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2026 United Kingdom local elections


2026 United Kingdom local elections

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 (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.

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 (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.

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. By February 2026, the government confirmed 30 of the 63 council elections have been postponed. 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.

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. 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. Green candidate Hannah Spencer won the 2026 Gorton and Denton by-election, defeating Reform UK, with the incumbent Labour Party falling to third place. On 7 May 2026, there will also be devolved elections to the Senedd and the Scottish Parliament.

Post-1998 ceremonial counties of England by year of restructuring   2009  2019–2023  Upcoming (2027–2028)

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. At least 13 of the 21 county councils asked the government to delay their elections. 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.

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. 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.

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.

CouncilSeatsParty controlDetails
PreviousNew
Barking and Dagenham51LabourDetails
Barnet63LabourDetails
Bexley45ConservativeDetails
Brent57LabourDetails
Bromley58ConservativeDetails
Camden55LabourDetails
Croydon70No overall control (Conservative minority)Details
Ealing70LabourDetails
Enfield63LabourDetails
Greenwich55LabourDetails
Hackney57LabourDetails
Hammersmith and Fulham50LabourDetails
Haringey57LabourDetails
Harrow55ConservativeDetails
Havering55No overall control (HRA/Labour coalition)Details
Hillingdon53ConservativeDetails
Hounslow62LabourDetails
Islington51LabourDetails
Kensington and Chelsea50ConservativeDetails
Kingston upon Thames48Liberal DemocratsDetails
Lambeth63LabourDetails
Lewisham54LabourDetails
Merton57LabourDetails
Newham66LabourDetails
Redbridge63LabourDetails
Richmond upon Thames54Liberal DemocratsDetails
Southwark63LabourDetails
Sutton55Liberal DemocratsDetails
Tower Hamlets45AspireDetails
Waltham Forest60LabourDetails
Wandsworth58LabourDetails
Westminster54LabourDetails
All 32 councils1,817

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. 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.

CouncilSeatsParty controlDetails
PreviousNew
Barnsley63LabourDetails
Birmingham101LabourDetails
Bradford90LabourDetails
Calderdale54LabourDetails
Coventry54LabourDetails
Gateshead66LabourDetails
Kirklees69LabourDetails
Newcastle upon Tyne78No overall control (Labour minority)Details
Sandwell72LabourDetails
Sefton66LabourDetails
Solihull51ConservativeDetails
South Tyneside54LabourDetails
St Helens48LabourDetails
Sunderland75LabourDetails
Wakefield63LabourDetails
Walsall60ConservativeDetails
16 councils1,064
CouncilSeatsParty controlDetails
upofPreviousNew
Bolton2060No overall control (Labour minority)Details
Bury1751LabourDetails
Dudley2572ConservativeDetails
Knowsley1545LabourDetails
Leeds3399LabourDetails
Manchester3296LabourDetails
North Tyneside2060LabourDetails
Oldham2060No overall control (Labour minority)Details
Rochdale2060LabourDetails
Salford2160LabourDetails
Sheffield2884No overall control (Labour minority)Details
Stockport2163No overall control (Lib Dem minority)Details
Tameside1957LabourDetails
Trafford2163LabourDetails
Wigan2575LabourDetails
Wolverhampton2060LabourDetails
16 councils3551,065

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.

CouncilSeatsParty controlDetails
PreviousNew
CountyDistrict
CountyDistrict
SurreyNo overall controlElmbridgeNo overall control
Epsom and EwellResidents Association
Mole ValleyLiberal Democrats
Reigate and BansteadNo overall control
TandridgeNo overall control
Isle of Wight39No overall controlDetails
Milton Keynes60LabourDetails
Swindon57LabourDetails
Thurrock49LabourDetails
CountyDistrict
CountyDistrict
SurreyNo overall controlGuildfordLiberal Democrats
RunnymedeNo overall control
SpelthorneNo overall control
Surrey HeathLiberal Democrats
WaverleyNo overall control
WokingLiberal Democrats
6 councils367
CouncilSeatsParty controlDetails
upofPreviousNew
Blackburn with Darwen1751LabourDetails
Halton1854LabourDetails
Hartlepool1336LabourDetails
Hull1957Liberal DemocratsDetails
North East Lincolnshire1542No overall control (Conservative minority)Details
Peterborough1860No overall control (Labour minority)Details
Plymouth1957LabourDetails
Portsmouth1442No overall control (Lib Dem minority)Details
Reading1648LabourDetails
Southampton1751LabourDetails
Southend-on-Sea1751No overall control (Labour/independent/Lib Dem coalition)Details
Wokingham1854Liberal DemocratsDetails
12 councils201603
CouncilMayor beforeElected mayorDetails
CroydonJason Perry (Con)Details
HackneyCaroline Woodley (Labour Co-op)Details
LewishamBrenda Dacres (Labour Co-op)Details
NewhamRokhsana Fiaz (Labour Co-op)Details
Tower HamletsLutfur Rahman (Aspire)Details
WatfordPeter Taylor (Lib Dem)Details

All of these elections were delayed from 2025.

