The 2026 United States House of Representatives elections are scheduled to be held on Tuesday, November 3, 2026, as part of the 2026 midterm elections during President Donald Trump's second nonconsecutive term. Voters will elect representatives from all 435 congressional districts across each of the fifty U.S. states, and five of the six non-voting delegates from the District of Columbia and the inhabited U.S. territories.
Special elections are also being held on dates throughout 2026. Numerous other federal, state, and local elections, including elections to the Senate, will be held on this date. The winners of this election will serve in the 120th United States Congress, with seats apportioned among the states based on the 2020 United States census and revised district maps as a result of the 2025–2026 United States redistricting.
Retirements
Summary
As of July 2026, 58 representatives and two non-voting delegates (24 Democrats and 36 Republicans) have announced their retirement, 30 of whom (9 Democrats and 21 Republicans) are retiring to run for other offices. This is the second-most retirements of representatives in a single election cycle in US history behind 1992, which saw 65 retirements in total.[1]
Democratic
- California 11: Nancy Pelosi is retiring.[2]
- California 26: Julia Brownley is retiring.[3]
- District of Columbia at-large: Eleanor Holmes Norton is retiring.[4]
- Florida 24: Frederica Wilson is retiring.[5]
- Illinois 2: Robin Kelly is retiring to run for the U.S. Senate.[6]
- Illinois 4: Chuy García is retiring.[7]
- Illinois 7: Danny Davis is retiring.[8]
- Illinois 8: Raja Krishnamoorthi is retiring to run for the U.S. Senate.[9]
- Illinois 9: Jan Schakowsky is retiring.[10]
- Maine 2: Jared Golden is retiring.[11]
- Maryland 5: Steny Hoyer is retiring.[12]
- Massachusetts 6: Seth Moulton is retiring to run for the U.S. Senate.[13]
- Michigan 11: Haley Stevens is retiring to run for the U.S. Senate.[14]
- Minnesota 2: Angie Craig is retiring to run for the U.S. Senate.[15]
- New Hampshire 1: Chris Pappas is retiring to run for the U.S. Senate.[16]
- New Jersey 12: Bonnie Watson Coleman is retiring.[17]
- New York 7: Nydia Velázquez is retiring.[18]
- New York 12: Jerry Nadler is retiring.[19]
- Pennsylvania 3: Dwight Evans is retiring.[20]
- Tennessee 9: Steve Cohen is retiring due to redistricting.[21]
- Texas 30: Jasmine Crockett is retiring to run for the U.S. Senate.[22]
- Texas 33: Marc Veasey is retiring (previously ran for Tarrant County Judge).[23]
- Texas 37: Lloyd Doggett is retiring due to redistricting.[24]
- U.S. Virgin Islands at-large: Stacey Plaskett is retiring to run for governor of the U.S. Virgin Islands.[25]
Republican
- Alabama 1: Barry Moore is retiring to run for the U.S. Senate.[26]
- Arizona 1: David Schweikert is retiring to run for governor of Arizona.[27]
- Arizona 5: Andy Biggs is retiring to run for governor of Arizona.[28]
- California 48: Darrell Issa is retiring.[29]
- Florida 2: Neal Dunn is retiring.[30]
- Florida 11: Daniel Webster is retiring.[31]
- Florida 16: Vern Buchanan is retiring.[32]
- Florida 19: Byron Donalds is retiring to run for governor of Florida.[33]
- Georgia 1: Buddy Carter is retiring to run for the U.S. Senate.[34]
- Georgia 10: Mike Collins is retiring to run for the U.S. Senate.[35]
- Georgia 11: Barry Loudermilk is retiring.[36]
- Iowa 2: Ashley Hinson is retiring to run for the U.S. Senate.[37]
- Iowa 4: Randy Feenstra is retiring to run for governor of Iowa.[38]
- Kentucky 6: Andy Barr is retiring to run for the U.S. Senate.[39]
- Louisiana 5: Julia Letlow is retiring to run for the U.S. Senate.[40]
- Michigan 10: John James is retiring to run for governor of Michigan.[41]
- Missouri 6: Sam Graves is retiring.[42]
- Montana 1: Ryan Zinke is retiring.[43]
- Nebraska 2: Don Bacon is retiring.[44]
- Nevada 2: Mark Amodei is retiring.[45]
- New York 21: Elise Stefanik is retiring (previously ran for governor of New York).[46]
- Oklahoma 1: Kevin Hern is retiring to run for the U.S. Senate.[47]
- South Carolina 1: Nancy Mace is retiring to run for governor of South Carolina.[48]
- South Carolina 5: Ralph Norman is retiring to run for governor of South Carolina.[49]
- South Dakota at-large: Dusty Johnson is retiring to run for governor of South Dakota.[50]
- Tennessee 6: John Rose is retiring to run for governor of Tennessee.[51]
- Texas 8: Morgan Luttrell is retiring.[52]
- Texas 10: Michael McCaul is retiring.[53]
- Texas 19: Jodey Arrington is retiring.[54]
- Texas 21: Chip Roy is retiring to run for attorney general of Texas.[55]
- Texas 22: Troy Nehls is retiring.[56]
- Texas 38: Wesley Hunt is retiring to run for the U.S. Senate.[57]
- Utah 4: Burgess Owens is retiring.[58]
- Washington 4: Dan Newhouse is retiring.[59]
- Wisconsin 7: Tom Tiffany is retiring to run for governor of Wisconsin.[60]
- Wyoming at-large: Harriet Hageman is retiring to run for the U.S. Senate.[61]
Incumbents defeated
In primary elections
Democrats
Five Democrats lost renomination.
- Colorado 1: Diana DeGette lost renomination to Melat Kiros.[62]
- New York 10: Dan Goldman lost renomination to Brad Lander.[63]
- New York 13: Adriano Espaillat lost renomination to Darializa Avila Chevalier.[64]
- Texas 18: Al Green lost a redistricting race to fellow incumbent Christian Menefee.[65]
- Texas 33: Julie Johnson lost renomination to Colin Allred.[66]
Republicans
Two Republicans lost renomination.
- Kentucky 4: Thomas Massie lost renomination to Ed Gallrein.[67]
- Texas 2: Dan Crenshaw lost renomination to Steve Toth.[68]
Opinion polling
| Source of poll aggregation |
Dates administered |
Dates updated |
Republicans | Democrats | Other/ Undecided[e] |
Margin |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Decision Desk HQ[69] | January 9, 2025 – July 2, 2026 | July 2, 2026 | 39.7% | 45.0% | 15.3% | Democrats +5.3% |
| FiftyPlusOne[70] | January 9, 2025 – July 2, 2026 | July 2, 2026 | 43.5% | 49.1% | 7.4% | Democrats +5.6% |
| RealClearPolitics[71] | May 29 – June 29, 2026 | July 2, 2026 | 42.9% | 48.5% | 8.6% | Democrats +5.6% |
| Silver Bulletin[72] | January 9, 2025 – July 2, 2026 | July 2, 2026 | 41.7% | 47.9% | 10.4% | Democrats +6.2% |
| VoteHub[73] | January 9, 2025 – July 2, 2026 | July 2, 2026 | 41.1% | 47.1% | 11.8% | Democrats +6.0% |
| Race to the WH[74] | January 9, 2025 – July 2, 2026 | July 2, 2026 | 41.6% | 47.7% | 10.7% | Democrats +6.1% |
| Average | July 2, 2026 | 41.8% | 47.6% | 10.6% | Democrats +5.8% | |
Crossover seats
This is a list of congressional seats that voted for one party in the 2024 presidential election and another in the 2024 House elections.[75]
Democratic
There were originally 13 districts which Donald Trump won in 2024 that are represented by Democrats. This table only includes the 11 remaining after mid-decade redistricting. Four of these districts were already won by Trump but were made more Republican-leaning through redistricting.[76]
| District | Incumbent | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | Member | Party | First elected |
2025 PVI | Trump margin of victory in 2024 |
Incumbent margin of victory in 2024 |
| Maine 2 | Jared Golden (retiring) |
Democratic | 2018 | R+4 | R+9.0 | D+0.7 |
| Michigan 8 | Kristen McDonald Rivet | Democratic | 2024 | R+1 | R+2.0 | D+6.6 |
| Nevada 3 | Susie Lee | Democratic | 2018 | D+1 | R+0.7 | D+2.7 |
| New Jersey 9 | Nellie Pou | Democratic | 2024 | D+2 | R+1.1 | D+4.9 |
| New Mexico 2 | Gabe Vasquez | Democratic | 2022 | EVEN | R+1.9 | D+4.2 |
| New York 3 | Tom Suozzi | Democratic | 2016 2022 (retired) 2024 (special) |
EVEN | R+4.3 | D+3.6 |
| North Carolina 1 | Don Davis[f] | Democratic | 2022 | R+5[g] | R+11.6 | D+1.7[f] |
| Ohio 9 | Marcy Kaptur[h] | Democratic | 1982 | R+5[g] | R+10.5 | D+0.6[h] |
| Texas 28 | Henry Cuellar[i] | Democratic | 2004 | R+3[g] | R+10.4 | D+5.6[i] |
| Texas 34 | Vicente Gonzalez[j] | Democratic | 2016 | R+3[g] | R+10.1 | D+2.6[j] |
| Washington 3 | Marie Gluesenkamp Perez | Democratic | 2022 | R+2 | R+3.3 | D+3.9 |
Mid-decade redistricting in Republican-controlled states created 12 more districts which Trump would have won had they existed in 2024.[76]
| District | Incumbent | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | Member | Party | First elected |
Original 2025 PVI |
Estimated new PVI |
Trump margin of victory in 2024 |
Incumbent margin of victory in 2024 |
| Alabama 2 | Shomari Figures | Democratic | 2024 | D+5 | R+7 | R+14.3 | D+9.2 |
| Florida 9 | Darren Soto | Democratic | 2016 | D+4 | R+8 | R+17.7 | D+12.6 |
| Florida 14 | Kathy Castor | Democratic | 2006 | D+5 | R+4 | R+10.5 | D+15.4 |
| Florida 22 | Lois Frankel (running in the 23rd district) |
Democratic | 2012 | D+4 | R+4 | R+10.5 | D+9.9 |
| Florida 25 | Debbie Wasserman Schultz (running in the 20th district) |
Democratic | 2004 | D+5 | R+3 | R+9.2 | D+9.0 |
| Louisiana 6 | Cleo Fields | Democratic | 1992 1996 (retired) 2024 |
D+8 | R+16 | R+31.8 | D+13.0 |
| Missouri 5 | Emanuel Cleaver | Democratic | 2004 | D+12 | R+9 | R+18.3 | D+23.8 |
| Ohio 1 | Greg Landsman | Democratic | 2022 | D+3 | R+1 | R+1.9 | D+9.2 |
| Tennessee 9 | Steve Cohen (retiring) |
Democratic | 2006 | D+23 | R+9 | R+21.1 | D+45.6 |
| Texas 9 | Al Green (ran in the 18th district and lost renomination) |
Democratic | 2004 | D+24 | R+9 | R+19.9 | D+100.0 |
| Texas 32 | Julie Johnson (ran in the 33rd district and lost renomination) |
Democratic | 2024 | D+13 | R+8 | R+17.7 | D+23.5 |
| Texas 35 | Greg Casar (running in the 37th district) |
Democratic | 2022 | D+19 | R+4 | R+10.4 | D+34.7 |
Republican
There were originally three districts which Kamala Harris won in 2024 that are represented by Republicans.[76]
| District | Incumbent | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | Member | Party | First elected |
2025 PVI[77] |
Harris margin of victory in 2024 |
Incumbent margin of victory in 2024 |
| Nebraska 2 | Don Bacon (retiring) |
Republican | 2016 | D+3 | D+4.6 | R+1.9 |
| New York 17 | Mike Lawler | Republican | 2022 | D+1 | D+0.6 | R+6.3 |
| Pennsylvania 1 | Brian Fitzpatrick | Republican | 2016 | D+1 | D+0.3 | R+12.8 |
Mid-decade redistricting, primarily due to California Proposition 50, created five more districts which Harris would have won had they existed in 2024.[76]
| District | Incumbent | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | Member | Party | First elected |
Original 2025 PVI |
Estimated new PVI |
Harris margin of victory in 2024 |
Incumbent margin of victory in 2024 |
| California 1 | James Gallagher | Republican | 2026 (special) | R+12 | D+7 | D+12.2 | R+30.7 |
| California 3 | Kevin Kiley (running in the 6th district) |
Independent | 2022[k] | R+2 | D+6 | D+10.2 | R+10.9 |
| California 41 | Ken Calvert (running in the 40th district) |
Republican | 1992 | R+2 | D+9 | D+14.1 | R+3.4 |
| California 48 | Darrell Issa (retiring) |
Republican | 2000 2018 (retired) 2020 |
R+7 | D+2 | D+3.4 | R+18.6 |
| Utah 1 | Blake Moore (running in the 2nd district) |
Republican | 2020 | R+10 | D+12 | D+23.7 | R+31.0 |
Mid-decade redistricting changes
Finalized new map; Democratic gain expected Voluntary redistricting rejected |
Finalized new map; Republican gain expected Redistricting challenge rejected New map finalized; later struck down in court |
Voluntary redistricting enacted Voluntary redistricting rejected |
Court-ordered/mandatory redistricting Redistricting challenge rejected
New map finalized; later struck down in court |
In the United States, all states with multiple congressional districts are required to revise their district maps following each decennial census to account for population changes. In 2026, most states will use the same districts created in the redistricting cycle following the 2020 census, which were first used in the 2022 elections. Maps have changed or would change in several states, often due to legal challenges made based on partisan or racial gerrymandering.
