Why your vote matters in 2024

In the 2000 presidential race, the election came down to Florida, and the winner of the Sunshine State won by less than 0.1 percent of the vote.

October 16, 2024

The 2024 election could have a big impact on education policy

States are voting on school choice and more in 2024.

October 16, 2024

Why voting patterns may shift this election

538’s Galen Druke asks The New York Times’s Ruth Igielnik if analysts should be skeptical of data that shows a shift in voting patterns.

October 15, 2024

Could recent hurricanes affect the presidential election?

The 538 team discusses how hurricane season and election season collide, prompting it to become a political talking point this election cycle.

October 15, 2024

What the polls say about the 2024 election

538’s Galen Druke and The New York Times’s Ruth Igielnik discuss the latest polling data showing an extremely close presidential race.

October 15, 2024

How Hurricanes Helene and Milton could affect the 2024 election

Even if they don't change voters' minds, they could dampen turnout.

October 15, 2024

How Georgia could swing back to the GOP in 2024

Our fourth deep dive into polling and other data in the seven key swing states.

October 14, 2024

3 states could vote to mandate paid sick days

Paid leave and minimum wage policies have passed by ballot initiative before.

October 11, 2024

Trump is holding more campaign events than Harris

But it probably doesn't matter.

October 10, 2024

How redistricting could play a key role in the fight to control the House in 2024

North Carolina, New York, Alabama, Georgia and Louisiana redrew their districts.

October 9, 2024

The 2024 race to control the House couldn't be tighter

Introducing 538's forecast for U.S. House races.

October 8, 2024

How 538's 2024 House election forecast works

Here's everything that goes into this year's model.

October 8, 2024

Are polls that use AI chatbots even polls? | 538 Politics podcast

The 538 team plays another round of "Good or Bad Use of Polling” to discuss how an experimental polling company, Aaru, uses AI chatbots to obtain information about political preferences.

October 8, 2024

The election might not be that close after all | 538 Politics podcast

The 538 team discusses whether average polling error in presidential elections could translate into a landslide victory for either candidate.

October 8, 2024

Will there be a racial realignment in the 2024 election? | 538 Politics podcast

538’s Galen Druke and G. Elliott Morris discuss crosstabs and whether they can predict a racial realignment on Election Day.

October 8, 2024

What Americans think about the war in Gaza, a year after the Oct. 7 attacks

They've grown less supportive of Israel's actions and U.S. military aid.

October 7, 2024

Which way are key demographic groups leaning in the 2024 election?

Keep an eye on the gender gap and a possible racial realignment in November.

October 4, 2024

Black and Arab American voters could swing Michigan's 2024 election

Our third deep dive into polling and other data in the seven swing states.

October 3, 2024

How does a VP debate affect candidate favorability? | 538 Politics Podcast

538's Galen Druke and Nathaniel Rakich discuss how polls show a vice presidential debate has little to no impact on a candidate's favorability.

October 3, 2024

What issues matter to Americans? | 538 Politics Podcast

538's Galen Druke and The New York Times’s Ruth Igielnik discuss how important voters rank climate change, national security and the Middle East ahead of the election.

October 3, 2024

Does a VP debate impact how voters see presidential candidates?

The 538 team and The New York Times’s Ruth Igielnik discuss whether a vice presidential debate can impact how viewers see presidential candidates Donald Trump and Kamala Harris.

October 3, 2024

What early polls say about who won the VP debate

Americans are split over whether Vance or Walz won.

October 2, 2024

How Harris is distancing herself from Biden on the economy | 538 Politics podcast

The 538 team discusses the strategic differences between the Harris campaign when addressing inflation and the economy compared to President Joe Biden.

October 1, 2024

How a scandal in New York could affect the national House race

538's Galen Druke and G. Elliott Morris discuss allegations of possible violations of ethics rules by Rep. Anthony D'Esposito and what it means for which party wins the House.

October 1, 2024

Will foreign policy impact the 2024 election? | 538 Politics podcast

The 538 team discusses conflict in the Middle East and whether it impacts whom Americans will cast their ballot for in November.

October 1, 2024

Why VP debates aren't all that important

Historically, they haven't really moved the polls.

October 1, 2024

The 2024 election could come down to a single tipping-point state

A close contest means one state could decide the outcome.

September 30, 2024

Why you can't predict polling error in advance | 538 Politics podcast

The 538 team discusses how polls have underestimated Democratic and Republican support in the past and how unpredictable the direction of polling error can be.

