Live UK election results tracker: are we heading for a hung parliament?

Latest general election results from the UK’s 650 constituencies. Find out whether Theresa May and the Conservatives will get the increased majority they asked for, or whether Jeremy Corbyn and Labour can pull off a surprise. Search for your own seat by name or postcode and find out when you can expect a declaration

Total seats won

568 of 650 seats declared at 9 Jun 04.42 BST

  • Con

    269

    (-11)

  • Lab

    235

    (+29)

  • LD

    10

    (+4)

  • SNP

    33

    (-18)

  • DUP

    10 (+2)

  • UKIP

    0 (0)

  • Green

    0 (0)

  • Others

    11

68.46% turnout

Overview

Theresa May’s election gamble appears to have failed with the exit poll predicting Conservatives falling short of a majority. The SNP have lost seats to the Conservatives, Labour and the Lib dems. The Ukip vote – as is proving the pattern of the night – collapsed. From 4am a deluge of results from key swing seats across the country are expected to come through.

Gains and losses

  • Con -11
  • Lab +29
  • SNP -18
  • LD +4
  • UKIP 0
  • Green 0

Latest declarations

  • Con hold Halesowen & Rowley Regis with a 11.8% majority
  • Con win Banff & Buchan with a 19.1% swing
  • Lab hold Leeds North East with a 15.2% swing
  • Con hold Meon Valley with a 47.4% majority
  • Con hold Plymouth Moor View with a 11.0% majority

Key seats

  • Con win Banff & Buchan with a 19.1% swing
  • Liam Fox holds Somerset North with a 27.6% majority
  • Con hold Northampton South with a 2.8% majority
  • Con hold Northampton North with a 2.0% majority
  • Tulip Siddiq holds Hampstead & Kilburn with a 26.6% majority

Find your result

Type a constituency name or full postcode

Battlegrounds checklist

The table below shows the seats each party is defending in order of vulnerabilty — which is based on the size of the majority for the incumbent party.

  • Conservative 27 seats lost

  • Labour 3 seats lost

  • Lib Dem 3 seats lost

  • SNP 19 seats lost

Full results

Party Seats Gain Loss Net Votes Share (%) Change (%)
Con Conservative 269 16 27 -11 11,729,311 41.98 +5.05
Lab Labour 235 32 3 29 11,267,839 40.33 +9.88
SNP Scottish National Party 33 1 19 -18 908,335 3.25 -1.49
DUP Democratic Unionist Party 10 2 0 2 292,316 1.05 +0.45
Lib Dem Liberal Democrat 10 7 3 4 1,954,029 6.99 -0.88
SF Sinn Féin 7 3 0 3 238,915 0.86 +0.29
PC Plaid Cymru 3 0 0 0 150,132 0.54 -0.05
Ind Ind 1 0 4 -4 120,938 0.43 +0.11
UUP Ulster Unionist Party 0 0 2 -2 83,280 0.3 -0.07
SDLP Social Democratic and Labour Party 0 0 3 -3 95,419 0.34 +0.01
Green Green 0 0 0 0 425,800 1.52 -2.25
Other Other 0 0 0 0 673,022 2.41 -11.05

Background

The polls have closed in the June 2017 general election. Across 650 constituencies, polls will close and counts begin at 10pm, with the first declarations expected around 1am. Between then and breakfast time, most of England, Scotland and Wales should have declared. Northern Ireland will come later but may not affect the outcome.

Theresa May said she called the election (which was not due until 2020) to "strengthen her hand" in Brexit negotiations by securing a stronger mandate. To achieve that aim, she needs to increase her majority in the House of Commons, probably by double figures. That seemed straightforward at the beginning of the campaign, but a number of missteps, notably over a policy requiring those who need social care at home to potentially surrender value in their houses to pay for it, have made it less of a foregone conclusion.

So anything less than a big win for May will carry a taint of failure. And if the Tories come back without an overall majority - which seems on the face of it to be unlikely, but has been forecast by one pollster - it would be a big win for the other parties, especially Labour. What would happen then is hard to predict, but the likelihood is that a minority government would be formed. Short of an electoral earthquake, there is unlikely to be a workable coalition among the other parties, and a coalition featuring the Conservatives seems improbable this time.

The first results are expected at around 1am. Traditionally, Sunderland is one of the first areas to declare, and traditionally this gives Labour an early lead in the results, which may not be instructive by the end of the night. Conversely, if Labour does badly in Sunderland, one of its oldest heartlands, the party is in for a sticky night.

New results have come in