As of July 2026, several states have seen challenges to their congressional district maps that were put in place during the redistricting cycle brought upon by the results of the 2020 census. In Arkansas, a federal court dismissed a case against their congressional map that argued the map did not comply with the Voting Rights Act.[78] The Florida Supreme Court dismissed a challenge regarding the Florida's congressional map, finding a new plurality-Black congressional district would be against federal law.[79]
In Georgia, litigation is still ongoing regarding appeals to the newly drawn congressional map that was used in the 2024 elections. However, it was not resolved before the filing deadline for the 2026 Congressional elections.[80] In Louisiana, litigation remained unresolved.[81] In South Carolina, the South Carolina Supreme Court ruled that partisan gerrymandering is not in violation of the state's constitution, keeping the maps in place.[82] In Texas, a trial was held in federal court in El Paso to determine whether its congressional map discriminated against Black and Latino voters in violation of the VRA,[83] but the case was paused pending expected new maps in the state.[84]
In Utah, a partisan gerrymander case resulted in a map which creates a safe Democratic district comprising the majority of Salt Lake County following a district court ruling.[85] In Wisconsin, a challenge to the state's current congressional map, arguing it was an unlawful partisan gerrymander, was dismissed by the Wisconsin Supreme Court.[86] A new map was required in Ohio due to the Congressional Redistricting Procedures Amendment to Section XI of the state's constitution, resulting in two districts becoming more Republican leaning.[87]
Out-of-cycle partisan redistricting efforts
Governor Greg Abbott called a special session of the Texas Legislature to redraw its congressional districts, leading to the Texas Legislature passing new maps resulting in 5 new Republican-leaning districts.[88] On November 18, a panel of the District Court for the Western District of Texas issued a preliminary injunction blocking the new map, putting the former map back in place,[89] but the Supreme Court later placed an administrative stay on the ruling, allowing the new maps to stand.[90] Governor Ron DeSantis has expressed interest in redrawing Florida's congressional map, and the Florida House has created a special redistricting committee.[91] Governor Mike Kehoe of Missouri called a special session on August 29, 2025, which redrew the solid Democratic 5th district to a solid Republican district, allowing the GOP to pick up a seat.[92] Republican state legislative leaders in North Carolina announced a redraw of the state's congressional districts to make the 1st congressional district more Republican leaning.[93]
Talks and efforts about redistricting occurred in Nebraska, New Hampshire, Indiana, and Kansas, but either failed or did not gain traction.[94][95][96][97]
Democrats have threatened to retaliate against attempts to mid-decade redistrict for partisan gain and have stated the possibility of redrawing the congressional maps in blue states. In California, the state legislature drafted a map eliminating five Republican districts to combat Texas's plan, which was approved by voters. In Virginia, members of the General Assembly announced a plan on October 23, 2025 to begin the process to redraw the state's congressional districts before the 2026 elections.[98]
Democratic governor Wes Moore of Maryland unsuccessfully pursued redistricting in his state.[99] Redistricting has been considered in Colorado, New Jersey, and New York. Legal and political challenges make redistricting before 2026 highly unlikely.[100][101][102]
| State (linked to summaries below) |
Status | Notes | Change in partisanship[l] | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| D | C | R | |||
| Alabama | New districts enacted | In April 2026, the Supreme Court ruled on Louisiana v. Callais that stricter scrutiny had to be applied with regard to section 2 of the Voting Rights Act. Governor Kay Ivey was initially reluctant to call a special session after Allen v. Milligan, but was lobbied to do so by the state attorney general and secretary of state, both of whom also filed emergency injunctions to lift the requirements levied on them by the federal courts.[103]
The Supreme Court voted 6-3 to lift the stay, paving the way for state legislators to redraw.[104] On May 26, 2026, an Alabama court blocked the new map, arguing that the Louisiana v. Callais decision does not change the fact that the map intentionally discriminates against African-American voters in violation of the Constitution.[105] On June 2, 2026, the Supreme Court granted stay on the block, allowing the new map to be implemented.[106] |
|||
| Arkansas | Districts left in place | In Christian Ministerial Alliance v. Thurston, plaintiffs alleged racial gerrymandering diluting the voting power of black voters by splitting Little Rock into three districts. The case was heard in a federal district court. The panel ruled that it did not constitute a racial gerrymander and dismissed the case.[107] | |||
| California | New districts enacted | In response to Texas's redistricting, a new map was approved by voters in a special statewide election temporarily permitting an off-cycle redistricting. The state's constitution prohibits the state legislature from drawing congressional districts, so the map was subject to a 2025 referendum. It was passed by two-thirds of the legislature and over a 64% majority approval by the state's voters for the new districts to take place.[108] | |||
| Florida | New districts enacted | In September 2023, a state circuit judge ruled that the map passed by the state legislature discriminated against Black voters, by redrawing the formerly plurality-Black 5th district to no longer have a Black plurality. Florida appealed this ruling and the map was reinstated by an appeals court.[109] |
|||
| Indiana | Districts left in place | On November 18, 2025, the Indiana State Senate voted 29–19 against meeting in December with their House colleagues to discuss redistricting.[115] Despite this, Governor Mike Braun stated that he would "explore all options" to enable redistricting, in response to pressure from President Trump. On November 25, the state senate announced it would vote on a potential proposal approved by the state house.[116] After passing in the state house, the state senate rejected the proposal 31–19.[96] | |||
| Kansas | Districts left in place | Republican Kansas state legislators announced a plan to call a special session to redraw the 3rd congressional district, but lacked the necessary support in the House.[97] | |||
| Louisiana | New districts enacted | In April 2026, the Supreme Court ruled on Louisiana v. Callais that stricter scrutiny had to be applied with regard to section 2 of the Voting Rights Act. The state following the ruling requested the Court strike down the lower court ruling to have two black majority districts, which it proceeded to do. The state government has pushed to move back the primary dates in light of the court requiring redistricting.[117] On May 29, 2026, Governor Jeff Landry signed a new map into law, removing one of the two plurality-Black, Democratic-controlled districts.[118] | |||
| Maryland | Districts left in place | In November 2025, Governor Wes Moore announced the creation of the Redistricting Advisory Commission which began the process of redistricting the congressional lines to make the 1st district more Democratic. The plan has received support from State House Speaker Joseline Peña-Melnyk, but opposition from State Senate President Bill Ferguson. In January 2026, the Governor's Redistricting Advisory Commission voted to recommend a congressional map that would redraw the 1st congressional district to make it more favorable for Democrats.[119] The map passed the state house on February 2.[99] On February 20, Ferguson told reporters that the window to redraw Maryland's congressional maps had closed, killing the bill.[120] | |||
| Missouri | New districts enacted | The Missouri Legislature passed maps to create a new safely Republican seat in the 5th district. Governor Mike Kehoe signed the map into law in September 2025.[92] The maps may be blocked by a referendum if enough signatures are gathered.[121] In March 2026, opponents of the map said they had enough signatures for the referendum to qualify.[122] | |||
| New York | Districts left in place | Voters in NY-11 filed a lawsuit in October 2025, claiming the Staten Island-based district illegally dilutes the power of Black and Hispanic voters in the district.[123] Acting New York Supreme Court Justice Jeffrey Pearlman ordered the independent redistricting commission to make new maps to reconfigure NY-11 by February 6, 2026.[124] The deadline was suspended after Rep. Malliotakis, who represents the district, appealed the ruling.[125] On March 2, the U.S. Supreme Court temporarily blocked Pearlman's order, allowing the state's current map to be used for the 2026 election.[126] | |||
| North Carolina | New districts enacted | The state Senate passed the bill for a new map making the competitive 1st congressional district more Republican-leaning on October 21, 2025. The state House passed it the next day. The governor, Josh Stein, does not have the authority to veto the map.[93] It has received pushback from the NAACP and Common Cause, both of which accused the new map of diluting the minority vote. A hearing was held on November 19 to consider blocking the map.[127] | |||
| Ohio | New districts enacted | Ohio voters amended the constitution in 2018, creating a process that requires both Republicans and Democrats in the state legislature to vote on the new congressional map. In the 2020 redistricting cycle, Democrats did not back a Republican proposal, necessitating a new map to be drawn in 2025. In October 2025, the Ohio Redistricting Commission passed a compromise map in a unanimous vote. The new map makes the 1st district more competitive, the 9th district lean more Republican, and the 13th district lean more Democratic.[87] | |||
| South Carolina | Districts left in place | In June 2025, the South Carolina Supreme Court heard arguments in League of Women Voters v. Alexander, as to whether the congressional maps are an unlawful partisan gerrymander in violation of the state's constitution.[128] In September 2025, the court ruled that partisan gerrymandering is not in violation of the state's constitution, repeatedly referencing the 2019 SCOTUS case Rucho v. Common Cause, leaving the current map in place.[82]Following the U.S. Supreme Court's decision in Louisiana v. Callais, Governor Henry McMaster called a special legislative session in May 2026 to consider redistricting and the state house approved a new map that would redraw the state's sole majority-minority district. However, the state senate ultimately voted against advancing the map after it became clear that passage would occur after the start of early voting in the state's primary election.[129] | |||
| Tennessee | New districts enacted | In April 2026, the Supreme Court ruled on Louisiana v. Callais that stricter scrutiny had to be applied with regard to section 2 of the Voting Rights Act. After facing calls to redistrict from U.S. Senator Marsha Blackburn and U.S. President Donald Trump, Governor Bill Lee called a special session to redraw the sole majority-minority district in Tennessee.[130] | |||
| Texas | New districts enacted | In League of United Latin American Citizens v. Abbott, held from May to June 2025 in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Texas, plaintiffs argued that the congressional districts passed by the state legislature discriminated against Black and Latino voters in violation of the Voting Rights Act.[131]In early 2025, the Trump Administration urged Texas officials to redraw congressional districts. This was followed by a meeting of the Texas Republican congressional delegation to discuss mid-decade redistricting to secure extra Republican seats.[132] On July 9, Governor Greg Abbott called a special session of the legislature to be held later that month with the goal of creating 5 new Republican seats. After Texas House Democrats staged a weeks-long walkout, the legislature passed the new maps on August 23, and Abbott signed them into law on August 29.[88] The previous case was paused, pending new maps.[84] After passage, on August 27, the court scheduled a preliminary injunction hearing to begin on October 1 to October 10.[133] On November 18, the panel issued a preliminary injunction blocking the new map, putting the former map back in place. The case on the 2021 maps remains open, pending action from the U.S. Supreme Court in Louisiana v. Callais.[89] On November 21, the U.S. Supreme Court issued an administrative stay on the lower court ruling, temporarily leaving the new map in place.[90] On December 4, the Supreme Court ruled 6–3 in allowing the map to stand for the 2026 elections.[134] | |||
| Utah | New districts enacted | In July 2023, in League of Women Voters v. Utah State Legislature, the Utah Supreme Court heard arguments alleging that the Utah Legislature violated a citizen-passed anti-gerrymandering proposition by dividing Salt Lake County voters into all four of Utah's districts. The case was sent back to a state district court, which held a hearing in January 2025. A ruling for the League of Women Voters was issued on August 25. New maps were expected to be drawn up by the Legislature by September 24 and finalized by November.[135] On October 6, the Utah Legislature passed a new map, which changed 2 Republican districts to be more competitive.[136] On November 10, Utah Third District Judge Dianna Gibson ruled that the new map also violated Proposition 4, opting to approve a plaintiff-submitted alternative, Map 1, which creates a safe Democratic district comprising only Salt Lake County.[85] | |||
| Virginia | Districts left in place | Democratic state lawmakers announced a plan to alter the state constitution to draw a new congressional map before the 2026 elections making 3-4 more Democratic seats.[98]
On January 27, 2026, Circuit Court Judge Jack Hurley Jr. ruled that a proposed constitutional amendment letting Democrats redraw the state's congressional maps was illegal, setting back the party's efforts to pick up seats for the House of Representatives.[137] On January 28, the Democratic Party of Virginia appealed the ruling.[138] On February 10, both chambers of the Virginia General Assembly passed a map that would net the Democratic Party 4 congressional seats.[139] On February 13, the Virginia Supreme Court paved the way for Democrats to finalize the redistricting via an April referendum, which voters ultimately approved.[140] The next day, a judge from the Tazewell Circuit Court ruled the referendum to be unconstitutional. State Attorney General Jay Jones appealed the decision,[141] and the Virginia Supreme Court heard oral arguments on April 27.[142] On April 28, it rejected the appeal, effectively blocking the certification.[143] On May 8, 2026, the Virginia Supreme Court tossed out the referendum.[144]
Following the ruling, House Speaker Don Scott and Attorney General Jay Jones filed an emergency appeal to the US Supreme Court and filed a motion requesting the state Supreme Court to pause its ruling from taking effect while the appeal plays out.[145] On May 15, the Supreme Court denied the appeal.[146] |
|||
| Wisconsin | Districts left in place | In July 2025, a lawsuit was filed by two liberal law firms in a Wisconsin district court, asking to consider the constitutionality of Wisconsin's congressional maps.[147] In September 2025, the Wisconsin Supreme court addressed this lawsuit and asked each party to provide briefs on whether this court case should proceed.[148] On March 31, 2026, a judicial panel dismissed the challenge.[149] | |||
| Net change (as of July 6, 2026) | |||||
Newly created seats
The following districts had no incumbent representative as a result of redistricting.