September 27, 2024

Why the GOP could win Nevada for the first time in 20 years

Our second deep dive into polling and other data in the seven key swing states.

September 27, 2024

The importance of polls and public opinion | 538 Politics podcast

538's Galen Druke and Nathaniel Rakich talk about the role polling can have in a democracy, from measuring issues voters consider important to providing insight into presidential elections.

September 27, 2024

What does a margin of error in polling mean? | 538 Politics podcast

The 538 team discusses what you should know about the margin of error of national and state polls.

September 27, 2024

Efforts to elect more Republican women stalled in the 2024 primaries

But Democratic women could expand their ranks this year after a strong showing.

September 27, 2024

Can you guess how Americans feel about Trump's platform?

Test your knowledge of what the public thinks about Trump's policies.

September 25, 2024

Why Democrats are doing better in Senate races than presidentially

The 538 team discusses what our new polling averages say in the states that will decide the Senate majority.

September 24, 2024

Will the Electoral College benefit Republicans again? | 538 Politics podcast

538's Galen Druke and Geoffrey Skelley talk about the Electoral College advantage in past elections and how it could play out in 2024.

September 24, 2024

What does early voting data reveal? | 538 Politics podcast

The 538 team discusses whether early voting data is a good indicator of who will win the 2024 presidential election.

September 24, 2024

How Harris talks about race and gender on the campaign trail | 538 Politics podcast

538's Galen Druke, University of Maryland’s Chryl Laird and Pew Research Center’s Kiana Cox discuss Kamala Harris' approach to talking about her race and gender during the 2024 presidential campaign.

September 20, 2024

What to know about 'Black Voters for Trump' | 538 Politics podcast

538's Galen Druke and the University of Maryland’s Chryl Laird talk about whether or not Black voters who support Trump are representative of a breakdown in this voting block.

September 20, 2024

How important is identity to Black voters? | 538 Politics podcast

University of Maryland’s Chryl Laird and Pew Research Center’s Kiana Cox discuss data on "linked fate" across interracial voters and voters of different political ideologies.

September 20, 2024

Is the gender gap growing? | 538 Politics podcast

538's Galen Druke and The New York Times's Ruth Igielnik discuss how young women are more liberal and what that means for the future electorate.

September 18, 2024

Does the Taylor Swift effect include voting? | 538 Politics podcast

The New York Times's Ruth Igielnik discusses how Taylor Swift’s endorsement of Kamala Harris has affected voter registration and the presidential race.

September 18, 2024

What do voters think about political violence? | 538 Politics podcast

538's Galen Druke and The New York Times's Ruth Igielnik talk about the percentage of Americans open to a variety of manifestations, from protesting to more serious violence.

September 18, 2024

Make your picks on the 2024 Interactive Electoral Map

ABC News Chief Washington Correspondent Jonathan Karl explains how to make your predictions on the 2024 presidential race.

September 17, 2024

UPDATED Oct. 16, 2024, at 10:12 PM

Who Is Favored To Win New Hampshire's 4 Electoral Votes?

538 uses polling, economic and demographic data to explore likely election outcomes.

Harris wins 85 times out of 100
in our simulations of the 2024 presidential election.
Trump wins 15 times out of 100.
Harris
 
000
Trump
 
000
 
 simulations
Harris wins N.H.
Trump wins N.H.
Popular vote margin

What are the latest polls in New Hampshire?

We adjust polls for house effects, mode, partisanship, voter likelihood and third parties and weight them based on their firm’s 538 pollster rating and how often it polls.

DatesPollster
Sponsor
538 Pollster RatingResultNet result
Oct. 1-2
2.4
Harris
51%
44%
Trump
Harris +7
Sept. 12-16
2.6
Harris
54%
43%
Trump
Harris +11
Sept. 11-12
2.4
Harris
51%
43%
Trump
Harris +8
Aug. 15-19
2.6
Harris
50%
43%
Trump
Harris +7
Aug. 13-14
2.4
Harris
51%
44%
Trump
Harris +7
July 26-28
2.9
Harris
48%
41%
Trump
Harris +7
July 24-25
2.4
Harris
50%
44%
Trump
Harris +6
July 23-25
2.6
Harris
49%
43%
Trump
Harris +6
Dates
Pollster
Sponsor
538 Pollster Rating
Result
Net result
51%
44%
Harris +7
54%
43%
Harris +11
51%
43%
Harris +8
50%
43%
Harris +7
51%
44%
Harris +7
48%
41%
Harris +7
50%
44%
Harris +6
49%
43%
Harris +6

How has the forecast changed in New Hampshire over time?

