2025 Italian local elections


The 2025 Italian local elections were held at the municipal level, where the first round were held between April and May and run-off rounds were held on 8 and 9 June of the same year, concurrently with the 2025 Italian referendum. In Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol, the elections were held on 4 May. In the Aosta Valley, the elections were held in the autumn. In the 4 municipalities voting in Friuli-Venezia Giulia, the elections were held on 13 and 14 April, with a possible run-off round on 27 and 28 April.
For municipalities that renewed the municipal council in 2020, the vote was postponed to spring 2026; this delay was due to the postponement of the 2020 Italian local elections to September, caused by the COVID-19 pandemic in Italy. In ordinary Italian regions, the consultations only concerned municipalities with early elections. The municipal elections took place in 468 comuni, of which there were 75 municipalities with a population greater than 15,000 inhabitants and 393 with a population lower.

Summary of Municipal Elections

Municipal elections in major municipalities

Following the first-round vote in the 31 major municipalities:
Centre-left won in 9; Centre-right in 4; Right in 1; Others in 6; 13 municipalities proceeded to a runoff.

Municipal elections in provincial capitals

In provincial capitals, the center-left won in the first round in 2 cities, Genoa and Ravenna, while in 2 others, Taranto and Matera, a runoff was needed. In Matera, the outcome was anatra zoppa : the elected mayor was from the centre-right coalition, but the lists supporting the centre-left candidate won a majority of votes in the first round, thus they have a majority of council seats.

Municipal elections

Aosta Valley

Aosta

Valdostan Union, Autonomists of the Centre and Democratic Party formed a coalition. PD vetoed the inclusion of Forza Italia, and UV and AdC vetoed Civic NetworkGreens and Left Alliance.

Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol

Elections were held in 265 municipal councils in Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol. Results shown correspond to the 38 higher municipalities including the two provincial capitals of Bolzano and Trent.

Autonomous Province of Bolzano">Province of Bolzano">Autonomous Province of Bolzano

Bolzano (provincial capital)
Candidates made official on 18 March 2025.
The mayoralty flipped from the centre-left to the centre-right.
Bruneck
No coalitions were formed in the local election in Bruneck as all parties ran separately.
Merano

Autonomous Province of Trentino">Province of Trentino">Autonomous Province of Trentino

Source of all results for Trentino Province:
''Candidates made official on 19 March 2025.''
Aldeno
Altopiano della Vigolana
Arco
Directly-elected Mayor
Party-list
Avio
Directly-elected Mayor
Party-list
Baselga di Pinè
Borgo Valsugana
Directly-elected Mayor
Party-list
Brentonico

Friuli-Venezia Giulia

Elections were held in 4 municipal councils in Friuli-Venezia Giulia.

Higher municipalities

Pordenone
Monfalcone
The election in Monfalcone had high media coverage during the campaign period due to the presence of an Islamist municipal list called Plural Italy led by candidate for mayor Bou Konate, a Senegalese Muslim. The list only missed winning a single council seat by a mere 0.06%, therefore barely missing the electoral threshold of 3%. The League within the centre-right coalition won the election in a landslide with 70.87%.

Lower municipalities

[Nimis]
[San Pier d'Isonzo]

Liguria

[Metropolitan [City of Genoa]]

Genoa
The election took place on the 25–26 May 2025 with Silvia Salis winning.
Orero">Orero, Liguria">Orero
[Rossiglione]

[Province of Imperia]

[Vallecrosia]

[Province of Savona]

[Sassello]

Veneto

Metropolitan City of Venice

Santa Maria di Sala

Provincial elections

Election of the President of the Province

It is important to note that six Sicilian provinces were provisionally led from 15 August 2015 by an extraordinary commissioner via regional appointment and thus 27 April election was to elect a new provincial president.

Summary of elected Provincial presidents

The Provincial presidents won by the centre-right, centre-left and others category include each two presidents elected in Sicily, previously governed as commissariats and therefore not bound to any coalition.