How to
watch the Hungarian election like a pro
Be
warned: There’s some complex math involved in this contest.
April 10,
2026 4:00 am CET
By Hanne
Cokelaere and Júlia Vadler
https://www.politico.eu/article/how-watch-hungary-election-like-pro/
Hungarians
are heading to the polls on Sunday in an election that will potentially end
Prime Minister Viktor Orbán’s 16-year rule.
The race
is being closely watched worldwide thanks to Orbán’s outsize influence as the
preeminent EU ally of both U.S. President Donald Trump and Russian President
Vladimir Putin.
In both
Washington and Moscow, the Hungarian leader’s departure would be viewed as a
setback. On the U.S. side, he has been directly endorsed by Trump and MAGA
allies, who see him as a trailblazer for their brand of Christian-oriented
nationalism. And on the Russian side, Orbán has proven himself useful, delaying
and blocking EU measures to support Ukraine.
POLITICO’s
Poll of Polls suggests the prime minister is now in trouble, with his
challenger Péter Magyar and his center-right Tisza party enjoying a comfortable
lead.
But
polling numbers don’t necessarily mean parliamentary seats — especially not in
Hungary’s complicated electoral system. Most voters will be picking both a
constituency candidate and from a party list, with districts that have been
redrawn to benefit the ruling party and ballots coming in from abroad.
It’s not
the easiest race to wrap one’s head around, but here’s everything to know
before the first results start coming in.
Voting
logistics
Polls
open at 6 a.m. and close at 7 p.m. on April 12. Voters who are already in line
by the time polls close will still be able to cast their ballots. All Hungarian
citizens who are at least 18 years of age can vote; as can some over the age of
16, if they are married.
Most will
cast two votes: one for a candidate who can win a seat in a direct race in
their own constituency; the second for a party list that runs across the
country. Voters who belong to a registered ethnicity can also cast a vote for a
nationality-based list — although only the German and Roma minorities have the
numbers to elect a representative.
What the
polls say
Hungarian
polls diverge wildly depending on the pollsters and the organizations that
commissioned or conducted them.
POLITICO’s
Poll of Polls aggregates the numbers from different pollsters, and its
projections put Magyar’s Tisza party at 49 percent, 10 points clear of Orbán’s
Fidesz at 39 percent.
POLITICO
excluded some pollsters because they didn’t meet criteria for sample size,
methodology or transparency regarding their funding and commissions. If these
were also taken into account, the gap between the two parties would narrow —
but it wouldn’t be reversed in Orbán’s favor.
Still,
voting intention polls rarely match voting results to a tee, and with Hungary’s
(mind-boggling) electoral system and gerrymandered constituency map, vote
shares don’t equal final political weight.
Case in
point
Back in
2022, polls suggested a tight race between Orbán and his then-challenger Péter
Márki-Zay. But Fidesz ultimately received a whopping 54 percent of the
party-list vote, compared with just 34 percent for the opposition, and won 87
out of 106 constituency mandates.
That
tally handed Fidesz 135 out of 199 parliamentary seats — or 67.8 percent.
And
that’s without counting Imre Ritter, the representative of the German
Hungarians and a former Fidesz affiliate, who has tended to support the ruling
coalition.
Complex
counting mechanics
The
Hungarian parliament has 199 seats, 106 of which are filled through
constituency races. Those races are easy to follow: The candidate with the most
votes wins the seat.
The
remaining 93 seats are filled through nation-wide party lists — and this is
where things get complicated.
Only
parties that receive at least 5 percent of the vote are eligible to win
party-list seats. But the calculation for those seats isn’t just based on
party-list votes. That would be far too simple. Instead, some of the vote count
for those 93 seats include votes cast in the 106 constituency races. This not
only includes votes that went to unsuccessful candidates, but also votes that
winning candidates didn’t need to stay ahead of their closest competitor! This
is the result of a 2011 reform, which has since been blamed for baking a
winner-takes-all element into the system.
A
billboard featuring a portrait of Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán (left)
with the text reading, ‘Let’s get together against the war’, and a damaged
poster with a portrait of Volodymyr Zelensky (center) and opposition leader
Péter Magyar (right) with the text reading, ‘They are dangerous’ in Budapest on
March 27, 2026. | Attila Kisbenedek/AFP via Getty Images
Seats are
distributed proportionally according to the D’Hondt system, but the vote
threshold is lower for nationality list candidates.
Time for
results
Results
for the constituency race typically trickle in first, while shares for the
party-list vote remain in a flux throughout the night due to the complicated
math.
Hungary’s
electoral bureau said vote counting will start when polls close at 7 p.m., with
the first preliminary results expected to land from 8 p.m.
The
bureau said it expects up to 95 percent of the party-list votes and up to 97
percent of the constituency vote to be counted Sunday night, but warned it
could take up to a week before 100 percent of the votes are counted.
Expect
the first projections of the new breakdown of parliament seats around midnight.
The vote
from abroad
Hungarians
who live abroad can cast their vote by post, but only for country-wide lists.
Those
mail-in ballots were enough to determine one parliamentary seat in 2018; and
two in 2022. And with analysts now projecting the postal vote could again
determine two seats, they could become critical in a tight race.
In the
previous two elections, the mail-in vote heavily favored Orbán, with Fidesz
receiving more than 90 percent of the postal vote in 2022, and over 216,500 out
of about 225,000 mail-in ballots in 2018 — a slant that has previously led
opposition parties to advocate for removing nonresident Hungarians’ right to
vote.
This
year, nearly 500,000 people have registered for a postal ballot — a record
number — with many of them located in Romania and Serbia. According to a
government counter, more than 230,000 of those votes had already arrived at the
time of writing Thursday.
The
largest Hungarian party in Romania, the Democratic Alliance of Hungarians in
Romania, openly supports Fidesz, and party leader Hunor Kelemen has called on
Hungarian Romanians in Transylvania to support the prime minister.
Still,
Magyar tried to appeal to Hungarians in Slovakia earlier this year by
criticizing new Slovak legislation revolving around the controversial Beneš
decrees — a set of World War II-era laws that stripped ethnic Hungarians and
Germans of citizenship and property in what was then Czechoslovakia.
Meanwhile,
Hungarian citizens who live abroad but still have residency in the country can
cast their votes at embassies or consulates. This demographic tends to favor
opposition parties more, but their ballots count toward the domestic vote, both
for party lists and constituencies.
This
year, a record number of voters picked this option, with 90,734 people registered to cast
their ballots abroad. Tisza launched a website specifically aimed at luring
this group to polling stations.

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