Political Polls Tracker

Live Polling Tracker · Updated 6 hours ago
Political Polls Tracker: Trump Approval, Generic Ballot, and More

Live political polling data from hundreds of pollsters, updated twice daily. Trump and Vance approval and favorability, 2026 generic ballot, Congressional and Supreme Court approval, plus pollster accuracy scorecards.

37.2%
Trump Approval
5-poll average
D+6.2
Generic Ballot 2026
5-poll average
18.4%
Congress Approval
5-poll average
39.4%
Supreme Court Approval
5-poll average

Trump Approval Tracker

The latest presidential approval polls from across the political spectrum. Approval/disapproval, net rating, sample size, and the link to each pollster's release. Updated twice daily from VoteHub's polling aggregate.

Showing the 20 most recent Trump approval polls. Net rating = approve minus disapprove.
PollsterDatesSampleApproveDisapproveNetSource
John Zogby StrategiesMay 21-2244%54% -10 View →
RMG ResearchMay 13-21300042%57% -15 View →
American Research GroupMay 16-20100931%65% -34 View →
American Research GroupMay 16-20110031%64% -33 View →
IpsosMay 15-1898438%61% -23 View →
IpsosMay 15-18127135%63% -28 View →
Echelon InsightsMay 14-18100840%59% -19 View →
YouGovMay 15-18138041%57% -16 View →
YouGovMay 15-18154937%57% -20 View →
J.L. PartnersMay 15-18100339%52% -13 View →
Global Strategy GroupMay 13-18100039%59% -20 View →
AP-NORCMay 14-18111737%62% -25 View →
Quinnipiac UniversityMay 14-18110634%58% -24 View →
Beacon Research/Shaw & Co. ResearchMay 15-18100239%61% -22 View →
Data for ProgressMay 15-18114943%56% -13 View →
Impact Research/National ResearchMay 7-18150041%57% -16 View →
McLaughlin & AssociatesMay 12-18100044%53% -9 View →
Morning ConsultMay 15-17220342%55% -13 View →
YouGovMay 13-15206437%63% -26 View →
The New York Times/Siena CollegeMay 11-15150737%59% -22 View →
Reading the numbers: Net approval (right column) is the most-cited single number from approval polls. Positive net means more Americans approve than disapprove. Net approval below zero is the historical norm for a president in their second year, and second-term presidents rarely recover above water until the very end.

Generic Congressional Ballot 2026

The single most predictive number for the 2026 midterm elections. Pollsters ask: "If the election for Congress were held today, would you vote for the Democratic candidate or the Republican candidate in your district?" The aggregate result is the closest thing to a national mood-of-the-electorate measure that exists in U.S. polling.

PollsterDatesSampleDemRepMarginSource
John Zogby StrategiesMay 21-2249%42% D+7.0 View →
Verasight/Morris Predictive InsightsMay 18-20200052%41% D+11.0 View →
IpsosMay 15-1898439%38% D+1.0 View →
IpsosMay 15-18127135%31% D+4.0 View →
Echelon InsightsMay 14-18100851%43% D+8.0 View →
YouGovMay 15-18137546%43% D+3.0 View →
YouGovMay 15-18154340%35% D+5.0 View →
Quinnipiac UniversityMay 14-18110650%39% D+11.0 View →
Data for ProgressMay 15-18114951%43% D+8.0 View →
Impact Research/National ResearchMay 7-18150048%40% D+8.0 View →
McLaughlin & AssociatesMay 12-18100046%42% D+4.0 View →
Morning ConsultMay 15-17220347%41% D+6.0 View →
Morning ConsultMay 11-172852546%42% D+4.0 View →
The New York Times/Siena UniversityMay 11-15150749.5%39.1% D+10.4 View →
YouGovMay 13-15139745%40% D+5.0 View →
IpsosMay 8-1199341%35% D+6.0 View →
IpsosMay 8-11125436%31% D+5.0 View →
YouGovMay 9-11140845%40% D+5.0 View →
YouGovMay 9-11154737%34% D+3.0 View →
AtlasIntelMay 4-7206954.6%40.1% D+14.5 View →
Historical context: The party in the White House has lost House seats in 21 of the last 22 midterm elections. Generic ballot polls in mid-cycle years tend to overstate the in-party's support and underweight the out-party by 2-3 points on average, according to FiveThirtyEight's historical poll analysis.