Seats with multiple incumbents running
The following districts will have multiple incumbent representatives running, a product of multiple districts merging in redistricting.
- California 40: Ken Calvert (R) and Young Kim (R)
- Texas 18: Christian Menefee (D) defeated Al Green (D)
Election ratings
Special elections
There are eight special elections scheduled in 2026 to the 119th United States Congress, listed here by date and district.

| District | Incumbent | This race | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Member | Party | First elected | Results | Candidates | |
| Texas 18 | Sylvester Turner | Democratic | 2024 | Incumbent died March 5, 2025.[150] New member elected January 31, 2026, after no candidate received a majority vote in the November 4, 2025, jungle primary. Democratic hold. |
|
| Georgia 14 | Marjorie Taylor Greene | Republican | 2020 | Incumbent resigned January 5, 2026.[152] New member elected April 7, 2026, after no candidate received a majority vote in the March 10, 2026, jungle primary. Republican hold. |
|
| New Jersey 11 | Mikie Sherrill | Democratic | 2018 | Incumbent resigned November 20, 2025 to become governor of New Jersey.[154] New member elected April 16, 2026. Democratic hold. |
|
| California 1 | Doug LaMalfa | Republican | 2012 | Incumbent died January 6, 2026.[156] New member elected June 2, 2026. Republican hold. |
|
| Georgia 13 | David Scott | Democratic | 2002 | Incumbent died April 22, 2026.[158] New member to be elected July 28, 2026. |
|
| California 14 | Eric Swalwell | Democratic | 2012 | Incumbent resigned April 14, 2026, following sexual assault allegations.[160] New member to be elected August 18, 2026, after no candidate received a majority vote in the June 16, 2026, jungle primary. Democratic hold. |
|
| Texas 23 | Tony Gonzales | Republican | 2020 | Incumbent resigned April 14, 2026, after admitting to an affair.[162] New member to be elected TBD. |
|
| Florida 20 | Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick | Democratic | 2022 (special) | Incumbent resigned April 21, 2026, following money laundering allegations.[164] New member to be elected TBD. |
TBD |
Alabama
| District | Incumbent | Candidates[165][166][167] | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | 2025 PVI[77] |
Member | Party | First elected |
Status | |
| Alabama 1 | R+17[g] | None (new seat) | New representative to be elected |
| ||
| Alabama 2 | R+7[g] | Shomari Figures | Democratic | 2024 | Incumbent running |
|
| Barry Moore Redistricted from the 1st district |
Republican | 2020 | Incumbent retiring to run for U.S. Senate[26] | |||
| Alabama 3 | R+23[g] | Mike Rogers | Republican | 2002 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Alabama 4 | R+33[g] | Robert Aderholt | Republican | 1996 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Alabama 5 | R+15[g] | Dale Strong | Republican | 2022 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Alabama 6 | R+17[g] | Gary Palmer | Republican | 2014 | Incumbent running |
|
| Alabama 7 | D+10[g] | Terri Sewell | Democratic | 2010 | Incumbent running |
|
Alaska
| District | Incumbent | Candidates[168] | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | 2025 PVI[77] |
Member | Party | First elected |
Status | |
| Alaska at-large | R+6 | Nick Begich III | Republican | 2024 | Incumbent running |
|
Arizona
| District | Incumbent | Candidates[169] | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | 2025 PVI[77] |
Member | Party | First elected |
Status | |
| Arizona 1 | R+1 | David Schweikert | Republican | 2010 | Incumbent retiring to run for governor[27] |
|
| Arizona 2 | R+7 | Eli Crane | Republican | 2022 | Incumbent running |
|
| Arizona 3 | D+22 | Yassamin Ansari | Democratic | 2024 | Incumbent running |
|
| Arizona 4 | D+4 | Greg Stanton | Democratic | 2018 | Incumbent running |
|
| Arizona 5 | R+10 | Andy Biggs | Republican | 2016 | Incumbent retiring to run for governor[28] |
|
| Arizona 6 | EVEN | Juan Ciscomani | Republican | 2022 | Incumbent running |
|
| Arizona 7 | D+13 | Adelita Grijalva | Democratic | 2025 (special) | Incumbent running |
|
| Arizona 8 | R+8 | Abraham Hamadeh | Republican | 2024 | Incumbent running |
|
| Arizona 9 | R+15 | Paul Gosar | Republican | 2010 | Incumbent running |
|
Arkansas
| District | Incumbent | Candidates[170] | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | 2025 PVI[77] |
Member | Party | First elected |
Status | |
| Arkansas 1 | R+23 | Rick Crawford | Republican | 2010 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Arkansas 2 | R+8 | French Hill | Republican | 2014 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Arkansas 3 | R+13 | Steve Womack | Republican | 2010 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Arkansas 4 | R+20 | Bruce Westerman | Republican | 2014 | Incumbent renominated |
|
California
| District | Incumbent | Candidates[171] | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | 2025 PVI[77] |
Member | Party | First elected |
Status | |
| California 1 | D+7[g] | James Gallagher | Republican | 2026 (special) | Incumbent advanced to general |
|
| California 2 | D+13[g] | Jared Huffman | Democratic | 2012 | Incumbent advanced to general |
|
| California 3 | D+6[g] | Ami Bera Redistricted from the 6th district |
Democratic | 2012 | Incumbent advanced to general |
|
| California 4 | D+8[g] | Mike Thompson | Democratic | 1998 | Incumbent advanced to general Democratic hold. |
|
| California 5 | R+10[g] | Tom McClintock | Republican | 2008 | Incumbent advanced to general |
|
| California 6 | D+5[g] | Kevin Kiley Redistricted from the 3rd district |
Independent | 2022[k] | Incumbent advanced to general |
|
| California 7 | D+7[g] | Doris Matsui | Democratic | 2005 (special) | Incumbent advanced to general Democratic hold. |
|
| California 8 | D+19[g] | John Garamendi | Democratic | 2009 (special) | Incumbent advanced to general |
|
| California 9 | D+8[g] | Josh Harder | Democratic | 2018 | Incumbent advanced to general |
|
| California 10 | D+18[g] | Mark DeSaulnier | Democratic | 2014 | Incumbent advanced to general |
|
| California 11 | D+36[g] | Nancy Pelosi | Democratic | 1987 (special) | Incumbent retiring[2] Democratic hold. |
|
| California 12 | D+39[g] | Lateefah Simon | Democratic | 2024 | Incumbent advanced to general Democratic hold. |
|
| California 13 | D+2[g] | Adam Gray | Democratic | 2024 | Incumbent advanced to general |
|
| California 14 | D+19[g] | TBD[m] | 2026 (special) | Incumbent to be determined in 2026 Democratic hold. |
| |
| California 15 | D+26[g] | Kevin Mullin | Democratic | 2022 | Incumbent advanced to general |
|
| California 16 | D+25[g] | Sam Liccardo | Democratic | 2024 | Incumbent advanced to general |
|
| California 17 | D+21[g] | Ro Khanna | Democratic | 2016 | Incumbent advanced to general |
|
| California 18 | D+16[g] | Zoe Lofgren | Democratic | 1994 | Incumbent advanced to general |
|
| California 19 | D+18[g] | Jimmy Panetta | Democratic | 2016 | Incumbent advanced to general |
|
| California 20 | R+16[g] | Vince Fong | Republican | 2024 (special) | Incumbent advanced to general |
|
| California 21 | D+5[g] | Jim Costa | Democratic | 2004 | Incumbent advanced to general |
|
| California 22 | D+1[g] | David Valadao | Republican | 2012 2018 (lost) 2020 |
Incumbent advanced to general |
|
| California 23 | R+9[g] | Jay Obernolte | Republican | 2020 | Incumbent advanced to general |
|
| California 24 | D+13[g] | Salud Carbajal | Democratic | 2016 | Incumbent advanced to general |
|
| California 25 | D+4[g] | Raul Ruiz | Democratic | 2012 | Incumbent advanced to general |
|
| California 26 | D+9[g] | Julia Brownley | Democratic | 2012 | Incumbent retiring[3] |
|
| California 27 | D+6[g] | George T. Whitesides | Democratic | 2024 | Incumbent advanced to general |
|
| California 28 | D+14[g] | Judy Chu | Democratic | 2009 (special) | Incumbent advanced to general |
|
| California 29 | D+19[g] | Luz Rivas | Democratic | 2024 | Incumbent advanced to general Democratic hold. |
|
| California 30 | D+21[g] | Laura Friedman | Democratic | 2024 | Incumbent advanced to general |
|
| California 31 | D+8[g] | Gil Cisneros | Democratic | 2018 2020 (lost) 2024 |
Incumbent advanced to general |
|
| California 32 | D+14[g] | Brad Sherman | Democratic | 1996 | Incumbent advanced to general |
|
| California 33 | D+7[g] | Pete Aguilar | Democratic | 2014 | Incumbent advanced to general |
|
| California 34 | D+28[g] | Jimmy Gomez | Democratic | 2017 (special) | Incumbent advanced to general Democratic hold. |
|
| California 35 | D+6[g] | Norma Torres | Democratic | 2014 | Incumbent advanced to general |
|
| California 36 | D+21[g] | Ted Lieu | Democratic | 2014 | Incumbent advanced to general |
|
| California 37 | D+33[g] | Sydney Kamlager-Dove | Democratic | 2022 | Incumbent advanced to general Democratic hold. |
|
| California 38 | D+8[g] | None (new seat) | New representative to be elected |
| ||
| California 39 | D+7[g] | Mark Takano | Democratic | 2012 | Incumbent advanced to general |
|
| California 40 | R+6[g] | Young Kim | Republican | 2020 | Incumbent advanced to general Republican hold. |
|
| Ken Calvert Redistricted from the 41st district |
Republican | 1992 | Incumbent advanced to general Republican hold. | |||
| California 41 | D+9[g] | Linda Sánchez Redistricted from the 38th district |
Democratic | 2002 | Incumbent advanced to general |
|
| California 42 | D+8[g] | Robert Garcia | Democratic | 2022 | Incumbent advanced to general |
|
| California 43 | D+27[g] | Maxine Waters | Democratic | 1990 | Incumbent advanced to general |
|
| California 44 | D+20[g] | Nanette Barragán | Democratic | 2016 | Incumbent advanced to general |
|
| California 45 | D+3[g] | Derek Tran | Democratic | 2024 | Incumbent advanced to general |
|
| California 46 | D+10[g] | Lou Correa | Democratic | 2016 | Incumbent advanced to general |
|
| California 47 | D+6[g] | Dave Min | Democratic | 2024 | Incumbent advanced to general |
|
| California 48 | D+2[g] | Darrell Issa | Republican | 2000 2018 (retired) 2020 |
Incumbent retiring[29] |
|
| California 49 | D+7[g] | Mike Levin | Democratic | 2018 | Incumbent advanced to general |
|
| California 50 | D+10[g] | Scott Peters | Democratic | 2012 | Incumbent advanced to general |
|
| California 51 | D+10[g] | Sara Jacobs | Democratic | 2020 | Incumbent advanced to general |
|
| California 52 | D+11[g] | Juan Vargas | Democratic | 2012 | Incumbent advanced to general |
|
Colorado
| District | Incumbent | Candidates[172] | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | 2025 PVI[77] |
Member | Party | First elected |
Status | |
| Colorado 1 | D+29 | Diana DeGette | Democratic | 1996 | Incumbent lost renomination |
|
| Colorado 2 | D+20 | Joe Neguse | Democratic | 2018 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Colorado 3 | R+5 | Jeff Hurd | Republican | 2024 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Colorado 4 | R+9 | Lauren Boebert | Republican | 2020 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Colorado 5 | R+5 | Jeff Crank | Republican | 2024 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Colorado 6 | D+11 | Jason Crow | Democratic | 2018 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Colorado 7 | D+8 | Brittany Pettersen | Democratic | 2022 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Colorado 8 | EVEN | Gabe Evans | Republican | 2024 | Incumbent renominated |
|
Connecticut
| District | Incumbent | Candidates[174][175] | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | 2025 PVI[77] |
Member | Party | First elected |
Status | |
| Connecticut 1 | D+12 | John B. Larson | Democratic | 1998 | Incumbent running |
|
| Connecticut 2 | D+4 | Joe Courtney | Democratic | 2006 | Incumbent running |
|
| Connecticut 3 | D+8 | Rosa DeLauro | Democratic | 1990 | Incumbent running |
|
| Connecticut 4 | D+13 | Jim Himes | Democratic | 2008 | Incumbent running |
|
| Connecticut 5 | D+3 | Jahana Hayes | Democratic | 2018 | Incumbent running |
|
Delaware
| District | Incumbent | Candidates[176] | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | 2025 PVI[77] |
Member | Party | First elected |
Status | |
| Delaware at-large | D+8 | Sarah McBride | Democratic | 2024 | Incumbent running |
|
Florida
