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Sunday, August 1, 2027 · 464 days away
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Spanish General Election 2027
Event overview
Election for the 16th Cortes Generales; latest date under current legislature.
Spain's next general election must be called by 1 August 2027 at the latest, when the current 15th legislature's four-year term expires. Both chambers are renewed: 350 deputies in the Congreso and at least 208 directly elected senators plus the regional-assembly appointments.
Spain returned a hung parliament at the 23 July 2023 general election, and Pedro Sánchez was invested Prime Minister on 16 November 2023 with support from Sumar, ERC, Junts, PNV, EH Bildu, and BNG. The legislature formally began on 17 August 2023, and under Article 68 of the Constitution and the Ley Orgánica del Régimen Electoral General (LOREG), Congress sits for a maximum four-year term. The investiture vote split 179-171 in favour of Sánchez, the narrowest margin of any Spanish prime-ministerial investiture since the 1977 transition.
If not dissolved early, the term ends on 17 August 2027, and the King must issue a dissolution decree to call elections, with polling day between 54 and 60 days later. In practice the government typically triggers dissolution before term expiry; Mariano Rajoy did so in 2016 and Sánchez in 2023. A polling day of 1 August 2027 corresponds to the latest permissible window if no early dissolution is called.
The 2027 ballot will elect the 16th Cortes Generales. Key issues include the amnesty law for Catalan separatists passed in 2024 (Ley Orgánica 1/2024), regional financing reforms, housing affordability with Madrid and Barcelona rents up more than 30 per cent over the term, and the PP-Vox opposition dynamic under Alberto Núñez Feijóo and Santiago Abascal. The Constitutional Court's 2024–2025 rulings on amnesty applications have kept the issue live, with Junts per Catalunya conditioning parliamentary support on specific judicial outcomes. Unemployment stood near 11.4 per cent in late 2025, still the highest in the Eurozone.
1 August 2027 is the outer bound derived from Articles 68 and 115 of the Constitution and LOREG's 54-day minimum campaign calendar. An election later than this would require an emergency constitutional manoeuvre that has never been used. The date therefore functions as a statutory deadline against which any Sánchez-government decision to call a snap poll will be measured. A historical parallel is the 1996 election timing, when Felipe González's PSOE-led minority government ran its term near the full four years before losing to Aznar's PP — the last prolonged legislature before Spain's modern pattern of more frequent dissolutions.
Spain's 17 autonomous communities run on staggered electoral calendars, and regional votes — including Castilla y León, Andalusia and Galicia — will set the national political weather ahead of the federal election. The Catalan question remains live after Salvador Illa's PSC-led Generalitat government took office in August 2024, ending the independence-movement's decade-long hold on the Catalan presidency. Financial-devolution negotiations with Catalonia, committed to in Sánchez's 2023 investiture pact with ERC, are expected to conclude before dissolution. The election will also shape Spain's posture on EU migration, Green Deal implementation, and defence spending, with Sánchez having pledged to reach the 2 per cent NATO floor by 2029.
Southern European election watchers pair this vote with the Italian General Election 2027 and the French Legislative Election. The post-election government will take part in the EU AI Act Phase 2 enforcement cycle.
When exactly is the Spanish general election? No later than 1 August 2027 unless the legislature is dissolved earlier; the King formally sets the date by decree on the Prime Minister's advice.
Is the election confirmed or expected? Confirmed as a constitutional deadline; the specific polling day is subject to royal decree typically issued 54 to 60 days before voting.
Who is responsible for running the election? The Junta Electoral Central supervises the national ballot; provincial electoral boards and the Interior Ministry handle logistics, including the diplomatic postal ballot for overseas Spaniards.
Where can I read the official announcement? The Boletín Oficial del Estado publishes the dissolution decree and certified results; junta electoral central's web portal carries authoritative campaign-period rulings.
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