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PÍTCAST PRO Pollster

Live aggregation of Hungary's most reliable pollsters. Track monthly averages, pollster methodology, and historical pivots around national elections. Learn more about Pollster.

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Polling averages in Hungary

Dots represent individual polls; lines show monthly means.

Note: due to rounding, adding up individual poll data does not always add up to 100.Last update: Nov 2025

Political timeline

Key political milestones in Hungary

Economic Stagnation and Reform Pressure

Late 1970s

Hungary faced growing economic difficulties under the communist regime, prompting calls for market-oriented reforms within the Hungarian Socialist Workers’ Party (MSZMP).

Emergence of Reform Movement

1985

At the MSZMP Party Congress, reform-minded communists gained influence, allowing limited pluralism and criticism of the government’s policies.

Formation of Opposition Groups

1987

Independent intellectual and civic groups such as the Hungarian Democratic Forum (MDF) and Alliance of Free Democrats (SZDSZ) emerged, demanding democratic change.

Kádár Replaced by Grósz

1988

Longtime leader János Kádár was replaced by Károly Grósz as General Secretary, signaling a shift toward gradual reform and political opening. Kádár dies in 1989.

Reburial of Imre Nagy

16th June 1989

The reburial of 1956 revolutionary leader Imre Nagy became a national event symbolizing reconciliation and the end of communist legitimacy.

Proclamation of the Republic of Hungary

23rd October 1989

On 23rd October 1989, Hungary officially became the Republic of Hungary, abandoning its communist constitution and embracing democracy and human rights.

First Free Elections Held

1990

Hungary held its first free parliamentary elections since World War II, resulting in victory for the Hungarian Democratic Forum (MDF) and the formation of the first democratic government.

Withdrawal of Soviet Troops

1991

The last Soviet troops left Hungary, marking the definitive end of communist influence and the full restoration of national sovereignty.

MSZP wins parliamentary elections

1994

The Hungarian Socialist Party (MSZP), successor to the Socialist Workers' Party (MSZMP), wins the parliamentary elections, forming a coalition government with the Alliance of Free Democrats (SZDSZ).

Fidesz wins parliamentary elections

1998

Fidesz, led by the young Viktor Orbán, wins the parliamentary elections and forms a coalition government with the Independent Smallholders' Party (FKGP) and the Christian Democratic People's Party (KDNP).

Hungary joins NATO

1999

Hungary becomes a member of NATO, marking a significant step in its integration into the Western political and security architecture.

MSZP's returns to power

2002

The Hungarian Socialist Party (MSZP) surprisingly returns to power, forming a coalition government with SZDSZ.

Hungary joins the European Union

2004

Hungary becomes a member of the European Union, with 84% of voters favouring the proposal.

MSZP wins again amid protests

2006

The MSZP wins the parliamentary elections again, but the victory is marred by widespread protests and after the leaking of the Őszöd-speech.

PM Gyurcsány resigns

21st March 2009

Prime Minister Ferenc Gyurcsány resigns amid popular collapse of the MSZP and the Global Financial Crisis.

Fidesz-KDNP wins supermajority

2010

Fidesz-KDNP wins a two-thirds supermajority in the parliamentary elections, allowing it to implement significant constitutional and legal changes.

Fidesz-KDNP dominance

2010-2024

Fidesz-KDNP, led by PM Orbán maintains its dominance in Hungarian politics, winning subsequent elections in 2014, 2018, and 2022, amid controversies over democratic backsliding, widespread corruption, tensions with the European Union and closer ties to Russia.

President Novák resigns

2024

President Katalin Novák resigns after scandal involving her in pardoning Endre Kónya, a former deputy director of an orphanage in Bicske who had been imprisoned due to his involvement in a pedophilia case implicating the orphanage's director.

Rise of Tisza Párt

2024-2025

The newly formed Tisza Párt, led by Péter Magyar rises in the wake of the 2024 European and municipal elections, positioning itself as the only opposition force against Fidesz-KDNP.

Parties in Hungary

Hungary goes to polls in the 2026 Parliamentary Election. Showing the most recent averages (2025 Nov).

20 parties since beginning of dataset
Tisza Párt emblem

Tisza Párt

Top 1
45.2%
Fidesz-KDNP emblem

Fidesz-KDNP

Top 2
43.4%
Mihazánk Mozgalom emblem

Mihazánk Mozgalom

Top 3
4.6%

Polling dataset

783 surveys
PollsterFieldedSampleTop parties
Medián
25 Nov 20251,000
Tisza Párt: 50.0%Fidesz-KDNP: 40.0%Mihazánk Mozgalom: 5.0%
PublicusMethodology
18 Nov 20251,002
Tisza Párt: 48.0%Fidesz-KDNP: 39.0%Demokratikus Koalíció: 6.0%
Magyar TársadalomkutatóMethodology
14 Nov 20251,000
Fidesz-KDNP: 50.0%Tisza Párt: 40.0%Mihazánk Mozgalom: 5.0%
Alapjogokért KözpontMethodology
13 Nov 20251,000
Fidesz-KDNP: 48.0%Tisza Párt: 41.0%Mihazánk Mozgalom: 5.0%
IDEA
07 Nov 20251,500
Tisza Párt: 47.0%Fidesz-KDNP: 40.0%Demokratikus Koalíció: 5.0%
Závecz Research
31 Oct 20251,000
Tisza Párt: 44.9%Fidesz-KDNP: 37.2%Mihazánk Mozgalom: 6.4%
Republikon
22 Oct 20251,000
Tisza Párt: 44.0%Fidesz-KDNP: 34.0%Mihazánk Mozgalom: 7.0%
Alapjogokért Központ
16 Oct 20251,000
Fidesz-KDNP: 47.0%Tisza Párt: 42.0%Mihazánk Mozgalom: 6.0%