
Local elections 2025: full mayoral and council results for England
Polling has taken place in councils across England, and there have been six mayoral elections. Voters also went to the polls in a parliamentary byelection in Runcorn and Helsby.
On 1 May many county councils in England are up for election. In areas with two tiers of local government, the county councils are the upper tier, with responsibility for big-budget areas such as education and social care. Some unitary authorities are also up for election.
In addition there are elections for mayors of combined authorities, including some new authorities, and two directly elected single-authority mayors.
These are some of the councils that show the key trends in the elections. The charts show the percentage of seats held in each council, by party.
Regions in white are up for election. The size of the circle indicates the seats gained as a percentage of the number that were up for election.
Labour had relatively little at stake in Keir Starmer's first major electoral test since becoming prime minister, as they were going into the election defending less than half the number of council seats up for election compared with the Conservatives.
Many of these council areas have been deeply Conservative for years, so expectations of significant Conservative losses were high.
The Lib Dems could make substantial gains if they can capitalise on anti-Conservative feeling in the centre-right, especially in areas such as Oxfordshire and Kent.
These are not traditionally strong Green areas for the most part, but university cities such as Canterbury and Exeter will be voting as part of their respective counties.
Independent candidates made significant gains in 2024, largely at the expense of Labour, both in the local elections and general elections.
Reform were called the 'wild card' going into the election, with the party having high hopes in regions like Kent and Lincolnshire.
These results are provided by the Press Association media newswire (PA). Numbers for change in seats are calculated against the state of the council just before this election. Other organisations calculate using the previous election, and this can lead to discrepancies. They may also announce individual ward councillor results as they become known, while PA release results for each council only when its full count is complete. PA collates results only for elections that were due in this electoral cycle, meaning there may be council byelection results in other parts of the country that are not included. There are frequent changes in ward boundaries, sometimes accompanied by changes in the number of councillors overall.

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Rhyl Journal
an hour ago
- Rhyl Journal
Rayner faces Labour backbench call to ‘smash' existing housebuilding model
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Daily Mail
an hour ago
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Powys County Times
an hour ago
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