The Writ

The Writ

Vote and Seat Projections

The Writ's Federal Vote and Seat Projections

What would be the result of a Canadian federal election if it were held today?

Éric Grenier's avatar
Éric Grenier
Jun 02, 2026
∙ Paid
Note to Readers: These projections are presented using Datawrapper’s interactive charts. They are best viewed on a desktop. In most cases, you can click, tap or hover over the charts to interact with them.

Updated June 2, 2026

The Liberals would very likely win a big majority government if an election were held today, with gains coming primarily from the Conservatives. Mark Carney’s Liberals hold a double-digit lead over the Conservatives, while the Bloc has about as much support as it did in the 2025 election. The New Democrats have ticked up in the projection, but it’s not clear yet if it is a real trend in the party’s favour or polling noise.

Full regional breakdowns and tracking charts are available for subscribers below, as are complete riding-level projections. A full methodological explanation of how the vote and seat projection model works can be found here.

The Vote Projection is based primarily on a weighted average of all publicly-available national and regional polls. The weighted average is then used to project the outcome in all 343 ridings across the country, taking into account local candidates. Those individual riding-level projections are then weighted by the number of eligible voters in each riding and past turnout to determine the national vote projection for each party.

The Seat Projection shows the number of seats in which each party is projected to be ahead. Parties are assigned a range of likely vote share in each riding based on past polling and modelling errors and 10,000 simulations are run to assign to each party a number of ridings in which they are in contention. The High and Low ranges take into account 95% of all likely outcomes, while the Avg. Projection shows the average number of seats each party wins in these simulations, which takes into account the tendency for parties to under- or out-perform their polls.

Wondering how to interpret the Seat Projection and the Avg. Projection? While the Seat Projection is The Writ’s “official call”, the Avg. Projection is an important guide to understanding the projections, in conjunction with the high and low ranges. Seat projections are rarely right on target, so the Avg. Projection should set expectations. In other words, if the Seat Projection for a party is 25 seats but the Avg. Projection is 21.2, your expectation should be that the party will win around 25 seats, with a greater likelihood that the party under-performs that target rather than beats it.

The percentage of simulations in which each party wins a majority or a plurality of seats is shown below.

Complete riding and sub-regional projections are available for subscribers of The Writ:

The Writ's Riding Projections

The Writ's Riding Projections

Éric Grenier
·
Mar 17
Read full story

A full breakdown of the methodology behind the vote and seat projection model can be found here:

Vote and seat projection methodology

Vote and seat projection methodology

Éric Grenier
·
Mar 17
Read full story

The table below includes all recent federal voting intentions polls that are publicly available. You can click or tap on the name of the polling firm in the left-most column to go directly to that polling firm’s original poll release. Rows containing polls conducted in a single region are highlighted in different colours.

Vote and seat projections broken down by region and tracking charts going back to the 2025 election are available for subscribers of The Writ below 👇

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