CouncilSeatsParty controlDetails
PreviousResult
East Sussex50No overall controlDetails
Essex78ConservativeDetails
Hampshire78ConservativeDetails
Norfolk84ConservativeDetails
Suffolk70ConservativeDetails
West Sussex70ConservativeDetails
6 councils430
CouncilSeatsParty controlDetails
PreviousNew
Huntingdonshire52No overall control (Lib Dem/Independent/Labour/Green coalition)Details
Newcastle-under-Lyme44ConservativeDetails
South Cambridgeshire45Liberal DemocratsDetails
3 councils141
CouncilSeatsParty controlDetails
upofPreviousNew
Adur1429LabourDetails
Cheltenham2040Liberal DemocratsDetails
Fareham1632ConservativeDetails
Gosport1428No overall control (Lib Dem minority)Details
Hastings1632No overall control (Green minority)Details
Nuneaton and Bedworth1938No overall control (Labour minority)Details
Oxford2448No overall control (Labour minority)Details
7 councils123247
CouncilSeatsParty controlDetails
upofPreviousNew
Basildon1442No overall control (Labour/Independent coalition)Details
Basingstoke and Deane1854No overall control (Lib Dem/Independent coalition)Details
Brentwood1339No overall control (Lib Dem/Labour coalition)Details
Broxbourne1030ConservativeDetails
Burnley1545No overall control (Burnley Independent/Lib Dem/Green coalition)Details
Cambridge1442LabourDetails
Cannock Chase1236LabourDetails
Cherwell1648No overall control (Lib Dem/Green/independent minority coalition)Details
Chorley1442LabourDetails
Colchester1751No overall control (Lib Dem/Labour coalition)Details
Crawley1236LabourDetails
Eastleigh1439Liberal DemocratsDetails
Epping Forest1854No overall control (Conservative minority)Details
Exeter1339LabourDetails
Harlow1133ConservativeDetails
Hart1133No overall control (CCH/Lib Dem coalition)Details
Havant1236No overall control (Labour/Lib Dem/Green coalition)Details
Hyndburn1135LabourDetails
Ipswich1648LabourDetails
Lincoln1133LabourDetails
Norwich1339No overall control (Labour minority)Details
Pendle1033No overall control (Lib Dem/Ind coalition)Details
Preston1648LabourDetails
Redditch927LabourDetails
Rochford1339No overall control (Conservative/Rochford Residents/Ind coalition)Details
Rugby1442No overall control (Labour minority)Details
Rushmoor1339No overall control (Labour minority)Details
St Albans2056Liberal DemocratsDetails
Stevenage1339LabourDetails
Tamworth1030LabourDetails
Three Rivers1339No overall control (Lib Dem minority)Details
Tunbridge Wells1339Liberal DemocratsDetails
Watford1236Liberal DemocratsDetails
Welwyn Hatfield1648No overall control (Labour/Lib Dem coalition)Details
West Lancashire1545No overall control (Labour minority)Details
West Oxfordshire1649No overall control (Lib Dem/Labour/Green coalition)Details
Winchester1545Liberal DemocratsDetails
Worthing1337LabourDetails
38 councils5161,545

According to the BBC, Labour are defending more than 2,500 seats, the Conservatives over 1,300 and the Liberal Democrats just under 700.

Following the election of Zack Polanski as Green Party leader, the party rose sharply in popularity polls. The party gained their first seat from Reform UK, in a Derbyshire by-election in January 2026. Hannah Spencer won the 2026 Gorton and Denton by-election after attracting a coalition of left-wing voters, working class voters, and Muslim voters disgruntled by the policies of the Starmer government and Labour's handling of the Gaza war. Spencer won the by-election with a majority of 4,402 votes to become the Green Party's fifth MP and first in the North of England. This was also the first ever parliamentary by-election win for the Greens.

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.

On 10 March 2026, Farage launched Reform's local election campaign at a live-streamed event with 1,500 supporters at GG's restaurant, in Newport, Isle of Wight. This was the first in a planned nationwide series of rallies.

On 19 March 2026, Kemi Badenoch launched the Conservative campaign for the local elections at an event at Sinfonia Smith Square in Westminster, London.

On 24 March 2026, Ed Davey launched the Liberal Democrat campaign for the local elections at an event in Lovelace Lodge, in East Horsley, Surrey.

On 20 March 2026, General Secretary of Unite Sharon Graham said in a speech to refuse workers near a waste depot in Tyseley, Birmingham that Labour will be "decimated" in the upcoming local elections and should "hang their heads in shame" over its handling of the Birmingham bin strike.

On 30 March 2026, Keir Starmer launched Labour's local election campaign at City of Wolverhampton College, West Midlands. According to ITV, Wolverhampton is one of Labour's safest councils in the region and Keir Starmer denied Birmingham was a "lost cause". The BBC said Labour is going into the elections with consistently low poll ratings.

On 2 April, Your Party announced it would endorse 250 candidates for the local elections, a majority of which would be independent candidates and community groups aligned with the party's platform rather than Your Party candidates. The party said it would target its efforts towards urban areas with large Muslim populations where support for Labour has weakened, such as Tower Hamlets, Newham, Redbridge, and Bradford.

On 1 April 2026, Rupert Lowe announced Restore Britain would not stand candidates for the local elections except in the Great Yarmouth area of the 2026 Norfolk County Council election.

  • 2026 Gorton and Denton by-election

  • 2026 Scottish Parliament election

  • 2026 Senedd election

  • Political make-up of local councils in the United Kingdom

  • Local authority, combined authority, and county combined authority election cycles in England (gov.uk)

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This article is sourced from Wikipedia and is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0. Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2026_United_Kingdom_local_elections

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