2024 UK General Election Results

Keir Starmer’s Labour won a landslide election victory, racking up gains in seats across the UK and bringing an end to 14 years of Conservative-led government.

The Conservatives won just 121 seats, down 251 from the 2019 notional election results. Tory support cratered in many parts of Britain, with Nigel Farage’s insurgent Reform UK party winning a significant numbers of votes and claiming its first parliamentary seats. The Liberal Democrats won a total of 71 seats, taking many from the Conservatives.

Explore all the results to see how the UK voted and where the parties won — and lost. For expert analysis from our reporters, visit our live blog.

Who has won the most seats?

With −% of seats declared, we have a tie. Conservative and Labour both have 0 seats and need 326 more for a majority in Parliament.

Seats won in 2019
Labour Party Leader
Labour
0
Conservative Party Leader
Conservative
0
Liberal Democrat Party Leader
Liberal Democrat
0
Scottish National Party Party Leader
Scottish National Party
0
Green Party Leader
Green
0
Reform UK Party Leader
Reform UK
0
Other parties
0
326-seat Parliament majority

What are the results by constituency?



Who won ‘Red Wall’ seats?

The Red Wall is a set of largely Brexit-backing seats in central and northern England that traditionally backed Labour, many of which switched to then Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s Conservatives in the 2019 general election.

Red Wall Party standings

Votes Share %
Conservative 0 0.0
Labour 0 0.0
Liberal Democrat 0 0.0
Green 0 0.0
Reform UK 0 0.0
Other parties 0 0.0


Who won ‘Blue Wall’ seats?

YouGov’s Patrick English defines the blue wall as Conservative-held areas in the south or east of England that voted Remain in the Brexit referendum and have a higher than average proportion of graduates.

Blue Wall Party standings

Votes Share %
Conservative 0 0.0
Labour 0 0.0
Liberal Democrat 0 0.0
Green 0 0.0
Reform UK 0 0.0
Other parties 0 0.0


Correction as of 7:50 a.m. UK time: Previous tallies of “Other parties” did not include independent candidates