| District | Incumbent | Candidates[179] | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | 2025 PVI[77] |
Member | Party | First elected |
Status | |
| Florida 1 | R+18 | Jimmy Patronis | Republican | 2025 (special) | Incumbent running |
|
| Florida 2 | R+8 | Neal Dunn | Republican | 2016 | Incumbent retiring[30] |
|
| Florida 3 | R+10 | Kat Cammack | Republican | 2020 | Incumbent running |
|
| Florida 4 | R+5 | Aaron Bean | Republican | 2022 | Incumbent running |
|
| Florida 5 | R+10 | John Rutherford | Republican | 2016 | Incumbent running |
|
| Florida 6 | R+14 | Randy Fine | Republican | 2025 (special) | Incumbent running |
|
| Florida 7 | R+5 | Cory Mills | Republican | 2022 | Incumbent running |
|
| Florida 8 | R+8[g] | Mike Haridopolos | Republican | 2024 | Incumbent running |
|
| Florida 9 | R+8[g] | Darren Soto | Democratic | 2016 | Incumbent running |
|
| Florida 10 | D+13[g] | Maxwell Frost | Democratic | 2022 | Incumbent re-elected |
|
| Florida 11 | R+7[g] | Daniel Webster | Republican | 2010 | Incumbent retiring[31] |
|
| Florida 12 | R+7[g] | Gus Bilirakis | Republican | 2006 | Incumbent running |
|
| Florida 13 | R+6[g] | Anna Paulina Luna | Republican | 2022 | Incumbent running |
|
| Florida 14 | R+4[g] | Kathy Castor | Democratic | 2006 | Incumbent running |
|
| Florida 15 | R+9[g] | Laurel Lee | Republican | 2022 | Incumbent running |
|
| Florida 16 | R+6[g] | Vern Buchanan | Republican | 2006 | Incumbent retiring[32] |
|
| Florida 17 | R+10[g] | Greg Steube | Republican | 2018 | Incumbent running |
|
| Florida 18 | R+8[g] | Scott Franklin | Republican | 2020 | Incumbent running |
|
| Florida 19 | R+14[g] | Byron Donalds | Republican | 2020 | Incumbent retiring to run for governor[33] |
|
| Florida 20 | D+20[g] | Vacant[n] | 2026 (special) | Incumbent to be determined in 2026 |
| |
| Debbie Wasserman Schultz Redistricted from the 25th district |
Democratic | 2004 | Incumbent running | |||
| Florida 21 | R+7[g] | Brian Mast | Republican | 2016 | Incumbent running |
|
| Florida 22 | R+4[g] | None (new seat) | New representative to be elected |
| ||
| Florida 23 | D+9[g] | Lois Frankel Redistricted from the 22nd district |
Democratic | 2012 | Incumbent running |
|
| Florida 24 | D+22[g] | Frederica Wilson | Democratic | 2010 | Incumbent retiring[5] |
|
| Florida 25 | R+3[g] | Jared Moskowitz Redistricted from the 23rd district |
Democratic | 2022 | Incumbent running |
|
| Florida 26 | R+7[g] | Mario Díaz-Balart | Republican | 2002 | Incumbent running |
|
| Florida 27 | R+6[g] | María Elvira Salazar | Republican | 2020 | Incumbent running |
|
| Florida 28 | R+10[g] | Carlos A. Giménez | Republican | 2020 | Incumbent running |
|
Georgia
| District | Incumbent | Candidates[180] | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | 2025 PVI[77] |
Member | Party | First elected |
Status | |
| Georgia 1 | R+8 | Buddy Carter | Republican | 2014 | Incumbent retiring to run for U.S. Senate[34] |
|
| Georgia 2 | D+4 | Sanford Bishop | Democratic | 1992 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Georgia 3 | R+15 | Brian Jack | Republican | 2024 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Georgia 4 | D+27 | Hank Johnson | Democratic | 2006 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Georgia 5 | D+36 | Nikema Williams | Democratic | 2020 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Georgia 6 | D+25 | Lucy McBath | Democratic | 2018 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Georgia 7 | R+11 | Rich McCormick | Republican | 2022 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Georgia 8 | R+15 | Austin Scott | Republican | 2010 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Georgia 9 | R+17 | Andrew Clyde | Republican | 2020 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Georgia 10 | R+11 | Mike Collins | Republican | 2022 | Incumbent retiring to run for U.S. Senate[35] |
|
| Georgia 11 | R+12 | Barry Loudermilk | Republican | 2014 | Incumbent retiring[36] |
|
| Georgia 12 | R+7 | Rick Allen | Republican | 2014 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Georgia 13 | D+21 | TBD[o] | 2026 (special) | Incumbent to be determined in 2026 |
| |
| Georgia 14 | R+19 | Clay Fuller | Republican | 2026 (special) | Incumbent renominated |
|
Hawaii
| District | Incumbent | Candidates[181] | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | 2025 PVI[77] |
Member | Party | First elected |
Status | |
| Hawaii 1 | D+13 | Ed Case | Democratic | 2002 (special) 2006 (retired) 2018 |
Incumbent running |
|
| Hawaii 2 | D+12 | Jill Tokuda | Democratic | 2022 | Incumbent running |
|
Idaho
| District | Incumbent | Candidates[182] | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | 2025 PVI[77] |
Member | Party | First elected |
Status | |
| Idaho 1 | R+22 | Russ Fulcher | Republican | 2018 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Idaho 2 | R+13 | Mike Simpson | Republican | 1998 | Incumbent renominated |
|
Illinois
| District | Incumbent | Candidates[183] | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | 2025 PVI[77] |
Member | Party | First elected |
Status | |
| Illinois 1 | D+18 | Jonathan Jackson | Democratic | 2022 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Illinois 2 | D+18 | Robin Kelly | Democratic | 2013 (special) | Incumbent retiring to run for U.S. Senate[6] |
|
| Illinois 3 | D+17 | Delia Ramirez | Democratic | 2022 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Illinois 4 | D+17 | Chuy García | Democratic | 2018 | Incumbent retiring[7] |
|
| Illinois 5 | D+19 | Mike Quigley | Democratic | 2009 (special) | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Illinois 6 | D+3 | Sean Casten | Democratic | 2018 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Illinois 7 | D+34 | Danny Davis | Democratic | 1996 | Incumbent retiring[8] |
|
| Illinois 8 | D+5 | Raja Krishnamoorthi | Democratic | 2016 | Incumbent retiring to run for U.S. Senate[9] |
|
| Illinois 9 | D+19 | Jan Schakowsky | Democratic | 1998 | Incumbent retiring[10] |
|
| Illinois 10 | D+12 | Brad Schneider | Democratic | 2012 2014 (lost) 2016 |
Incumbent renominated |
|
| Illinois 11 | D+6 | Bill Foster | Democratic | 2008 (special) 2010 (lost) 2012 |
Incumbent renominated |
|
| Illinois 12 | R+22 | Mike Bost | Republican | 2014 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Illinois 13 | D+5 | Nikki Budzinski | Democratic | 2022 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Illinois 14 | D+3 | Lauren Underwood | Democratic | 2018 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Illinois 15 | R+20 | Mary Miller | Republican | 2020 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Illinois 16 | R+11 | Darin LaHood | Republican | 2015 (special) | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Illinois 17 | D+3 | Eric Sorensen | Democratic | 2022 | Incumbent renominated |
|
Indiana
| District | Incumbent | Candidates[185] | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | 2025 PVI[77] |
Member | Party | First elected |
Status | |
| Indiana 1 | D+1 | Frank J. Mrvan | Democratic | 2020 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Indiana 2 | R+13 | Rudy Yakym | Republican | 2022 (special) | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Indiana 3 | R+16 | Marlin Stutzman | Republican | 2010 (special) 2016 (retired) 2024 |
Incumbent renominated |
|
| Indiana 4 | R+15 | Jim Baird | Republican | 2018 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Indiana 5 | R+8 | Victoria Spartz | Republican | 2020 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Indiana 6 | R+16 | Jefferson Shreve | Republican | 2024 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Indiana 7 | D+21 | André Carson | Democratic | 2008 (special) | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Indiana 8 | R+18 | Mark Messmer | Republican | 2024 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Indiana 9 | R+15 | Erin Houchin | Republican | 2022 | Incumbent renominated |
|
Iowa
| District | Incumbent | Candidates[186] | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | 2025 PVI[77] |
Member | Party | First elected |
Status | |
| Iowa 1 | R+4 | Mariannette Miller-Meeks | Republican | 2020 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Iowa 2 | R+4 | Ashley Hinson | Republican | 2020 | Incumbent retiring to run for U.S. Senate[37] |
|
| Iowa 3 | R+2 | Zach Nunn | Republican | 2022 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Iowa 4 | R+15 | Randy Feenstra | Republican | 2020 | Incumbent retiring to run for governor[38] |
|
Kansas
| District | Incumbent | Candidates[187] | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | 2025 PVI[77] |
Member | Party | First elected |
Status | |
| Kansas 1 | R+16 | Tracey Mann | Republican | 2020 | Incumbent running |
|
| Kansas 2 | R+10 | Derek Schmidt | Republican | 2024 | Incumbent running |
|
| Kansas 3 | D+2 | Sharice Davids | Democratic | 2018 | Incumbent running |
|
| Kansas 4 | R+12 | Ron Estes | Republican | 2017 (special) | Incumbent running |
|
Kentucky
| District | Incumbent | Candidates[188] | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | 2025 PVI[77] |
Member | Party | First elected |
Status | |
| Kentucky 1 | R+23 | James Comer | Republican | 2016 (special) | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Kentucky 2 | R+20 | Brett Guthrie | Republican | 2008 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Kentucky 3 | D+10 | Morgan McGarvey | Democratic | 2022 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Kentucky 4 | R+18 | Thomas Massie | Republican | 2012 (special) | Incumbent lost renomination[67] |
|
| Kentucky 5 | R+32 | Hal Rogers | Republican | 1980 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Kentucky 6 | R+7 | Andy Barr | Republican | 2012 | Incumbent retiring to run for U.S. Senate[39] |
|
Louisiana
| District | Incumbent | Candidates[189] | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | 2025 PVI[77] |
Member | Party | First elected |
Status | |
| Louisiana 1 | R+20[g] | Steve Scalise | Republican | 2008 (special) | Incumbent running |
|
| Louisiana 2 | D+25[g] | Troy Carter | Democratic | 2021 (special) | Incumbent running |
|
| Louisiana 3 | R+18[g] | Clay Higgins | Republican | 2016 | Incumbent running |
|
| Louisiana 4 | R+17[g] | Mike Johnson | Republican | 2016 | Incumbent running |
|
| Louisiana 5 | R+18[g] | Julia Letlow | Republican | 2021 (special) | Incumbent retiring to run for U.S. Senate[40] |
|
| Louisiana 6 | R+16[g] | Cleo Fields | Democratic | 1992 1996 (retired) 2024 |
Incumbent running |
|
Maine
| District | Incumbent | Candidates[192] | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | 2025 PVI[77] |
Member | Party | First elected |
Status | |
| Maine 1 | D+11 | Chellie Pingree | Democratic | 2008 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Maine 2 | R+4 | Jared Golden | Democratic | 2018 | Incumbent retiring[11] |
|
Maryland
| District | Incumbent | Candidates[193] | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | 2025 PVI[77] |
Member | Party | First elected |
Status | |
| Maryland 1 | R+8 | Andy Harris | Republican | 2010 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Maryland 2 | D+10 | Johnny Olszewski | Democratic | 2024 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Maryland 3 | D+12 | Sarah Elfreth | Democratic | 2024 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Maryland 4 | D+39 | Glenn Ivey | Democratic | 2022 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Maryland 5 | D+17 | Steny Hoyer | Democratic | 1981 (special) | Incumbent retiring[12] |
|
| Maryland 6 | D+3 | April McClain Delaney | Democratic | 2024 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Maryland 7 | D+31 | Kweisi Mfume | Democratic | 1986 1996 (resigned) 2020 (special) |
Incumbent renominated |
|
| Maryland 8 | D+30 | Jamie Raskin | Democratic | 2016 | Incumbent renominated |
|
Massachusetts
| District | Incumbent | Candidates[194] | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | 2025 PVI[77] |
Member | Party | First elected |
Status | |
| Massachusetts 1 | D+8 | Richard Neal | Democratic | 1988 | Incumbent running |
|
| Massachusetts 2 | D+13 | Jim McGovern | Democratic | 1996 | Incumbent running |
|