Trump and Vance Favorability

Favorability is different from approval. Approval measures "do you approve of how he's doing the job?" Favorability measures "do you have a favorable or unfavorable impression of this person?" The two numbers usually track but can diverge, especially for politicians whose handling of specific issues is unpopular even when their personal image is intact.

Trump Favorability

PollsterDatesFavUnfavNet
IpsosMay 15-1835%61% -26
Echelon InsightsMay 14-1838%59% -21
Global Strategy GroupMay 13-1839%59% -20
YouGovMay 9-1142%56% -14
YouGovMay 9-1138%57% -19
AtlasIntelMay 4-740%60% -20
CygnalMay 5-640.7%56.4% -15.7
HarrisXApr 29 - May 544%52% -8
HarrisXApr 29 - May 543%51% -8
HarrisXApr 29 - May 542%51% -9

JD Vance Favorability

PollsterDatesFavUnfavNet
IpsosMay 15-1834%57% -23
Echelon InsightsMay 14-1839%53% -14
Global Strategy GroupMay 13-1838%49% -11
YouGovMay 9-1143%52% -9
YouGovMay 9-1138%52% -14
AtlasIntelMay 4-737%58% -21
CygnalMay 5-642.6%50.9% -8.3
HarrisXApr 29 - May 546%45% +1
HarrisXApr 29 - May 543%43% +0
HarrisX/HarrisApr 29 - May 542%42% +0

Congressional and Supreme Court Approval

Two of the most-watched institutional approval measures in American politics. Both have been historically low through the 2020s. Congressional approval rarely cracks 30%; Supreme Court approval, which used to run above 60%, has been below 50% since 2021 and shows no signs of recovery.

Congress Approval

PollsterDatesApproveDisapprove
YouGovApr 24-2712%68%
YouGovApr 24-2712%64%
HarrisX/HarrisApr 23-2630%59%
Clarity Campaign LabsApr 15-2428%65%
GallupApr 1-1510%86%
High Point University Survey Research CenterMar 29 - Apr 330%52%
YouGovMar 27-3012%69%
YouGovMar 27-3011%63%
HarrisX/HarrisMar 25-2630%60%
University of Massachusetts Department of Political Science/YouGovMar 20-2519%69%

Supreme Court Approval

PollsterDatesApproveDisapprove
Quinnipiac UniversityMay 14-1833%57%
YouGovMay 4-638%45%
Marquette University Law SchoolApr 8-1644%56%
Marquette University Law SchoolApr 8-1642%57%
RMG ResearchApr 14-1540%53%
High Point University Survey Research CenterMar 29 - Apr 337%40%
University of Massachusetts Department of Political Science/YouGovMar 20-2535%50%
RMG ResearchMar 448%41%
Beacon Research/Shaw & Co. ResearchFeb 28 - Mar 242%57%
YouGovFeb 2037%47%

Pollster Accuracy Scorecard

Not all pollsters are equally accurate. The grades below reflect each pollster's historical performance against actual election results, drawing on archives from FiveThirtyEight and 2024 results from Split Ticket. Higher grades correlate with smaller margins of error, less herding (the tendency to publish results that match other pollsters), and a smaller "house effect" (systematic lean toward one party).

How to read the grades: A+ to A- means a pollster's results are reliably close to actual outcomes with little house effect. B-range pollsters are still useful but show slightly more error or partisan lean. C or D grades indicate either large error, a strong house effect, or both — read those results with skepticism.

