Finding 1
More candidates are running than in 2024
Across State House, State Senate, and U.S. House races, Georgia’s 2026 primary-stage field includes 620 major-party candidates, up 23.0% from 504 in 2024. This increase is not evenly distributed across parties or offices, but the topline trend is clear: more candidates are entering district-level races this cycle.
This shift is meaningful because candidate volume is one of the simplest indicators of electoral supply. A larger candidate supply doesn't necessarily translate to more meaningful voter choice in every district, but it does demonstrate a higher level of interest among people seeking office than Georgia saw in 2024.
Total major-party candidates by year
Qualified primary candidates (State House, State Senate, U.S. House)
Why this matters beyond 2026
This project is designed to make voter choice visible. In some parts of Georgia, competition is growing. In others, it is thinning or absent altogether. The 2026 primary ballot cannot be changed. But mapping these patterns still matters. It helps voters, researchers, organizers, donors, and future candidates understand where democratic competition is weakest, and where stronger civic pipelines may need to be built over time.
Finding 2
Nearly 1 in 4 State House districts are uncontested this year
Despite the larger candidate field statewide, many districts still offer limited voter choice. In 53 State House and State Senate districts, exactly one major-party candidate is running. All U.S. House primaries in Georgia are contested this year.
That is an important reminder that statewide candidate growth and district-level voter choice are not the same thing. Georgia may have more candidates overall in 2026, but that increase has not eliminated uncontested primaries in nearly a quarter of all State House districts and several more State Senate districts.
Uncontested districts
How 2026 uncontested districts are distributed across offices
Total
53
uncontested districts
State House
44 districts
83.0% of all no-competition districts
24.4% of State House districts
State Senate
9 districts
17.0% of all no-competition districts
16.1% of State Senate districts
Finding 3
Uncontested districts are more evenly split between parties than they were in 2024
Democrats in 2026 accounted for a slightly larger share of uncontested district primaries. Democrats are the sole major-party candidate in 28 of the state’s 53 uncontested districts, or 52.8% of the total. Republicans accounted for the remaining 25 districts, or 47.2%. In contrast, Republicans in 2024 accounted for nearly 6 out of 10 uncontested primaries across the state.
Uncontested districts by major party
How district primaries with exactly one major-party candidate were split between Democrats and Republicans in 2024 and 2026
Finding 4
Most uncontested districts are incumbent-held seats, not open races
Most uncontested districts in 2026 feature incumbents already holding the seat. In 51 of the state’s 53 uncontested districts, the sole major-party candidate is an incumbent, or 96.2% of the total. Only 2 uncontested districts are open-seat races.
This pattern indicates that many uncontested districts are not simply vacant openings. In 2026, they are more often seats already held by candidates running without a major-party challenger.
Uncontested districts in 2026
Most feature incumbents already holding the seat
Finding 5
Several districts remained uncontested across both cycles
Not all uncontested districts in 2026 are newly uncontested. 27 districts were uncontested in both 2024 and 2026, meaning the same pattern appeared in consecutive cycles.
That continuity suggests the absence of contested primaries is not limited to a single cycle in every part of the state. In some districts, uncontested elections appeared in both the 2024 and 2026 primary stages.
Districts uncontested in both 2024 and 2026
Grouped by office
State House
State Senate
Looking ahead
Where we go from here
This project documents where choice exists now. Over time, these patterns may also help inform future research, candidate development, civic organizing, and public understanding.
Definitions
This analysis focuses on primary-stage competition among major-party candidates. Throughout the page, “uncontested” refers to districts where exactly one major-party candidate is running.
Limitations
Candidate volume and uncontested districts do not capture every dimension of electoral competition. They are best understood as practical indicators of how much choice is available to voters at the primary stage.
Methodology
These findings compare Georgia’s 2024 and 2026 primary-stage candidate filings across State House, State Senate, and U.S. House races using a consistent major-party competition framework.