| Massachusetts 3 | D+11 | Lori Trahan | Democratic | 2018 | Incumbent running |
|
| Massachusetts 4 | D+11 | Jake Auchincloss | Democratic | 2020 | Incumbent running |
|
| Massachusetts 5 | D+24 | Katherine Clark | Democratic | 2013 (special) | Incumbent running |
|
| Massachusetts 6 | D+11 | Seth Moulton | Democratic | 2014 | Incumbent retiring to run for U.S. Senate[13] |
|
| Massachusetts 7 | D+34 | Ayanna Pressley | Democratic | 2018 | Incumbent running |
|
| Massachusetts 8 | D+15 | Stephen Lynch | Democratic | 2001 (special) | Incumbent running |
|
| Massachusetts 9 | D+6 | Bill Keating | Democratic | 2010 | Incumbent running |
|
Michigan
| District | Incumbent | Candidates[196] | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | 2025 PVI[77] |
Member | Party | First elected |
Status | |
| Michigan 1 | R+11 | Jack Bergman | Republican | 2016 | Incumbent running |
|
| Michigan 2 | R+15 | John Moolenaar | Republican | 2014 | Incumbent running |
|
| Michigan 3 | D+4 | Hillary Scholten | Democratic | 2022 | Incumbent running |
|
| Michigan 4 | R+3 | Bill Huizenga | Republican | 2010 | Incumbent running |
|
| Michigan 5 | R+13 | Tim Walberg | Republican | 2006 2008 (lost) 2010 |
Incumbent running |
|
| Michigan 6 | D+12 | Debbie Dingell | Democratic | 2014 | Incumbent running |
|
| Michigan 7 | EVEN | Tom Barrett | Republican | 2024 | Incumbent running |
|
| Michigan 8 | R+1 | Kristen McDonald Rivet | Democratic | 2024 | Incumbent running |
|
| Michigan 9 | R+16 | Lisa McClain | Republican | 2020 | Incumbent running |
|
| Michigan 10 | R+3 | John James | Republican | 2022 | Incumbent retiring to run for governor[41] |
|
| Michigan 11 | D+9 | Haley Stevens | Democratic | 2018 | Incumbent retiring to run for U.S. Senate[14] |
|
| Michigan 12 | D+21 | Rashida Tlaib | Democratic | 2018 | Incumbent running |
|
| Michigan 13 | D+22 | Shri Thanedar | Democratic | 2022 | Incumbent running |
|
Minnesota
| District | Incumbent | Candidates[200] | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | 2025 PVI[77] |
Member | Party | First elected |
Status | |
| Minnesota 1 | R+6 | Brad Finstad | Republican | 2022 (special) | Incumbent running |
|
| Minnesota 2 | D+3 | Angie Craig | DFL | 2018 | Incumbent retiring to run for U.S. Senate[15] |
|
| Minnesota 3 | D+11 | Kelly Morrison | DFL | 2024 | Incumbent running |
|
| Minnesota 4 | D+18 | Betty McCollum | DFL | 2000 | Incumbent running |
|
| Minnesota 5 | D+32 | Ilhan Omar | DFL | 2018 | Incumbent running |
|
| Minnesota 6 | R+10 | Tom Emmer | Republican | 2014 | Incumbent running |
|
| Minnesota 7 | R+18 | Michelle Fischbach | Republican | 2020 | Incumbent running |
|
| Minnesota 8 | R+7 | Pete Stauber | Republican | 2018 | Incumbent running |
|
Mississippi
| District | Incumbent | Candidates[202] | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | 2025 PVI[77] |
Member | Party | First elected |
Status | |
| Mississippi 1 | R+18 | Trent Kelly | Republican | 2015 (special) | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Mississippi 2 | D+11 | Bennie Thompson | Democratic | 1993 (special) | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Mississippi 3 | R+14 | Michael Guest | Republican | 2018 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Mississippi 4 | R+21 | Mike Ezell | Republican | 2022 | Incumbent renominated |
|
Missouri
| District | Incumbent | Candidates[203] | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | 2025 PVI[77] |
Member | Party | First elected |
Status | |
| Missouri 1 | D+29[g] | Wesley Bell | Democratic | 2024 | Incumbent running |
|
| Missouri 2 | R+6[g] | Ann Wagner | Republican | 2012 | Incumbent running |
|
| Missouri 3 | R+10[g] | Bob Onder | Republican | 2024 | Incumbent running |
|
| Missouri 4 | R+10[g] | Mark Alford | Republican | 2022 | Incumbent running |
|
| Missouri 5 | R+9[g] | Emanuel Cleaver | Democratic | 2004 | Incumbent running |
|
| Missouri 6 | R+13[g] | Sam Graves | Republican | 2000 | Incumbent retiring[42] |
|
| Missouri 7 | R+21[g] | Eric Burlison | Republican | 2022 | Incumbent running |
|
| Missouri 8 | R+27[g] | Jason Smith | Republican | 2013 (special) | Incumbent running |
|
Montana
| District | Incumbent | Candidates[204] | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | 2025 PVI[77] |
Member | Party | First elected |
Status | |
| Montana 1 | R+5 | Ryan Zinke | Republican | 2014 2017 (resigned) 2022 |
Incumbent retiring[43] |
|
| Montana 2 | R+15 | Troy Downing | Republican | 2024 | Incumbent renominated |
|
Nebraska
| District | Incumbent | Candidates[205] | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | 2025 PVI[77] |
Member | Party | First elected |
Status | |
| Nebraska 1 | R+6 | Mike Flood | Republican | 2022 (special) | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Nebraska 2 | D+3 | Don Bacon | Republican | 2016 | Incumbent retiring[44] |
|
| Nebraska 3 | R+27 | Adrian Smith | Republican | 2006 | Incumbent renominated |
|
Nevada
| District | Incumbent | Candidates[209] | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | 2025 PVI[77] |
Member | Party | First elected |
Status | |
| Nevada 1 | D+2 | Dina Titus | Democratic | 2008 2010 (lost) 2012 |
Incumbent renominated |
|
| Nevada 2 | R+7 | Mark Amodei | Republican | 2011 (special) | Incumbent retiring[45] |
|
| Nevada 3 | D+1 | Susie Lee | Democratic | 2018 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Nevada 4 | D+2 | Steven Horsford | Democratic | 2012 2014 (lost) 2018 |
Incumbent renominated |
|
New Hampshire
| District | Incumbent | Candidates[210] | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | 2025 PVI[77] |
Member | Party | First elected |
Status | |
| New Hampshire 1 | D+2 | Chris Pappas | Democratic | 2018 | Incumbent retiring to run for U.S. Senate[16] |
|
| New Hampshire 2 | D+2 | Maggie Goodlander | Democratic | 2024 | Incumbent running |
|
New Jersey
| District | Incumbent | Candidates[211] | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | 2025 PVI[77] |
Member | Party | First elected |
Status | |
| New Jersey 1 | D+10 | Donald Norcross | Democratic | 2014 (special) | Incumbent renominated |
|
| New Jersey 2 | R+5 | Jeff Van Drew | Republican | 2018[p] | Incumbent renominated |
|
| New Jersey 3 | D+5 | Herb Conaway | Democratic | 2024 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| New Jersey 4 | R+14 | Chris Smith | Republican | 1980 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| New Jersey 5 | D+2 | Josh Gottheimer | Democratic | 2016 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| New Jersey 6 | D+5 | Frank Pallone | Democratic | 1988 (special) | Incumbent renominated |
|
| New Jersey 7 | EVEN | Thomas Kean Jr. | Republican | 2022 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| New Jersey 8 | D+15 | Rob Menendez | Democratic | 2022 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| New Jersey 9 | D+2 | Nellie Pou | Democratic | 2024 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| New Jersey 10 | D+27 | LaMonica McIver | Democratic | 2024 (special) | Incumbent renominated |
|
| New Jersey 11 | D+5 | Analilia Mejia | Democratic | 2026 (special) | Incumbent renominated |
|
| New Jersey 12 | D+13 | Bonnie Watson Coleman | Democratic | 2014 | Incumbent retiring[17] |
|
New Mexico
| District | Incumbent | Candidates[215] | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | 2025 PVI[77] |
Member | Party | First elected |
Status | |
| New Mexico 1 | D+7 | Melanie Stansbury | Democratic | 2021 (special) | Incumbent renominated |
|
| New Mexico 2 | EVEN | Gabe Vasquez | Democratic | 2022 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| New Mexico 3 | D+3 | Teresa Leger Fernandez | Democratic | 2020 | Incumbent renominated |
|
New York
| District | Incumbent | Candidates[216][q] | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | 2025 PVI[77] |
Member | Party | First elected |
Status | |
| New York 1 | R+4 | Nick LaLota | Republican | 2022 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| New York 2 | R+6 | Andrew Garbarino | Republican | 2020 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| New York 3 | EVEN | Tom Suozzi | Democratic | 2016 2022 (retired) 2024 (special) |
Incumbent renominated |
|
| New York 4 | D+2 | Laura Gillen | Democratic | 2024 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| New York 5 | D+24 | Gregory Meeks | Democratic | 1998 (special) | Incumbent renominated |
|
| New York 6 | D+6 | Grace Meng | Democratic | 2012 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| New York 7 | D+25 | Nydia Velázquez | Democratic | 1992 | Incumbent retiring[18] |
|
| New York 8 | D+24 | Hakeem Jeffries | Democratic | 2012 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| New York 9 | D+22 | Yvette Clarke | Democratic | 2006 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| New York 10 | D+32 | Dan Goldman | Democratic | 2022 | Incumbent lost renomination |
|
| New York 11 | R+10 | Nicole Malliotakis | Republican | 2020 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| New York 12 | D+33 | Jerry Nadler | Democratic | 1992 (special) | Incumbent retiring[19] |
|
| New York 13 | D+32 | Adriano Espaillat | Democratic | 2016 | Incumbent lost renomination |
|
| New York 14 | D+19 | Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez | Democratic | 2018 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| New York 15 | D+27 | Ritchie Torres | Democratic | 2020 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| New York 16 | D+18 | George Latimer | Democratic | 2024 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| New York 17 | D+1 | Mike Lawler | Republican | 2022 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| New York 18 | D+2 | Pat Ryan | Democratic | 2022 (special) | Incumbent renominated |
|
| New York 19 | D+1 | Josh Riley | Democratic | 2024 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| New York 20 | D+8 | Paul Tonko | Democratic | 2008 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| New York 21 | R+10 | Elise Stefanik | Republican | 2014 | Incumbent retiring[46] |
|
| New York 22 | D+4 | John Mannion | Democratic | 2024 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| New York 23 | R+10 | Nick Langworthy | Republican | 2022 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| New York 24 | R+11 | Claudia Tenney | Republican | 2016 2018 (lost) 2020 |
Incumbent renominated |
|
| New York 25 | D+10 | Joseph Morelle | Democratic | 2018 (special) | Incumbent renominated |
|
| New York 26 | D+11 | Tim Kennedy | Democratic | 2024 (special) | Incumbent renominated |
|
North Carolina
| District | Incumbent | Candidates[222] | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | 2025 PVI[77] |
Member | Party | First elected |
Status | |
| North Carolina 1 | R+5[g] | Don Davis | Democratic | 2022 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| North Carolina 2 | D+17 | Deborah Ross | Democratic | 2020 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| North Carolina 3 | R+6[g] | Greg Murphy | Republican | 2019 (special) | Incumbent renominated |
|
| North Carolina 4 | D+23 | Valerie Foushee | Democratic | 2022 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| North Carolina 5 | R+9 | Virginia Foxx | Republican | 2004 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| North Carolina 6 | R+9 | Addison McDowell | Republican | 2024 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| North Carolina 7 | R+7 | David Rouzer | Republican | 2014 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| North Carolina 8 | R+10 | Mark Harris | Republican | 2024 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| North Carolina 9 | R+8 | Richard Hudson | Republican | 2012 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| North Carolina 10 | R+9 | Pat Harrigan | Republican | 2024 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| North Carolina 11 | R+5 | Chuck Edwards | Republican | 2022 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| North Carolina 12 | D+24 | Alma Adams | Democratic | 2014 (special) | Incumbent renominated |
|
| North Carolina 13 | R+8 | Brad Knott | Republican | 2024 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| North Carolina 14 | R+8 | Tim Moore | Republican | 2024 | Incumbent renominated |
|
North Dakota
