2026 Arizona elections


A general election will be held in the U.S. state of Arizona on November 3, 2026. Primary elections will take place on August 4, 2026. The state-wide races in Arizona as well as the 2026 [United States House of Representatives elections|House races] are expected to get significant attention due to its status as a battleground state. Arizona used to be a solid red state but had drifted into being a purple state by the 2020s, with Democrats holding both List of [United States Senators from Arizona|Senate seats] and the governorship, in addition to Democrat Joe Biden winning the state in the 2020 [United States presidential election in Arizona|2020 presidential election]. However, Republican Donald Trump won by a 5 point margin in 2024 [United States presidential election in Arizona|2024], showing his strongest performance out of every battleground state in that election. This is the first election cycle since 2014 that Arizona will not have a U.S. Senate election.

United States House of Representatives

Arizona has nine seats in the United States House of Representatives, which are currently held by three Democrats and six Republicans.
In the last 2024 [United States House of Representatives elections in Arizona|House election], Republicans won six seats, Democrats won three, with a total of 4 seats being decided by under 10 points in either direction.

Governor

Incumbent Democratic Governor Katie Hobbs is running for re-election to a second term in 2026. Hobbs narrowly defeated Republican nominee Kari Lake in 2022 with 50.32% of the vote. This is widely expected to be a close election.

Secretary of State

Incumbent Democratic secretary of state Adrian Fontes has declared his intention to run for a second term in 2026. He won in 2022 [Arizona Secretary of State election|2022] with 52.38% of the vote, giving him the biggest margin of victory out of every statewide Arizona Democrat in 2022.

Attorney General

Incumbent Democratic attorney general Kris Mayes has declared her intention to run for a second term in 2026. She won in 2022 [Arizona Attorney General election|2022] with 50.01% of the vote, making it the closest statewide race in Arizona in 2022.

State Treasurer

Incumbent Republican state treasurer Kimberly Yee is term limited and can not seek re-election for a third term. She won in 2022 with 55.67% of the vote, the best state-wide Republican showing in Arizona.

Superintendent of Public Instruction

Incumbent Republican Tom Horne is eligible to run for re-election in 2026. He won a close election against then incumbent Democrat Kathy Hoffman in 2022 [Arizona Superintendent of Public Instruction election|2022], with 50.18% of the vote. However, incumbent State treasurer Kimberly Yee has announced her intention to primary him for this position in 2026.

State Mine Inspector

Incumbent Republican Les Presmyk was appointed by Katie Hobbs on September 15, 2025, after Paul Marsh resigned and has announced his intention to run for a full term in 2026. Marsh, who won a full-term in 2022 with 98% against only a write-in Democratic candidate, had previously announced his intention to run for re-election in 2026.

Republican primary

Candidates

Declared

Democratic primary

Candidates

Declared
  • Brian Matlock, mechanical engineer

Corporation Commission

Two of the five seats on the Corporation Commission are up for election, elected by plurality block voting. Incumbents Kevin Thompson and Nick Myers, both Republicans, are running for re-election. The Arizona Freedom Caucus announced it would target Thompson and Myers with primary challenges from two state representatives.

Republican primary

Candidates

Declared

Democratic primary

Candidates

Declared

State Legislature

All 90 seats in both chambers of the Arizona State Legislature are up for election in 2026. Republicans held small majorities in both chambers, with a 17-13 majority in the State Senate, and 2024 [Arizona House of Representatives election|33-27] in the State House. These chambers will be highly competitive and are being targeted by Democrats.

Supreme Court

chief justice John Lopez IV is up for a retention election in 2026. He was appointed by former Governor Doug Ducey in 2016 and has not stated his intention to run again.

Ballot propositions

There are so far three ballot propositions which will appear before voters of Arizona in 2026.
Introduced by State House Speaker Steve Montenegro, would "Declare drug cartels to be terrorist organizations".
Sponsored by State Sen. Jake Hoffman, would "Prohibit the state and local governments from imposing taxes or fees based on vehicle miles traveled and from enacting rules to monitor or limit vehicle miles traveled without the person’s consent".
Sponsored by State Rep. Leo Biasiucci, would "Prohibit local government from imposing or increasing a tax on the sale of food items without voter approval and cap the tax rate at 2%".