How parliamentary seats are allocated after the vote

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The Ministry of Interior has outlined the seat allocation system used in the 2026 parliamentary elections in Cyprus, detailing how parliamentary seats are distributed through three separate stages.

After votes are counted in each electoral district, authorities calculate the total valid votes and divide them by the number of parliamentary seats assigned to that district.

The resulting figure is known as the electoral quota.

White ballots are considered invalid, although they are counted separately for statistical purposes.

First allocation of seats

Under the first stage of the seat allocation process, each party’s votes in a district are divided by the electoral quota.

The whole number resulting from that calculation determines how many seats the party secures during the first allocation.

For example, if the Nicosia district records 120,000 valid votes and has 19 parliamentary seats, the electoral quota would be 6,315 votes.

If a party receives 35,000 votes, it would secure five seats in the first allocation, while the remaining unused votes are carried forward for the second allocation stage.

Parties receiving fewer votes than the electoral quota do not gain a seat in the first round.

Independent candidates must secure votes equal to or above the electoral quota to be elected directly.

Second allocation process

In the second stage of the seat allocation procedure, the entire Republic is treated as a single electoral district.

Unused votes from all districts are combined alongside unallocated seats from the first stage.

Only party lists can participate in the second allocation.

To qualify, parties must secure at least 3.6% of valid votes nationwide.

Coalitions of two parties require 10%, while coalitions of more than two parties must obtain 20%.

The combined unused votes are divided by the number of remaining seats to create the second allocation quota.

Seats are then distributed according to each party’s remaining vote balance.

How districts receive remaining seats

The Ministry explained that assigning remaining seats to districts is more complex.

Parties are ranked according to their nationwide unused vote totals.

The first available seat goes to the district where the party has its highest remaining vote balance, provided a vacant seat exists there, and the party has an eligible candidate.

The process continues sequentially until all seats from the second allocation are distributed.

Third allocation stage

If seats remain unallocated after the second stage, a third seat allocation round is held.

At this stage, independent parties must secure at least 7.2% of valid votes nationwide to participate.

Coalition thresholds remain unchanged at 10% for two-party coalitions and 20% for larger alliances.

Remaining seats are assigned one by one to parties with the highest unused vote balances.

Preference votes and final confirmation

Seats are ultimately awarded to candidates who receive the highest number of preference votes within each party list.

In cases of tied votes, the General Returning Officer determines the outcome by lottery.

Once the process is completed, the General Returning Officer certifies the final results and publishes the names of the newly elected Members of Parliament.

Election results are then stored securely for two months.

Any legal challenge regarding the validity of the election may be submitted within two months from the publication of the official final results in the Official Gazette of the Republic.


Also read: Parliamentary elections: When results and seats are expected
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