| District | Incumbent | Candidates[223] | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | 2025 PVI[77] |
Member | Party | First elected |
Status | |
| North Dakota at-large | R+18 | Julie Fedorchak | Republican | 2024 | Incumbent renominated |
|
Ohio
| District | Incumbent | Candidates[224][r] | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | 2025 PVI[77] |
Member | Party | First elected |
Status | |
| Ohio 1 | R+1[g] | Greg Landsman | Democratic | 2022 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Ohio 2 | R+21[g] | David Taylor | Republican | 2024 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Ohio 3 | D+21 | Joyce Beatty | Democratic | 2012 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Ohio 4 | R+21[g] | Jim Jordan | Republican | 2006 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Ohio 5 | R+12[g] | Bob Latta | Republican | 2007 (special) | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Ohio 6 | R+17[g] | Michael Rulli | Republican | 2024 (special) | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Ohio 7 | R+5[g] | Max Miller | Republican | 2022 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Ohio 8 | R+8[g] | Warren Davidson | Republican | 2016 (special) | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Ohio 9 | R+5[g] | Marcy Kaptur | Democratic | 1982 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Ohio 10 | R+4[g] | Mike Turner | Republican | 2002 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Ohio 11 | D+28 | Shontel Brown | Democratic | 2021 (special) | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Ohio 12 | R+15[g] | Troy Balderson | Republican | 2018 (special) | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Ohio 13 | D+2[g] | Emilia Sykes | Democratic | 2022 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Ohio 14 | R+10[g] | David Joyce | Republican | 2012 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Ohio 15 | R+5[g] | Mike Carey | Republican | 2021 (special) | Incumbent renominated |
|
Oklahoma
| District | Incumbent | Candidates[231] | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | 2025 PVI[77] |
Member | Party | First elected |
Status | |
| Oklahoma 1 | R+11 | Kevin Hern | Republican | 2018 | Incumbent retiring to run for U.S. Senate[47] |
|
| Oklahoma 2 | R+28 | Josh Brecheen | Republican | 2022 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Oklahoma 3 | R+23 | Frank Lucas | Republican | 1994 (special) | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Oklahoma 4 | R+17 | Tom Cole | Republican | 2002 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Oklahoma 5 | R+9 | Stephanie Bice | Republican | 2020 | Incumbent renominated |
|
Oregon
| District | Incumbent | Candidates[232] | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | 2025 PVI[77] |
Member | Party | First elected |
Status | |
| Oregon 1 | D+20 | Suzanne Bonamici | Democratic | 2012 (special) | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Oregon 2 | R+14 | Cliff Bentz | Republican | 2020 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Oregon 3 | D+24 | Maxine Dexter | Democratic | 2024 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Oregon 4 | D+6 | Val Hoyle | Democratic | 2022 | Incumbent renominated | |
| Oregon 5 | D+4 | Janelle Bynum | Democratic | 2024 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Oregon 6 | D+6 | Andrea Salinas | Democratic | 2022 | Incumbent renominated |
|
Pennsylvania
| District | Incumbent | Candidates[234] | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | 2025 PVI[77] |
Member | Party | First elected |
Status | |
| Pennsylvania 1 | D+1 | Brian Fitzpatrick | Republican | 2016 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Pennsylvania 2 | D+19 | Brendan Boyle | Democratic | 2014 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Pennsylvania 3 | D+40 | Dwight Evans | Democratic | 2016 (special) | Incumbent retiring[20] |
|
| Pennsylvania 4 | D+8 | Madeleine Dean | Democratic | 2018 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Pennsylvania 5 | D+15 | Mary Gay Scanlon | Democratic | 2018 (special) | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Pennsylvania 6 | D+6 | Chrissy Houlahan | Democratic | 2018 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Pennsylvania 7 | R+1 | Ryan Mackenzie | Republican | 2024 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Pennsylvania 8 | R+4 | Rob Bresnahan | Republican | 2024 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Pennsylvania 9 | R+19 | Dan Meuser | Republican | 2018 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Pennsylvania 10 | R+3 | Scott Perry | Republican | 2012 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Pennsylvania 11 | R+11 | Lloyd Smucker | Republican | 2016 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Pennsylvania 12 | D+10 | Summer Lee | Democratic | 2022 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Pennsylvania 13 | R+23 | John Joyce | Republican | 2018 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Pennsylvania 14 | R+17 | Guy Reschenthaler | Republican | 2018 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Pennsylvania 15 | R+19 | Glenn Thompson | Republican | 2008 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Pennsylvania 16 | R+11 | Mike Kelly | Republican | 2010 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Pennsylvania 17 | D+3 | Chris Deluzio | Democratic | 2022 | Incumbent renominated |
|
Rhode Island
| District | Incumbent | Candidates[238] | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | 2025 PVI[77] |
Member | Party | First elected |
Status | |
| Rhode Island 1 | D+12 | Gabe Amo | Democratic | 2023 (special) | Incumbent running |
|
| Rhode Island 2 | D+4 | Seth Magaziner | Democratic | 2022 | Incumbent running |
|
South Carolina
| District | Incumbent | Candidates[239] | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | 2025 PVI[77] |
Member | Party | First elected |
Status | |
| South Carolina 1 | R+6 | Nancy Mace | Republican | 2020 | Incumbent retiring to run for governor[48] |
|
| South Carolina 2 | R+7 | Joe Wilson | Republican | 2001 (special) | Incumbent renominated |
|
| South Carolina 3 | R+21 | Sheri Biggs | Republican | 2024 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| South Carolina 4 | R+11 | William Timmons | Republican | 2018 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| South Carolina 5 | R+11 | Ralph Norman | Republican | 2017 (special) | Incumbent retiring to run for governor[49] |
|
| South Carolina 6 | D+13 | Jim Clyburn | Democratic | 1992 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| South Carolina 7 | R+12 | Russell Fry | Republican | 2022 | Incumbent renominated |
|
South Dakota
| District | Incumbent | Candidates[240] | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | 2025 PVI[77] |
Member | Party | First elected |
Status | |
| South Dakota at-large | R+15 | Dusty Johnson | Republican | 2018 | Incumbent retiring to run for governor[50] |
|
Tennessee
| District | Incumbent | Candidates[241] | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | 2025 PVI[77] |
Member | Party | First elected |
Status | |
| Tennessee 1 | R+29[g] | Diana Harshbarger | Republican | 2020 | Incumbent running |
|
| Tennessee 2 | R+17[g] | Tim Burchett | Republican | 2018 | Incumbent running |
|
| Tennessee 3 | R+18[g] | Chuck Fleischmann | Republican | 2010 | Incumbent running |
|
| Tennessee 4 | R+11[g] | Scott DesJarlais | Republican | 2010 | Incumbent running |
|
| Tennessee 5 | R+10[g] | Andy Ogles | Republican | 2022 | Incumbent running |
|
| Tennessee 6 | R+13[g] | John Rose | Republican | 2018 | Incumbent retiring to run for governor[51] |
|
| Tennessee 7 | R+11[g] | Matt Van Epps | Republican | 2025 (special) | Incumbent running |
|
| Tennessee 8 | R+10[g] | David Kustoff | Republican | 2016 | Incumbent running |
|
| Tennessee 9 | R+9[g] | Steve Cohen | Democratic | 2006 | Incumbent retiring[21] |
|
Texas
| District | Incumbent | Candidates[242] | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | 2025 PVI[77] |
Member | Party | First elected |
Status | |
| Texas 1 | R+24[g] | Nathaniel Moran | Republican | 2022 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Texas 2 | R+11[g] | Dan Crenshaw | Republican | 2018 | Incumbent lost renomination[68] |
|
| Texas 3 | R+11[g] | Keith Self | Republican | 2022 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Texas 4 | R+12[g] | Pat Fallon | Republican | 2020 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Texas 5 | R+10[g] | Lance Gooden | Republican | 2018 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Texas 6 | R+11[g] | Jake Ellzey | Republican | 2021 (special) | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Texas 7 | D+13[g] | Lizzie Fletcher | Democratic | 2018 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Texas 8 | R+13[g] | Morgan Luttrell | Republican | 2022 | Incumbent retiring[52] |
|
| Texas 9 | R+9[g] | None (new seat) | New representative to be elected |
| ||
| Texas 10 | R+10[g] | Michael McCaul | Republican | 2004 | Incumbent retiring[53] |
|
| Texas 11 | R+17[g] | August Pfluger | Republican | 2020 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Texas 12 | R+11[g] | Craig Goldman | Republican | 2024 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Texas 13 | R+23[g] | Ronny Jackson | Republican | 2020 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Texas 14 | R+12[g] | Randy Weber | Republican | 2012 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Texas 15 | R+7[g] | Monica De La Cruz | Republican | 2022 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Texas 16 | D+11[g] | Veronica Escobar | Democratic | 2018 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Texas 17 | R+10[g] | Pete Sessions | Republican | 1996 2018 (lost) 2020 |
Incumbent renominated |
|
| Texas 18 | D+29[g] | Christian Menefee | Democratic | 2026 (special) | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Al Green Redistricted from the 9th district |
Democratic | 2004 | Incumbent lost renomination[243] Democratic loss | |||
| Texas 19 | R+25 | Republican | 2016 | Incumbent retiring[54] |
| |
| Texas 20 | D+16[g] | Joaquin Castro | Democratic | 2012 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Texas 21 | R+10[g] | Chip Roy | Republican | 2018 | Incumbent retiring to run for Texas attorney general[55] |
|
| Texas 22 | R+11[g] | Troy Nehls | Republican | 2020 | Incumbent retiring[56] |
|
| Texas 23 | R+7[g] | TBD[s] | 2026 (special) | Incumbent to be determined in 2026 |
| |
| Texas 24 | R+8[g] | Beth Van Duyne | Republican | 2020 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Texas 25 | R+11[g] | Marc Veasey Redistricted from the 33rd district |
Democratic | 2012 | Incumbent retiring[23] Democratic loss |
|
| Roger Williams | Republican | 2012 | Incumbent renominated | |||
| Texas 26 | R+11[g] | Brandon Gill | Republican | 2024 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Texas 27 | R+10[g] | Michael Cloud | Republican | 2018 (special) | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Texas 28 | R+3[g] | Henry Cuellar | Democratic | 2004 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Texas 29 | D+17[g] | Sylvia Garcia | Democratic | 2018 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Texas 30 | D+25[g] | None (new seat) | New representative to be elected |
| ||
| Texas 31 | R+11[g] | John Carter | Republican | 2002 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Texas 32 | R+8[g] | None (new seat) | New representative to be elected |
| ||
| Texas 33 | D+18[g] | Jasmine Crockett Redistricted from the 30th district |
Democratic | 2022 | Incumbent retiring to run for U.S. Senate[22] Democratic loss |
|
| Julie Johnson Redistricted from the 32nd district |
Democratic | 2024 | Incumbent lost renomination[246] | |||
| Texas 34 | R+3[g] | Vicente Gonzalez | Democratic | 2016 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Texas 35 | R+4[g] | None (new seat) | New representative to be elected |
| ||
| Texas 36 | R+12[g] | Brian Babin | Republican | 2014 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Texas 37 | D+30[g] | Lloyd Doggett | Democratic | 1994 | Incumbent retiring[24] Democratic loss |
|
