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Florida Presidential Election Results

Florida Presidential Election Results

Winner

Donald J. Trump wins Florida.

Race called by The Associated Press.

Updated Jan. 26, 2021
Vote totals certified
Candidate Party Votes Pct. Electoral votes E.V.
Trump* Donald J. Trump* Winner Republican Rep. 5,668,731 51.2% 29
Biden Joseph R. Biden Jr. Democrat Dem. 5,297,045 47.9%
Jorgensen Jo Jorgensen Libertarian Lib. 70,324 0.6%
Hawkins Howie Hawkins Green Green 14,721 0.1%
De La Fuente Rocky De La Fuente Other Other 5,966 0.1%
La Riva Gloria La Riva Independent Ind. 5,712 0.1%
Blankenship Don Blankenship Constitution Const. 3,902 <0.1%
Write-ins Write-ins 1,055 <0.1%
Total reported Total reported 11,067,456
View all candidates Collapse candidates

* Incumbent

The vote count has been certified in Florida.

Biden
Trump
11 million votes reported

Results by county

County Margin 2016 margin Est. votes reported Total votes Absentee
Miami-Dade Biden +7 D+29.4
100%
1,156,816 1,148,798
Broward Biden +30 D+34.9
100%
957,672 831,693
Palm Beach Biden +13 D+15.4
100%
773,158 614,147
Hillsborough Biden +7 D+6.8
100%
712,063 603,967
Orange Biden +23 D+24.4
100%
647,403 532,878
Pinellas Biden +0.22 R+1.1
100%
559,715 559,121
Duval Biden +4 R+1.4
100%
492,820
Lee Trump +19 R+20.2
100%
393,899 378,985
Brevard Trump +16 R+19.5
100%
360,764
Polk Trump +14 R+13.9
100%
343,256 242,629
Volusia Trump +14 R+12.9
100%
307,439 241,192
Pasco Trump +20 R+21.4
100%
301,970
Sarasota Trump +10 R+11.5
100%
270,575 226,093
Seminole Biden +3 R+1.6
100%
260,815 216,731
Manatee Trump +16 R+17
100%
216,958 173,066
Lake Trump +20 R+22.9
100%
211,314 192,802
Collier Trump +25 R+25.7
100%
207,818 178,545
Marion Trump +26 R+26
100%
204,376 152,294
St. Johns Trump +27 R+33.1
100%
176,622 149,800
Osceola Biden +14 D+24.9
100%
172,436 142,872
St. Lucie Trump +1.6 R+2.4
100%
172,169 140,354
Escambia Trump +15 R+20.3
100%
170,372
Leon Biden +28 D+24.9
100%
162,929 130,320
Alachua Biden +27 D+22.3
100%
142,604 127,597
Clay Trump +37 R+43.9
100%
124,405 93,331
Okaloosa Trump +39 R+47.1
100%
116,373
Charlotte Trump +27 R+27.5
100%
116,340 100,696
Hernando Trump +30 R+28.7
100%
108,922 82,689
Santa Rosa Trump +47 R+52.9
100%
106,928
Martin Trump +25 R+26.6
100%
98,726 83,679
Indian River Trump +22 R+24.2
100%
97,484 81,466
Citrus Trump +41 R+39.4
100%
93,208 72,480
Bay Trump +44 R+45.8
100%
93,024 28,654
Sumter Trump +36 R+39
100%
92,485
Flagler Trump +21 R+20.4
100%
71,716
Nassau Trump +46 R+49.8
100%
58,811 58,550
Highlands Trump +34 R+31.8
100%
52,170 39,872
Monroe Trump +8 R+6.8
100%
48,029 37,383
Walton Trump +52 R+55.7
100%
43,711 32,367
Putnam Trump +41 R+36.2
100%
36,373 25,591
Columbia Trump +45 R+44.2
100%
33,042 26,079
Gadsden Biden +37 D+37.3
100%
23,762 17,995
Levy Trump +46 R+44.5
100%
23,145 15,522
Jackson Trump +39 R+37.1
100%
22,419 17,233
Suwannee Trump +57 R+54.9
100%
21,057 14,710
Wakulla Trump +41 R+39.9
100%
18,404 12,922
Okeechobee Trump +44 R+39.2
100%
15,954 11,597
Baker Trump +70 R+64.4
100%
14,059 9,978
Bradford Trump +53 R+49.3
100%
13,632 11,662
Hendry Trump +23 R+14.1
100%
12,940 10,106
DeSoto Trump +32 R+27.5
100%
12,659 9,331
Washington Trump +61 R+56.8
100%
12,327 11,719
Taylor Trump +54 R+51.1
100%
10,127 7,339
Gilchrist Trump +64 R+62.3
100%
9,685 6,034
Madison Trump +19 R+15.5
100%
9,380 7,643
Holmes Trump +79 R+77.5
100%
9,068 5,634
Hardee Trump +45 R+40.5
100%
8,485 4,917
Jefferson Trump +7 R+5.1
100%
8,451 5,801
Dixie Trump +66 R+62.8
100%
8,167 5,627
Gulf Trump +51 R+49.2
100%
8,163
Franklin Trump +37 R+39.3
100%
6,849 5,119
Calhoun Trump +62 R+55.7
100%
6,526 4,663
Union Trump +65 R+62.1
100%
6,245
Hamilton Trump +32 R+28
100%
5,830 4,025
Glades Trump +46 R+39.4
100%
5,193
Lafayette Trump +72 R+67.2
100%
3,658 2,375
Liberty Trump +60 R+57.1
100%
3,561 2,450
View all Collapse

