Data map

An interactive map of how data travels through the platform: from external sources (the election commission, parliament, the audit office, data.egov.bg, the statistics institute, Eurostat, the consumer-protection price monitor and more), through the datasets built from them, to the site features that consume them. One source often feeds several features — the map shows exactly which.

What the map shows

  • Sources — every external register and portal watched daily for changes, with check frequency and the date of the latest refresh. The full list with links lives on the sources page.
  • Datasets — election results, roll-call votes, the budget, procurement, EU funds, prices and the rest of the processed collections.
  • Features — the site's interactive maps, dashboards and tools, linked to the data they stand on.

The map is generated automatically from the watched-sources registry — a new source appears on it the moment it is added. The refresh log lives on the recent-updates page, and the processed data is free to reuse under Creative Commons BY 4.0 — see sources and downloads.

What is published

  • Parliamentary elections — results by party, region, municipality, settlement and section.
  • Local elections — municipal councillors and mayors.
  • Parliament — roll-call votes and MP business connections.
  • Party financing and governments.
  • Macroeconomic and regional indicators, demographics.
  • EU funds and public procurement.

Explore the data

  • Home
  • Governance
  • National Assembly
  • Roll-call votes
  • Governments
  • MP business connections
  • Public procurement
  • State budget
  • EU funds
  • Indicators
  • Consumption
  • Prices
  • Party financing
  • Opinion polls
  • Seat simulator
  • Parties
  • Results by region
  • Extraordinary local elections
  • Local-elections reconciliation
  • Sofia
  • About the project

Recent analysis

  • Following the public money: a citizen's toolkit for procurement
  • How the budget simulator works: data and model
  • The BNB reserve after the euro: can it be spent?