

District councils

Elections for all councillors

Council Seats Party control Details
Previous New
Huntingdonshire 52 No overall control (Lib Dem/Independent/Labour/Green coalition) Details
Newcastle-under-Lyme 44 Conservative Details
South Cambridgeshire 45 Liberal Democrats Details
3 councils 141

Elections for half of councillors

Council Seats Party control Details
up of Previous New
Adur 14 29 Labour Details
Cheltenham 20 40 Liberal Democrats Details
Fareham 16 32 Conservative Details
Gosport 14 28 No overall control (Lib Dem minority) Details
Hastings 16 32 No overall control (Green minority) Details
Nuneaton and Bedworth 19 38 No overall control (Labour minority) Details
Oxford 24 48 No overall control (Labour minority) Details
7 councils 123 247

Elections for one third of councillors

Council Seats Party control Details
up of Previous New
Basildon 14 42 No overall control (Labour/Independent coalition) Details
Basingstoke and Deane 18 54 No overall control (Lib Dem/Independent coalition) Details
Brentwood 13 39 No overall control (Lib Dem/Labour coalition) Details
Broxbourne 10 30 Conservative Details
Burnley 15 45 No overall control (Burnley Independent/Lib Dem/Green coalition) Details
Cambridge 14 42 Labour Details
Cannock Chase 12 36 Labour Details
Cherwell 16 48 No overall control (Lib Dem/Green/independent minority coalition) Details
Chorley 14 42 Labour Details
Colchester 17 51 No overall control (Lib Dem/Labour coalition) Details
Crawley 12 36 Labour Details
Eastleigh 14 39 Liberal Democrats Details
Epping Forest 18 54 No overall control (Conservative minority) Details
Exeter 13 39 Labour Details
Harlow 11 33 Conservative Details
Hart 11 33 No overall control (CCH/Lib Dem coalition) Details
Havant 12 36 No overall control (Labour/Lib Dem/Green coalition) Details
Hyndburn 11 35 Labour Details
Ipswich 16 48 Labour Details
Lincoln 11 33 Labour Details
Norwich 13 39 No overall control (Labour minority) Details
Pendle 10 33 No overall control (Lib Dem/Ind coalition) Details
Preston 16 48 Labour Details
Redditch 9 27 Labour Details
Rochford 13 39 No overall control (Conservative/Rochford Residents/Ind coalition) Details
Rugby 14 42 No overall control (Labour minority) Details
Rushmoor 13 39 No overall control (Labour minority) Details
St Albans 20 56 Liberal Democrats Details
Stevenage 13 39 Labour Details
Tamworth 10 30 Labour Details
Three Rivers 13 39 No overall control (Lib Dem minority) Details
Tunbridge Wells 13 39 Liberal Democrats Details
Watford 12 36 Liberal Democrats Details
Welwyn Hatfield 16 48 No overall control (Labour/Lib Dem coalition) Details
West Lancashire 15 45 No overall control (Labour minority) Details
West Oxfordshire 16 49 No overall control (Lib Dem/Labour/Green coalition) Details
Winchester 15 45 Liberal Democrats Details
Worthing 13 37 Labour Details
38 councils 516 1,545

Campaigns

Green Party

Following the election of Zack Polanski as Green Party leader, the party rose sharply in popularity polls quickly after.[12][13] The party gained their first seat from Reform UK, in a Derbyshire by-election in January 2026.[14] Hannah Spencer won the 2026 Gorton and Denton by-election after attracting left-leaning voters disgruntled by Labour's handling of the Gaza war.[15] Spencer won the by-election with a majority of 4,402 votes, defeating both Reform UK and the Labour Party to become the Green Party's fifth MP and first in the North of England.[22][23] This was also the first ever parliamentary by-election win for the Greens.[24]