A+
Marist Poll
High accuracy
A+
Selzer & Co.
Low error
A
Siena/NYT
High accuracy
A
Monmouth
Low house effect
A
Suffolk University
High accuracy
A-
Quinnipiac
Slight Dem lean
A-
Fox News
Low error
B+
Emerson College
High volume
B+
YouGov
Online panel
B+
Ipsos/Reuters
High volume
B
CNN/SSRS
Moderate error
B
CBS/YouGov
Moderate error
B
NBC/WSJ
Slight Dem lean
B-
Rasmussen
GOP house effect
C
Trafalgar Group
GOP house effect

How Political Polling Works

What's the difference between approval and favorability?

Approval asks "do you approve or disapprove of how this person is handling the job?" Favorability asks "is your overall impression of this person favorable or unfavorable?" The two numbers usually track but can diverge sharply. A president might be personally well-liked (high favorability) while presiding over an unpopular policy agenda (low approval), or vice versa.

What is the generic ballot, and how predictive is it?

The generic ballot asks respondents how they intend to vote for Congress in their district without naming specific candidates. The aggregate result has historically been one of the better single predictors of how many House seats each party will win, though it tends to overstate Democratic performance by roughly 2-3 points on average. Smart analysts subtract that adjustment before drawing conclusions.

What is a "house effect"?

Every pollster has methodological choices (whom they call, how they weight responses, what questions they ask, who their typical respondent is) that systematically push their results a little toward one party or the other. The average bias is called the pollster's house effect. Fox News has a small Republican lean; Quinnipiac has a small Democratic lean. The grades on this page already account for these effects.

What does "registered voter" vs "likely voter" mean?

"Registered voter" (RV) samples include everyone who is registered to vote, regardless of their actual likelihood of voting. "Likely voter" (LV) samples filter for people who are statistically likely to vote in the next election. Likely-voter screens are more accurate close to an election but introduce more methodological variance, since each pollster defines "likely" slightly differently.

What is the margin of error?

Margin of error reflects the uncertainty inherent in surveying a sample rather than the whole population. A poll with a 3-point margin of error and a result of 45-42 actually means the true number for the leading candidate is somewhere between 42% and 48%, and for the trailing candidate between 39% and 45%. Two polls with overlapping margins of error are not statistically different from each other.

How accurate were the polls in 2024?

2024 polls underestimated Trump's support nationally by about 2.3 points on average — smaller than the 4.5 point miss in 2020 but larger than the historical norm. The states that polls missed worst were Iowa, Florida, and Pennsylvania. Pollsters who used likely-voter screens and dialed-in cell phones (rather than online-only panels) generally outperformed.

Why are some polls labeled "partisan"?

A partisan poll is one commissioned by a political party, candidate, or advocacy group. These polls are not necessarily wrong but they have an obvious incentive to publish results favorable to their sponsor. We label them clearly. Aggregators usually weight partisan polls less heavily in their averages.

How often does new polling data come out?

Major pollsters release between one and four national surveys per month. State-level polls come out more often in election years. This page refreshes from VoteHub's polling aggregate twice daily, so any major poll released within the last 12 hours will appear here.

Methodology and Sources

Polling data on this page is aggregated from VoteHub, a free public polling API that pulls from hundreds of pollsters including Marist, Siena/NYT, Quinnipiac, Fox News, CNN, Emerson College, Ipsos, YouGov, Monmouth, Suffolk, and others. We refresh the data twice daily.

Pollster grades draw on archived data from FiveThirtyEight (now defunct, archive preserved by VoteHub) and 2024 polling averages from Split Ticket, weighted by historical accuracy, herding behavior, and average margin of error.

"5-poll average" stats in the hero bar are computed by averaging the five most recent polls in each category. We use a simple mean rather than a weighted aggregate to keep the headline numbers easy to interpret — the recent-polls table below each section shows the underlying data.

For broader election coverage, see our 2026 state primary calendar, our red states vs blue states map, and the 2026 redistricting tracker. For live prediction-market odds, see the ElectionOdds.com homepage.

Polling data via VoteHub