Bulgarian parliamentary elections — latest vote: 19 April 2026

Turnout: 50.70% (3,360,330 of 6,627,747 registered voters).

Biggest gain: ПрБ (+44.59 pp). Biggest loss: ГЕРБ-СДС (-13.00 pp).

Paper / machine vote: 52.39% / 47.61%.

Parties and results

PartyVotes%ΔSeats
ПрБ1,444,92044.59%+44.59 pp131
ГЕРБ-СДС433,75513.39%-13.00 pp39
ПП-ДБ408,84612.62%-1.60 pp37
ДПС230,6937.12%-11.88 pp21
Възраждане137,9404.26%-9.11 pp12
МЕЧ104,5063.23%-1.37 pp
Величие100,5723.10%-0.90 pp
БСП-ОЛ97,7533.02%-4.56 pp
Сияние93,5592.89%+2.89 pp
АПС50,7591.57%-5.92 pp
ИТН23,8610.74%-6.05 pp
АКБ18,9990.59%
СБ18,6400.58%-0.49 pp
БМ17,2630.53%
ПД10,0320.31%
Нация9,8040.30%
ДНК9,7610.30%
НБ6,2210.19%
ГН4,6650.14%
НПИ-СИ4,3920.14%
МБ4,3580.13%
ПнЗ3,0270.09%
ИК-Батков2,0930.06%
Съпротива1,8970.06%
3М1,8400.06%

Section-level anomalies detected: 3,331. See problem sections.

Voting abroad

Germany (37,593 voters) · Turkey (30,229 voters) · United Kingdom (27,635 voters) · Spain (19,558 voters) · USA (9,888 voters) · Netherlands (9,817 voters) · Austria (6,993 voters) · Belgium (6,580 voters) · Italy (6,524 voters) · France (5,229 voters)

Largest cities

Sofia (638,489 voters) · Plovdiv (158,118 voters) · Varna (153,254 voters) · Burgas (93,514 voters) · Stara Zagora (62,409 voters) · Ruse (58,366 voters) · Pleven (47,230 voters) · Haskovo (34,605 voters) · Dobrich (34,233 voters) · Pernik (34,220 voters)

Recent analysis

  • Budget 2026 in focus: the record deficit, the critics, and a check against the numbers — The first regular budget of the Radev cabinet arrives with a 5.7%-of-GDP deficit and an excessive-deficit procedure just months after euro adoption. We line up the verified figures from the 2026 Budget Law and the 2026–2028 medium-term forecast, gather the reactions of politicians and economists (sourced line by line), and run the claims themselves through our budget simulator: the deficit, the €2,300 social-security cap and the party-subsidy cut all check out; 'you can't consolidate while debt explodes' is arithmetically false; and the 'soft' revenue and the 'Videnov-era' comparison do not survive scrutiny.
  • Following the public money: a citizen's toolkit for procurement — The expanded public-procurement module — set against АОП/ЦАИС ЕОП, SIGMA and the international tools (opentender.eu, DOZORRO, OCDS). An explainable Corruption Risk Index, money-flow diagrams, a politician scanner, a per-oblast choropleth and a red-flag feed — with worked examples of what you can actually find (single bidding, concentration, MP- and official-connected firms).
  • How the budget simulator works: data and model — How /budget/simulator works: where the data comes from and how the model is built. Static and dynamic mode, how every lever is scored (VAT, income tax, corporate, dividends, the social-security cap, excise, spending), the behavioral elasticities and fiscal multipliers behind dynamic mode, the limitations and the validation against official costings.
  • The BNB reserve after the euro: can it be spent? — A recurring promise: with the euro, Bulgaria "frees up" 20–40 billion leva of reserves it can finally spend. We trace the claim to source — how big the BNB reserve actually is (≈€42bn), what happened to it on 1 January 2026 (a ≈€1.48bn transfer to the ECB in exchange for a non-redeemable claim — an accounting swap, not a release), and why EU law (Art 123 TFEU) and basic accounting mean neither the state nor anyone else gets cash to spend.
  • Local councils and capital programmes — what we ingest and what's missing — An audit of all 16 municipalities with council-votes data and 26 with capital-programme data on electionsbg.com. Data tables, gaps grouped by issue (publication policy, Cloudflare/TSPD bot guards, scanned PDFs, stale CMSes), and the eight oblast capitals where readers can ask their councils to publish what their bigger peers already do.
  • Twenty years of Bulgarian cabinets — what the numbers actually show — Analysis of all 18 cabinets since 2005 through their macro footprints — GDP, inflation, unemployment, debt and EU funds. What worked and what didn't for each mandate, who left the bill for the next, and why the last 4 years are a paradox: the most unstable politics on top of the strongest economy since EU accession.

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Recent analysis

  • Budget 2026 in focus: the record deficit, the critics, and a check against the numbers
  • Following the public money: a citizen's toolkit for procurement
  • How the budget simulator works: data and model