Reform UK

On 1 January 2026, Nigel Farage announced he wanted to go "double or quits" by planning to spend more than £5 million over the next four months in the run-up to the local elections, saying he wanted to spend "every single penny in the bank account" on a mass direct mail and social media campaign. He called this year's set of local elections the "single most important event" before the next general election. In August 2025, Reform UK received a £9 million donation from Christopher Harborne.[25]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ All vote shares in the infobox are projected national vote shares calculated by the BBC.
  2. ^ Swing figures are between the BBC national projected vote share extrapolation from 2021 local elections, and the BBC equivalent vote share projection from these local elections held in different areas.
  3. ^ Davey served as Acting Leader from 13 December 2019 to 27 August 2020 alongside the Party Presidents Baroness Sal Brinton and Mark Pack, following Jo Swinson's election defeat in the 2019 general election. Davey was elected Leader in August 2020.[4]
  1. ^ a b c New electoral boundaries

References

  1. ^ a b "Open Council Data UK - compositions councillors parties wards elections emails". opencouncildata.co.uk.
  2. ^ a b "Party Totals Archive 2016-25". Open Council Data.
  3. ^ "2026 Local Elections". Election Maps UK. Retrieved 3 March 2026.
  4. ^ Stewart, Heather (27 August 2020). "'Wake up and smell the coffee': Ed Davey elected Lib Dem leader". The Guardian.
  5. ^ a b "Some local elections could be delayed by up to a year, says Angela Rayner". Sky News. 16 December 2024. Retrieved 19 December 2024.
  6. ^ a b Whannel, Kate (5 February 2025). "Council shake-up sees elections delayed in nine areas". BBC News. Retrieved 5 February 2025.
  7. ^ https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c62nq678nyzo
  8. ^ "Electoral Commission responds to potential election postponements". Electoral Commission. 19 December 2025. Retrieved 1 January 2026.
  9. ^ "The government's decision to delay mayoral elections cannot be justified on democratic or fairness grounds". Institute for Government. 5 December 2025. Retrieved 1 January 2026.
  10. ^ Morton, Becky (19 December 2025). "Watchdog hits out at potential local election delays". BBC News. Retrieved 1 January 2026.
  11. ^ "Government abandons plans to delay 30 council elections". BBC News. 16 February 2026. Retrieved 16 February 2026.
  12. ^ a b "Voting Intention Polls and Trends | Ipsos". www.ipsos.com. 7 April 2024. Retrieved 23 January 2026.
  13. ^ a b "POLITICO Poll of Polls — British polls, trends and election news for the United Kingdom and Scotland". POLITICO. 15 February 2022. Archived from the original on 23 January 2026. Retrieved 23 January 2026.
  14. ^ a b Roberts, Georgia (21 January 2026). "Greens take Reform UK seat in first of its kind win in Derbyshire". BBC News. Retrieved 23 January 2026.
  15. ^ a b Fitzpatrick, Kevin (16 February 2026). "Gorton and Denton by-election 'too close to call'". BBC News. Retrieved 23 February 2026.
  16. ^ "Counties given 'extraordinary' deadline to cancel elections". Local Government Chronicle. 17 December 2024. Retrieved 19 December 2024.
  17. ^ "Tory party accused of 'bottling' May elections as county councils seek delay". The Guardian. 10 January 2025. Retrieved 12 January 2025.
  18. ^ "Suffolk County Council elections 'will go ahead in May 2026'". BBC News. 5 November 2025. Retrieved 10 November 2025.
  19. ^ "Local Government Reorganisation (LGR) Timeline". LGIU. 28 August 2025. Retrieved 29 October 2025.
  20. ^ Maddox, David (3 December 2025). "Labour expected to postpone mayoral elections by two years amid continued Reform poll lead". The Independent.
  21. ^ [1] Full Council Report - Change to Election Cycle - Barnsley Council
  22. ^ "Parliamentary Gorton and Denton by-election – 26 February 2026". Manchester City Council. 27 February 2026. Retrieved 27 February 2026.
  23. ^ McKiernan, Jennifer (27 February 2026). "Green Party wins Gorton and Denton by-election, pushing Labour into third place". BBC News. Retrieved 27 February 2026.
  24. ^ Cooke, Millie (27 February 2026). "Gorton and Denton result live: Hannah Spencer wins by-election for Greens as Starmer's Labour plunged into crisis". The Independent. Retrieved 27 February 2026.
  25. ^ "Nigel Farage promises Reform UK spending blitz on May's local elections". PA News Agency. 1 January 2026. Retrieved 2 January 2026.