2025 Czech parliamentary election

2025 Czech parliamentary election

3–4 October 2025

All 200 seats in the Chamber of Deputies
101 seats needed for a majority
Opinion polls
Turnout68.95% ( 3.56 pp)
  First party Second party Third party
 
Leader Andrej Babiš Petr Fiala Vít Rakušan
Party ANO ODS STAN
Alliance SPOLU
Leader's seat Moravian-Silesian South Moravian Central Bohemian
Last election 27.1%
72 seats
27.8%
71 seats
15.6%
33 seats
Seats won 80 52 22
Seat change 8 19 11
Popular vote 1,940,507 1,313,346 631,512
Percentage 34.5% 23.4% 11.2%
Swing 7.4pp 4.4pp n/a

  Fourth party Fifth party Sixth party
 
Leader Zdeněk Hřib Tomio Okamura Filip Turek
Party Pirates SPD AUTO
Leader's seat Prague Central Bohemian Central Bohemian
Last election 15.6%
4 seats
9.6%
20 seats
Did not exist
Seats won 18 15 13
Seat change 14 5 New party
Popular vote 504,537 437,611 380,601
Percentage 9.0% 7.8% 6.8%
Swing n/a 1.8pp New party

Results by district (top) and mandates by region (bottom)

Prime Minister before election

Petr Fiala
ODS

Prime Minister after election

Andrej Babiš
ANO

Parliamentary elections were held in the Czech Republic on 3 and 4 October 2025, to elect all 200 members of the Chamber of Deputies, the lower house of the Czech Parliament. The election saw ANO return to power as the largest party in parliament. The parties that formed the previous government lost their majority but performed better than polling suggested, winning 92 seats after being projected to win only 62–70 seats. ANO also performed better than expected while the far-right Freedom and Direct Democracy (SPD) performed worse than expected based on polling. The left-wing Stačilo! failed to enter Parliament. The leader of ANO, Andrej Babiš, went on to form a coalition government with SPD and another right-wing party, Motorists for Themselves (AUTO). He was appointed prime minister for a second time on 9 December.

The main issues in the election were the economy, inflation, foreign policy and defence spending. The 2025 election marked the first time that mail-in voting was permitted for citizens living or stationed abroad.