| Greg Casar Redistricted from the 35th district |
Democratic | 2022 | Incumbent renominated | |||
| Texas 38 | R+10[g] | Wesley Hunt | Republican | 2022 | Incumbent retiring to run for U.S. Senate[57] |
|
Utah
| District | Incumbent | Candidates[247] | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | 2025 PVI[77] |
Member | Party | First elected |
Status | |
| Utah 1 | D+12[g] | None (new seat) | New representative to be elected |
| ||
| Utah 2 | R+15[g] | Blake Moore Redistricted from the 1st district |
Republican | 2020 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Utah 3 | R+21[g] | Celeste Maloy Redistricted from the 2nd district |
Republican | 2023 (special) | Incumbent renominated |
|
| Utah 4 | R+17[g] | Burgess Owens | Republican | 2020 | Incumbent retiring[58] Republican loss |
|
| Mike Kennedy Redistricted from the 3rd district |
Republican | 2024 | Incumbent renominated | |||
Vermont
| District | Incumbent | Candidates[248] | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | 2025 PVI[77] |
Member | Party | First elected |
Status | |
| Vermont at-large | D+17 | Becca Balint | Democratic | 2022 | Incumbent running |
|
Virginia
| District | Incumbent | Candidates[249] | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | 2025 PVI[77] |
Member | Party | First elected |
Status | |
| Virginia 1 | R+3 | Rob Wittman | Republican | 2007 (special) | Incumbent running |
|
| Virginia 2 | EVEN | Jen Kiggans | Republican | 2022 | Incumbent running |
|
| Virginia 3 | D+18 | Bobby Scott | Democratic | 1992 | Incumbent running |
|
| Virginia 4 | D+17 | Jennifer McClellan | Democratic | 2023 (special) | Incumbent running |
|
| Virginia 5 | R+6 | John McGuire | Republican | 2024 | Incumbent running |
|
| Virginia 6 | R+12 | Ben Cline | Republican | 2018 | Incumbent running | |
| Virginia 7 | D+2 | Eugene Vindman | Democratic | 2024 | Incumbent running |
|
| Virginia 8 | D+26 | Don Beyer | Democratic | 2014 | Incumbent running |
|
| Virginia 9 | R+22 | Morgan Griffith | Republican | 2010 | Incumbent running |
|
| Virginia 10 | D+6 | Suhas Subramanyam | Democratic | 2024 | Incumbent running |
|
| Virginia 11 | D+18 | James Walkinshaw | Democratic | 2025 (special) | Incumbent running |
|
Washington
| District | Incumbent | Candidates[250] | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | 2025 PVI[77] |
Member | Party | First elected |
Status | |
| Washington 1 | D+15 | Suzan DelBene | Democratic | 2012 (special) | Incumbent running |
|
| Washington 2 | D+12 | Rick Larsen | Democratic | 2000 | Incumbent running |
|
| Washington 3 | R+2 | Marie Gluesenkamp Perez | Democratic | 2022 | Incumbent running |
|
| Washington 4 | R+10 | Dan Newhouse | Republican | 2014 | Incumbent retiring[59] |
|
| Washington 5 | R+5 | Michael Baumgartner | Republican | 2024 | Incumbent running |
|
| Washington 6 | D+10 | Emily Randall | Democratic | 2024 | Incumbent running |
|
| Washington 7 | D+39 | Pramila Jayapal | Democratic | 2016 | Incumbent running |
|
| Washington 8 | D+3 | Kim Schrier | Democratic | 2018 | Incumbent running |
|
| Washington 9 | D+22 | Adam Smith | Democratic | 1996 | Incumbent running |
|
| Washington 10 | D+9 | Marilyn Strickland | Democratic | 2020 | Incumbent running |
|
West Virginia
| District | Incumbent | Candidates[251] | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | 2025 PVI[77] |
Member | Party | First elected |
Status | |
| West Virginia 1 | R+22 | Carol Miller | Republican | 2018 | Incumbent renominated |
|
| West Virginia 2 | R+20 | Riley Moore | Republican | 2024 | Incumbent renominated |
|
Wisconsin
| District | Incumbent | Candidates[252] | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | 2025 PVI[77] |
Member | Party | First elected |
Status | |
| Wisconsin 1 | R+2 | Bryan Steil | Republican | 2018 | Incumbent running |
|
| Wisconsin 2 | D+21 | Mark Pocan | Democratic | 2012 | Incumbent running |
|
| Wisconsin 3 | R+3 | Derrick Van Orden | Republican | 2022 | Incumbent running |
|
| Wisconsin 4 | D+26 | Gwen Moore | Democratic | 2004 | Incumbent running |
|
| Wisconsin 5 | R+11 | Scott Fitzgerald | Republican | 2020 | Incumbent running |
|
| Wisconsin 6 | R+8 | Glenn Grothman | Republican | 2014 | Incumbent running |
|
| Wisconsin 7 | R+11 | Tom Tiffany | Republican | 2020 (special) | Incumbent retiring to run for governor[60] |
|
| Wisconsin 8 | R+8 | Tony Wied | Republican | 2024 (special) | Incumbent running |
|
Wyoming
| District | Incumbent | Candidates[253] | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | 2025 PVI[77] |
Member | Party | First elected |
Status | |
| Wyoming at-large | R+23 | Harriet Hageman | Republican | 2022 | Incumbent retiring to run for U.S. Senate[61] |
|
Non-voting delegates
| District | Incumbent | This race | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Delegate | Party | First elected | Results | Candidates | |
| American Samoa at-large | Amata Coleman Radewagen | Republican | 2014 | Incumbent's intent unknown |
|
| District of Columbia at-large | Eleanor Holmes Norton | Democratic | 1990 | Incumbent retiring[4] |
|
| Guam at-large | James Moylan | Republican | 2022 | Incumbent running |
|
| Northern Mariana Islands at-large | Kimberlyn King-Hinds | Republican | 2024 | Incumbent running |
|
| U.S. Virgin Islands at-large | Stacey Plaskett | Democratic | 2014 | Incumbent retiring to run for governor[25] |
|
See also
Notes
- ↑ As well as five of the six non-voting delegates.
- 1 2 Kevin Kiley was elected as a Republican in 2024, but he is now an Independent who caucuses with the Republicans.
- ↑ As a result of redistricting.
- ↑ As a result of death, resignation, or expulsion.
- ↑ Calculated by taking the difference of 100% and all other candidates combined.
- 1 2 Davis was elected to a previous, competitive, version of this district which Trump only won by 3.2 points in 2024, but it was redrawn to be more strongly Republican-leaning in 2025 by the North Carolina state legislature.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 Map was changed after the publication of the most recent Cook Partisan Voting Index
- 1 2 Kaptur was first elected to a previous, competitive but Republican-tilting, version of this district which Trump won by 6.7 points in 2024, but it was redrawn to be more strongly Republican-leaning by a bipartisan redistricting commission, as the previous maps expired in 2024.
- 1 2 Cuellar was elected to a previous, competitive but Republican-tilting, version of this district which Trump only won by 7.3 points in 2024, but it was redrawn to be more strongly Republican-leaning in 2025 by the Texas state legislature.
- 1 2 Gonzalez was elected to a previous, competitive but Republican-tilting, version of this district which Trump only won by 4.4 points in 2024, but it was redrawn to be more strongly Republican-leaning in 2025 by the Texas state legislature.
- 1 2 Kiley was originally elected as a Republican. He left the Republican Party to become an independent in March 2026 but remains a member of the House Republican Conference.
- ↑ Competitive seats are defined as seats won by less than 10 points by their respective party in 2024
- ↑ Rep. Eric Swalwell resigned on April 14, 2026.[160] A special election using the district's current lines will be held on August 18, 2026.
- ↑ Rep. Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick resigned on April 21, 2026.[164] A special election will be held TBD.
- ↑ Rep. David Scott (D) died on April 22, 2026, before he could run for re-election. A special election will be held on July 28, 2026. If no candidate gets a majority, the runoff election will be held on August 25, 2026.[158]
- ↑ Van Drew was first elected as a Democrat but switched to the Republican Party in December 2019.
- ↑ In New York, congressional candidates in the 1st District file with the Suffolk County Board of Elections, candidates in the 2nd, 3rd, and 16th-26th Districts file with the State Board of Elections, candidates in the 4th District file with the Nassau County Board of Elections, and candidates in the 5th-15th Districts file with the New York City Board of Elections.[217]
- ↑ In Ohio, congressional candidates file with the board of elections of the most populous county in their districts, not with the Secretary of State. [225]
- ↑ Rep. Tony Gonzales resigned on April 14, 2026.[244] A special election using the current district's lines will be held TBD.
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{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - 1 2 Vakil, Caroline (February 2, 2026). "Maryland Democrats advance new congressional lines in state House". The Hill. Retrieved February 3, 2026.
- ↑ Toomer, Lindsey (December 9, 2025). "In shift, Sen. Bennet supports Colorado constitutional amendment for emergency redistricting". Colorado Newsline. Retrieved December 16, 2025.
- ↑ "New Jersey governor doesn't rule out redistricting that could target GOP". Newsweek. July 22, 2025. Retrieved August 9, 2025.
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- ↑ "Gov. Ivey calls special session on Alabama redistricting". WBRC. May 2026.
- ↑ Schonfeld, Zach (May 11, 2026). "Supreme Court lifts block on Alabama Republicans' map". The Hill. Retrieved May 12, 2026.
- ↑ Schonfeld, Zach (May 26, 2026). "Court blocks Alabama Republicans' congressional map". The Hill. Retrieved May 26, 2026.
- ↑ Schonfeld, Zach; Vakil, Caroline (June 2, 2026). "Supreme Court clears way for Alabama Republicans to use congressional map for midterms". The Hill. Retrieved June 3, 2026.
- ↑ "District Court Rejects Federal Challenge to Arkansas Congressional Map: Eastern District of Arkansas Court Finds Lack of Evidence that Map is a Racial Gerrymander and is Racially Dilutive". Legal Defense Fund. June 9, 2025.
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- ↑ Schemmel, Alec (April 22, 2026). "Virginia court declares state's redistricting vote was unconstitutional in legal win for Republicans". Fox News. Retrieved April 27, 2026.
- ↑ Vakil, Caroline (April 27, 2026). "Virginia Supreme Court mulls legality of Democratic redistricting referendum". The Hill. Retrieved April 27, 2026.
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- ↑ Schonfeld, Zach; Mueller, Julia (May 8, 2026). "Virginia Supreme Court throws out redistricting results in blow to Democrats". The Hill. Retrieved May 8, 2026.
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- ↑ "New Lawsuit Alleges Wisconsin's Congressional Map Violates State Constitution". Democracy Docket. July 22, 2025. Retrieved October 1, 2025.
- ↑ Kremer, Rich (September 25, 2025). "Wisconsin Supreme Court orders legal briefs in 2 congressional map challenges". WPR. Retrieved October 1, 2025.
- ↑ Rego, Max (March 31, 2026). "Judicial panel dismisses challenge to Wisconsin congressional map". The Hill. Retrieved April 1, 2026.
- ↑ Scherer, Jasper (March 5, 2025). "Congressman and former Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner dies". The Texas Tribune. Retrieved March 5, 2025.
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- ↑ Iyer, Kaanita (November 21, 2025). "GOP Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene to resign in January". CNN. Retrieved November 21, 2025.
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- ↑ "Official Special General Election Results: U.S. House of Representatives 11th Congressional District" (PDF). New Jersey Secretary of State. May 14, 2026. Retrieved May 14, 2026.
- ↑ Wong, Scott; Stewart, Kyle (January 6, 2026). "GOP Rep. Doug LaMalfa dies at 65". NBC News. Retrieved January 6, 2026.
- ↑ "Final Official Election Results - Congressional District 1". California Secretary of State. June 12, 2026. Retrieved June 12, 2026.
- 1 2 Mitchell, Tia (April 22, 2026). "Georgia U.S. Rep. David Scott has died". The Atlanta Journal Constitution. Retrieved April 22, 2026.
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- 1 2 Solender, Andrew (April 13, 2026). "Eric Swalwell announces resignation from Congress in shock move". Axios. Retrieved April 13, 2026.
- ↑ "Congressional District 14, Special Primary Election - 06/16/2026 (Official)". Alameda County Registrar of Voters. Retrieved April 23, 2026.
- ↑ "Embattled GOP Rep. Tony Gonzales announces he's stepping down from Congress". CNN. April 13, 2026.
