General election 2024 poll tracker: How do the parties compare?

  • Published

Use our interactive poll tracker to check the latest trends measuring how people say they intend to vote.

29 June 2024

Tap party name to highlight its polls in the chart

  1. Average Range
  2. LAB 40%
    (35-45)%
  3. CON 20%
    (15-25)%
  4. REF 16%
    (13-19)%
  5. LD 11%
    (8-14)%
  6. GRN 6%
    (3-9)%
  7. SNP 3%
    (2-4)%
  8. PC 1%
    (<1-2)%
Trend line showing average voting intention, based on individual polls

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A scatter plot showing an average percentage of people who said they would vote for each party (excluding those who didn't know or wouldn't vote) in each poll taken since January 2020. The chart shows the Conservative party started off leading but Labour took the lead in late 2021 with the gap widest in autumn 2022. Both the Conservative and Labour share declined since May 2024 while Reform UK's share has increased. In the week commencing 24 June 2024, the three parties vote shares have levelled off. The chart also shows that Reform UK are currently in third place and the Lib Dems are in fourth. The Green Party is in fifth place. The SNP and Plaid Cymru are also shown in sixth and seventh place on Great Britain vote share but these parties only stand in Scotland and Wales.

*Because the SNP and Plaid Cymru only campaign in Scotland and Wales respectively, the margin of error for their support across Great Britain is likely to be within +/- 1%. Latest chart update: 30 June 2024

What do the latest polls tell us?

Latest update: 29 June 2024

There's quite a lot of variation between the polls but they all agree that Labour has a big lead over the Conservatives, writes senior political analyst Peter Barnes.

The polls have had quite a broad range of figures over the last few days, particularly for the Conservatives and Reform UK.

This is partly explained by how different polling companies deal with people who say they're undecided about how to vote - but there's certainly more variation than at the same stage of the last election campaign in 2019.

However, if you look at the poll averages, there's been very little change for any of the parties over the last ten days or so.

Labour still has a lead of around 20 points over the Conservatives with Reform UK in third and the Liberal Democrats in fourth.

How big are the gaps between parties?

All polls are based on a sample of people interviewed, typically more than 1,000, which is then weighted to be representative of the country.

There is always a margin of error, meaning the real percentage could be higher or lower than any one poll suggests.

We estimate that the true support for each party lies within the ranges shown here.

Latest UK general election voting intention: 29 June 2024

Percentage range of party support, after adjusting for and/or excluding 'don't know' and 'won't vote'.

Party Average poll Poll range
Labour 40% 35-45%
Conservatives 20% 15-25%
Reform UK 16% 13-19%
Lib Dems 11% 8-14%
Green 6% 3-9%
SNP 3% 2-4%
Plaid Cymru 1% Less than 1% to 2%

*Because the SNP and Plaid Cymru only campaign in Scotland and Wales respectively, the margin of error for their support across Great Britain is likely to be within +/- 1%

What is a poll tracker?

Each dot in the chart shows one poll result for a party.

We summarise all that information with an average line that makes it easier to understand the trend.

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Which polls do we use?

To get an appropriate range of polls for our averages, we use those conducted by members of the British Polling Council., external

Its members agree to the same rules on transparency, but the council has said membership should not be seen as a guarantee of quality.

The polls we include have come from BMG, Deltapoll, Electoral Calculus, Find Out Now, Focaldata, Ipsos, JL Partners, More in Common, Opinium, Norstat (formerly Panelbase), People Polling, Redfield and Wilton Strategies, Savanta, Survation, Techne, Verian (formerly Kantar Public), WeThink (formerly Omnisis), Whitestone Insight and YouGov.

We only include the headline percentages on voting intention, which pollsters calculate by excluding or otherwise adjusting for those people who answered "don't know" or "won't vote".

Most of the polls included cover Great Britain, although some do poll the whole of the UK. People surveyed do not get the option to choose parties which only stand in Northern Ireland.

We include data that is in the public domain. Some polling companies will not publish all data for all parties at the same time.

Who pays for polls?

Where polling companies have stated in their data tables who their client is, we have included this in our table. It is common for polling companies to do their work for news organisations, television programmes and campaign groups.

What is the margin of error?

The true position for the Conservatives and Labour might be within five percentage points of our average.

Nine out of 10 polls just before election day have been within that range of the eventual national vote shares in the 2010 to 2019 general elections.

The gap has been smaller for other parties which campaign throughout Great Britain, such as the Liberal Democrats, Green party and Reform UK (formerly the Brexit Party) and smaller still for the SNP and Plaid Cymru.

How do we average the polls?

Our estimate of a party's support is a rolling average of polls.

A party's share on any given day is the average of their results from polls taken over the previous fortnight. We only take the most recent poll from each company for that day's averages.

Why do polling companies have different results?

All opinion polls will differ a bit because they are interviewing different people. There are also other things that can lead to differences between polling companies. For example:

  • Different companies find the people who take part in their polls in different ways

  • The precise wording of the question varies between pollsters, and some pollsters ask more than one question to reach their voting intention figures

  • Pollsters apply "weights" to their data to try to make their results reflect the make-up of the voting population. So if a particular poll has a smaller proportion of female respondents than there are in the wider population, their responses will be given extra weight in the final results. But different companies take different factors into account

  • The companies have different ways of treating people who initially say they do not know how they will vote, or are not certain if they will vote.

What do pollsters ask?

For voting intention, polling companies typically ask interviewees a question along the lines of: "If a general election were held tomorrow, which party would you vote for?"

Some polling companies have not given their interviewees the choice of some parties, including them within the "other" category.

For example, Reform UK, formerly the Brexit Party until 2021, has only been included as an option in every poll featured in our tracker since autumn 2022, while support for Plaid Cymru is included among "other" parties in polls released by Techne.

Produced by Grace Richardson, Scott Jarvis, Becky Rush, Allison Shultes, Libby Rogers, Daniel Wainwright, Aidan McNamee, Jana Tauschinski, Debie Loizou, Preeti Vaghela, Robert Cuffe, John Walton.

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