Tracking the vote count

See how the reported vote share changed over time.

Absentee votes by candidate

Some states and counties will report candidate vote totals for mail-in ballots, but some places may not report comprehensive vote type data.

Candidate Absentee/early votesVotes Pct.
Biden 4,117,968 51.8%
Trump 3,778,054 47.5%
Jorgensen 36,903 0.5%
Hawkins 9,232 0.1%
De La Fuente 3,576 <0.1%
La Riva 3,265 <0.1%
Blankenship 2,125 <0.1%
Write-ins 27 <0.1%
Total reported 7,951,150
View all candidates Collapse candidates

84% of counties (56 of 67) have reported absentee votes. Data for absentee votes may not be available in some places.

Latest updates

Maggie Astor Jan. 7, 2021

Vice President Mike Pence affirms Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Kamala Harris as the next president and vice president.

Explore the exit poll

See which groups backed Mr. Trump or Mr. Biden for president.

These figures are estimates.

Trump
Biden

Are you male or female?

Male 45% of voters
54%
45%
Female 55%
48
51

What is your racial or ethnic heritage?

White 62% of voters
62
37
Black 14%
10
89
Hispanic/Latino 19%
46
53
Asian 1%
Other 3%
44
55

How old are you?

18-29 14% of voters
38
60
30-44 20%
50
48
45-64 34%
54
45
65 or over 32%
55
45

Latest updates

Nicholas Fandos, in Washington

Congress confirmed Joe Biden’s victory, defying a mob that stormed the Capitol after being egged on by President Trump. Read more ›

Winner Claudia Tenney, Republican, wins New York’s 22nd Congressional District ›
Winner Mariannette Miller-Meeks, Republican, wins Iowa’s Second Congressional District ›

Maggie Astor Jan. 7, 2021

Vice President Mike Pence affirms Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Kamala Harris as the next president and vice president.

Astead Herndon, in Atlanta Jan. 6, 2021

Today encapsulated the politics of progress and grievance that have defined the Trump years: Senate wins for Warnock and Ossoff, and a mob at the Capitol. Read more ›

Winner Democrats have won the Senate ›

Jonathan Martin, in Atlanta Jan. 6, 2021

Democrats have now captured control of the Senate as Jon Ossoff has defeated David Perdue, following the Rev. Raphael Warnock’s victory over Senator Kelly Loeffler. See live results ›

The New York Times Jan. 6, 2021

A mob of people loyal to President Trump stormed the Capitol, halting Congress’s counting of the electoral votes to confirm President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory. Read more ›

Trip Gabriel Dec. 14, 2020

Joseph R. Biden Jr. has received a majority of votes from the Electoral College, formally securing the presidency in the manner set out in the Constitution. Read more ›

Isabella Grullón Paz Dec. 14, 2020

The 538 members of the Electoral College are meeting to cast ballots for president based on the election results in their states, formalizing Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory. Track the Electoral College results ›

The New York Times Dec. 5, 2020

California has certified its electors for the 2020 election, officially giving Joseph R. Biden Jr. more than the 270 pledged electors needed to become president. Read more ›

Winner Lee Zeldin, Republican, wins re-election in New York’s First Congressional District ›
Winner Andrew Garbarino, Republican, wins New York’s Second Congressional District ›
Winner Nicole Malliotakis, Republican, wins New York’s 11th Congressional District ›
Winner Mike Garcia, Republican, wins re-election in California’s 25th Congressional District ›
Winner John Katko, Republican, wins re-election in New York’s 24th Congressional District ›

Reid Epstein, in Washington Nov. 30, 2020

The chairwoman of the Wisconsin Elections Commission has certified Biden as the winner in Wisconsin, formalizing his narrow victory in a state Trump carried four years ago. Read more ›

Glenn Thrush, in Washington Nov. 30, 2020

Arizona has officially certified Biden’s narrow victory in the state, further undermining Trump’s efforts to portray his decisive national loss as a matter still under dispute. Read more ›

Winner David Valadao, Republican, wins California’s 21st Congressional District ›

Michael D. Shear, in Washington Nov. 23, 2020

President Trump authorized his government to begin the transition to President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s administration. Read more ›