- ↑ Davies, David Martin (April 13, 2026). "Texas Rep. Tony Gonzales to resign amid misconduct allegations; special election looms". TPR. Retrieved April 14, 2026.
When Gov. Greg Abbott calls for a special election to fill Texas Congressional District 23, Democrat Katy Padilla Stout says she will "absolutely" run.
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- ↑ "Republican Party Certification of Candidates" (PDF). Alabama Secretary of State. Retrieved March 2, 2026.
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- ↑ "Certified List of Candidates (PDF)" (PDF). California Secretary of State. Retrieved March 26, 2026.
- ↑ "2026 Unofficial Primary Election Candidate List". www.sos.state.co.us. Retrieved April 29, 2026.
- ↑ Rowley, Jocelyn (January 18, 2026). "Loveland businessman Tim Veldhuizen launches independent bid for Congress". Loveland Reporter-Herald. Retrieved January 24, 2026.
- ↑ Pazniokas, Mark (May 11, 2026). "Luke Bronin beats John Larson in convention upset, faces primary". CT Mirror. Retrieved June 7, 2026.
- ↑ Pazniokas, Mark (May 15, 2026). "CT GOP opens convention, nominating down-ballot candidates". CT Mirror. Retrieved June 7, 2026.
- ↑ "Filed Candidates by Office". Delaware Department of Elections. Retrieved November 14, 2025.
- ↑ "Delaware Republicans Showcase Unity, Endorse Candidates and Launch 2026 Campaign at State Convention". Delaware LIVE News. April 27, 2026. Retrieved June 16, 2026.
Delegates selected businessman Earl Cooper as their nominee for Delaware's at-large U.S. House seat
- ↑ Baker, Alyssa (June 16, 2026). "McBride launches reelection bid after 57-stop Delaware tour". CoastTV. Retrieved June 16, 2026.
- ↑ "Candidate Listing for 2026 General Election". Florida Department of State. Retrieved May 28, 2026.
- ↑ "Qualifying Candidate Information". Georgia Secretary of State. Retrieved February 27, 2026.
- ↑ "2026 Candidate Report". Hawaii Office of Elections. Retrieved February 2, 2026.
- ↑ "Search Filed Candidates". Idaho Secretary of State. Retrieved February 23, 2026.
- ↑ "Candidate Filing Search". Illinois State Board of Elections. Retrieved May 22, 2026.
- ↑ Olander, Olivia; Petrella, Dan (August 19, 2025). "Top candidates for the US House in Illinois' 2nd, 7th, 8th and 9th districts for the 2026 election". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved September 11, 2025.
- ↑ "Candidate Information". Indiana Secretary of State. May 14, 2021. Retrieved January 8, 2026.
- ↑ "Candidate List". Iowa Secretary of State. Retrieved June 24, 2026.
- ↑ "Candidates for the 2026 Primary". Kansas Secretary of State. Retrieved October 28, 2025.
- ↑ "Candidate Filings with the Office of the Secretary of State". Kentucky Secretary of State. Retrieved November 5, 2025.
- ↑ "Candidate Inquiry". Louisiana Secretary of State. February 11, 2026. Retrieved February 11, 2026.
- ↑ "State Rep. Gabe Firment announces candidacy for Louisiana's 5th Congressional District". KALB. July 1, 2026. Retrieved July 2, 2026.
- ↑ "Rick for Louisiana - Rick Edmonds for Congress". Retrieved July 2, 2026.
- ↑ "2026 Primary Candidate List". Department of the Secretary of State of Maine. Retrieved February 5, 2026.
- ↑ "2026 Gubernatorial Primary Election State Candidates List". elections.maryland.gov. Maryland State Board of Elections. Retrieved February 25, 2025.
- ↑ "2026 Candidates". sec.state.ma.us. Massachusetts Secretary of State. Retrieved June 5, 2026.
- ↑ Landes, Josh (March 13, 2026). "Milleron to mount second bid for 1st Mass. Congressional seat". WAMC. Retrieved March 25, 2026.
- ↑ "2026 August Primary Candidate Listing". Michigan Secretary of State. Retrieved January 8, 2026.
- ↑ Hopper, Zach (March 20, 2026). "MI-01 Meet the Candidates Project comes to Marquette". MyUPNow. Retrieved March 24, 2026.
- ↑ "Indian-American doctor runs as independent for US Congress". ap7am.com. February 10, 2026. Retrieved March 31, 2026.
- ↑ Wethington, Paula (December 16, 2025). "Maurice Morton announces candidacy for Michigan's 13th Congressional district". CBS Detroit. Retrieved December 16, 2025.
- ↑ "Candidate Filings". Minnesota Secretary of State. Retrieved May 17, 2026.
- ↑ Judd, Jake (November 18, 2025). "Doss Kicks Off Congressional Campaign Backed by Forward Independence Party". KNSI. Retrieved November 22, 2025.
- ↑ "2026 Primary Election Candidate Qualifying List". Mississippi Secretary of State. December 29, 2025. Retrieved December 29, 2025.
- ↑ "UNOFFICIAL Candidate List - 2026 Primary Election". Missouri Secretary of State. Retrieved February 24, 2026.
- ↑ "FEDERAL PRIMARY 2026". Montana Secretary of State. Retrieved February 17, 2026.
- ↑ "2026 Elections". Nebraska Secretary of State. January 5, 2026.
- ↑ Ourada, Jackie (May 14, 2026). "Independent candidate from Norfolk launches bid for 1st Congressional District race". Nebraska Public Media. Retrieved May 14, 2026.
- ↑ "Macey Budke of North Platte enters race for House of Representatives". North Platte Bulletin. February 10, 2026. Retrieved February 16, 2026.
- ↑ Hammeke, Alex (November 13, 2025). "Cohen announces independent candidacy for House of Representatives seat". Central Nebraska Today. Retrieved November 13, 2025.
- ↑ "Candidate Filing List". Nevada Secretary of State. Retrieved March 2, 2026.
- ↑ "2026 Election Details". sos.nh.gov. New Hampshire Secretary of State. Retrieved June 5, 2025.
- ↑ "Unofficial Primary Election Candidates: U.S. House of Representatives". New Jersey Secretary of State. Retrieved February 13, 2026.
- ↑ Heinis, John (February 26, 2025). "Richard Barilla, an independent, files to challenge Rep. Rob Menendez in 2026". Hudson County View. Retrieved February 26, 2025.
- ↑ "Lacking a candidate, Republicans will back independent campaign in CD-8". New Jersey Globe. May 29, 2026. Retrieved June 30, 2026.
- ↑ "DA'SHONE HUGHEY ANNOUNCES CAMPAIGN FOR U.S. CONGRESS IN NEW JERSEY'S 8TH DISTRICT". Blue Mountain Eagle. June 29, 2026. Retrieved June 30, 2026.
- ↑ "2026 Primary Election Contest/Candidate List". New Mexico Secretary of State. February 3, 2026. Retrieved February 4, 2026.
- ↑ "New York Primary Election Results". New York Times. June 23, 2026. Retrieved June 23, 2026.
- ↑ "Where to File Petitions". New York State Board of Elections. Retrieved April 1, 2026.
- ↑ "Rep. Ritchie Torres secures Congressional Black Caucus PAC endorsement – Bronx Times". Bronx Times. February 12, 2026. Retrieved February 13, 2026.
- ↑ Walker, Corey (November 11, 2025). "Ritchie Torres Faces Multiple 2026 Challengers Attacking His Support for Israel". Algemeiner Journal. Retrieved November 11, 2025.
- ↑ Buchiere, Steve (November 13, 2025). "Independent candidate joins race for 24th House seat". Finger Lakes Times. Retrieved January 13, 2026.
- ↑ Day, Lucas (March 22, 2026). "Auburn Attorney Launches Independent Bid in NY-24 Race". Finger Lakes Daily News. Retrieved March 28, 2026.
- ↑ "2026 General Candidate List by Contest - Federal and State Only". North Carolina State Board of Elections. Retrieved December 1, 2025.
- ↑ "2026 Primary Contest/Candidate List". North Dakota Secretary of State. January 2, 2024.
- ↑ "Ohio Primary Election Results". New York Times. May 5, 2026. Retrieved May 5, 2026.
- ↑ "Ohio Candidate Requirement Guide 2026" (PDF). Ohio Secretary of State. Retrieved March 4, 2026.
- ↑ "May 2026 Primary Election". Hamilton County Board of Elections. Retrieved January 24, 2026.
- ↑ "Wilson running for Congress as independent". The Lima News. April 2, 2026. Retrieved April 4, 2026.
- ↑ "2026 November General Candidates List". Lucas County Board of Elections. Retrieved February 5, 2026.
- ↑ "Candidate Report". Montgomery County Board of Elections. Retrieved January 26, 2026.
- ↑ "Candidate Filing Information". Clark County Board of Elections. Retrieved January 28, 2026.
- ↑ "OK Candidate Filing". Oklahoma State Election Board. Retrieved April 1, 2026.
- ↑ "Candidates for 2026 Primary Election". Oregon Secretary of State. Retrieved September 12, 2025.
- ↑ Hansen-White, Rebecca (August 25, 2025). "4th District incumbent, Democrat Val Hoyle, faces new primary challenger from Corvallis". KLCC. Retrieved August 25, 2025.
- ↑ "Election Information". Pennsylvania Department of State. Retrieved February 18, 2026.
- ↑ Barcaro, Matt (September 3, 2025). "Independent enters race for 10th Congressional District". WGAL. Retrieved September 3, 2025.
- ↑ Walters, Mark (November 18, 2025). "'Perry should retire,' fifth challenger says, adding that he'd accept incumbent's endorsement". The York Dispatch. Retrieved November 18, 2025.
- ↑ "Cody Thomas Launches Congressional Campaign Focused on Restoring Representation in Rural PA". Franklin County Free Press. March 3, 2026. Retrieved March 11, 2026.
- ↑ "Candidates in Upcoming Elections". Rhode Island Department of State. Retrieved June 2, 2026.
- ↑ "Candidate Listing". South Carolina Election Commission. Retrieved March 14, 2026.
- ↑ "2026 Primary Election Candidate List". South Dakota Secretary of State. Retrieved January 7, 2026.
- ↑ "Candidates for United States House of Representatives as of May 17, 2026" (PDF). Tennessee Secretary of State. Retrieved May 18, 2026.
- ↑ "Candidate Information". Texas Secretary of State. Retrieved November 11, 2025.
- ↑ "Democratic Rep. Al Green unseated by Rep. Christian Menefee in Texas primary with two incumbents". NBC News. Retrieved May 26, 2026.
- ↑ Ferris, Sarah (April 13, 2026). "Embattled GOP Rep. Tony Gonzales announces he's stepping down from Congress". CNN.
- ↑ Crow, Kirsten (July 14, 2025). "Former Corpus Christi mayor Dan McQueen announces bid for congressional seat". Caller Times. Retrieved July 14, 2025.
- ↑ "Former Rep. Colin Allred knocks off Rep. Julie Johnson in Texas House runoff". Politico. Retrieved May 26, 2026.
- ↑ "2026 Candidate Filings". Lieutenant Governor of Utah. Retrieved March 9, 2026.
- ↑ "General Election Candidates". Vermont Secretary of State. Retrieved May 4, 2026.
- ↑ "August 4, 2026 Primary Elections Candidates". Virginia Department of Elections. Retrieved May 1, 2026.
- ↑ "Primary 2026 Candidate List". Washington Secretary of State. Retrieved May 1, 2026.
- ↑ "Candidates Listing by Office". West Virginia Secretary of State. Retrieved January 12, 2026.
- ↑ "August 11, 2026 Partisan Primary and November 3, 2026 General Election". Wisconsin Elections Commission. Retrieved April 18, 2026.
- ↑ "2026 Election Information: Unofficial Primary Election Candidates Roster". Wyoming Secretary of State. Retrieved May 15, 2026.
- ↑ Byrd, Klark (March 20, 2026). "Former Casper vice mayor Shawn Johnson seeks Libertarian nod for US House". Oil City News. Retrieved April 5, 2026.
- ↑ "List of Primary Election Candidates". District of Columbia Board of Elections. Retrieved March 17, 2026.
- ↑ "Candidate Packet FILED Log". Guam Election Commission. Retrieved March 18, 2026.
- ↑ Erediano, Emmanuel T. (June 20, 2025). "NMC president to run for delegate". Marianas Variety. Retrieved June 26, 2025.
- ↑ "King-Hinds Announces Re-election Bid for U.S. House Seat". NMI News Service. December 20, 2025. Retrieved December 21, 2025.
- ↑ "Candidate Lists". Election System of the Virgin Islands. Retrieved May 19, 2026.