The forecast updates at least once a day and whenever we get new data. Uncertainty will decrease as we get closer to Election Day.

We forecast the popular vote only for candidates polling at 5 percent or higher nationally, polling at 10 percent or higher in at least one state or who are on the ballot in almost every state. Since Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s withdrawal, only Harris and Trump meet these criteria, so we are effectively forecasting the two-way popular vote between Democrats and Republicans.

What do the polls or fundamentals alone say?

Our forecast is based on a combination of the polls and various economic and political variables we call the “fundamentals.” This chart shows how we get from the polls today to a forecast for [state] on Election Day.

Median
95% of outcomes fall in this range
Margin of victory
Polling averages
Polling averages

Polling average

The state of public opinion today, according only to 538’s average of polls in [state] and accounting for trends in national polls.

Adjusted polling average

The polling average for [state] adjusted for movement in similar states and the effects of party conventions.

Forecast components
Weight

Forecast of polling average on Election Day

The adjusted polling average with uncertainty intervals that account for potential movement in the race between now and Election Day. This does not account for the chance that the polls systematically underestimate one candidate.

00

Fundamentals-only forecast

What our fundamentals model alone would predict the popular vote margin to be.

00

Full forecast

Our final forecast of the popular vote, based on a weighted average of the polls and fundamentals using the weights above. This accounts for the chance that the polls systematically underestimate one candidate.

Forecast components may not exactly add up to full forecast because of rounding and random sampling. (When combining the components, we take a random sample of simulations from each, and they may not exactly match the full sample of simulations.)

How has [state] voted in the past?

The results of the last six presidential elections in [state] compared with the national popular vote.

20XXDem.Rep.
ST XX.X%XX.X%
U.S.XX.X%XX.X%

See a different contest

Alabama
Better for Cand than ST
Alaska
Better for Cand than ST
Arizona
Better for Cand than ST
Arkansas
Better for Cand than ST
California
Better for Cand than ST
Colorado
Better for Cand than ST
Connecticut
Better for Cand than ST
District of Columbia
Better for Cand than ST
Delaware
Better for Cand than ST
Florida
Better for Cand than ST
Georgia
Better for Cand than ST
Hawaii
Better for Cand than ST
Idaho
Better for Cand than ST
Illinois
Better for Cand than ST
Indiana
Better for Cand than ST
Iowa
Better for Cand than ST
Kansas
Better for Cand than ST
Kentucky
Better for Cand than ST
Louisiana
Better for Cand than ST
Maine
Better for Cand than ST
Maine 1st District
Better for Cand than ST
Maine 2nd District
Better for Cand than ST
Maryland
Better for Cand than ST
Massachusetts
Better for Cand than ST
Michigan
Better for Cand than ST
Minnesota
Better for Cand than ST
Mississippi
Better for Cand than ST
Missouri
Better for Cand than ST
Montana
Better for Cand than ST
Nebraska
Better for Cand than ST
Nebraska 1st District
Better for Cand than ST
Nebraska 2nd District
Better for Cand than ST
Nebraska 3rd District
Better for Cand than ST
Nevada
Better for Cand than ST
New Hampshire
Better for Cand than ST
New Jersey
Better for Cand than ST
New Mexico
Better for Cand than ST
New York
Better for Cand than ST
North Carolina
Better for Cand than ST
North Dakota
Better for Cand than ST
Ohio
Better for Cand than ST
Oklahoma
Better for Cand than ST
Oregon
Better for Cand than ST
Pennsylvania
Better for Cand than ST
Rhode Island
Better for Cand than ST
South Carolina
Better for Cand than ST
South Dakota
Better for Cand than ST
Tennessee
Better for Cand than ST
Texas
Better for Cand than ST
Utah
Better for Cand than ST
Vermont
Better for Cand than ST
Virginia
Better for Cand than ST
Washington
Better for Cand than ST
West Virginia
Better for Cand than ST
Wisconsin
Better for Cand than ST
Wyoming
Better for Cand than ST
← Back to national forecast

Credits

Sources: American National Election Studies, The American Presidency Project at the University of California Santa Barbara, Ballotpedia, Clerk of the U.S. House of Representatives, Dave Leip’s Atlas of U.S. Presidential Elections, Federal Election Commission, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, MIT Election Data and Science Lab, Our Campaigns, polls, The Roper Center, state election websites, U.S. Census Bureau, University of Michigan Survey Research Center, VoteSmart