Senedd constituencies and electoral regions


The Senedd constituencies and electoral regions are the electoral districts used to elect members of the Senedd to the Senedd, and have been used in some form since the first election of the then National Assembly for Wales in 1999.
There are currently forty single-member constituencies and five four-member regions. The five electoral regions are: Mid and West Wales, North Wales, South Wales Central, South Wales East, and South Wales West, with the forty constituencies listed below. Voting last took place in all districts in the 2021 Senedd election, and is not used for local government. The current boundaries were introduced for the 2007 Assembly election.
The constituencies were created through the Government of Wales Act 1998, which established the National Assembly for Wales. The Assembly's constituencies were initially linked to the boundaries used for UK Parliament constituencies in Wales, set by the UK Parliament's Boundary Commission for Wales, except a delay in implementing new boundaries between the 2007 Assembly election and the subsequent 2010 UK election. The Parliamentary Voting System and Constituencies Act 2011, unlinked the two sets of constituencies, meaning any changes to one set, no longer affected the other. Subsequently, the UK Parliament introduced new constituencies for its 2024 UK election, and the Democracy and Boundary Commission Cymru was set up in 2024 to conduct boundary reviews of Senedd constituencies, with the constituencies not been overseen by a statutory body prior to 2024.
As part of Senedd reforms, new boundaries will be introduced for the 2026 Senedd election following a boundary review, consisting of sixteen general ticket constituencies with Welsh-only names, while the electoral regions are being abolished. Another review will be conducted for the 2030 election.

History

Establishment

Following the 1997 Welsh devolution referendum, where a narrow majority voted in support of the creation of a devolved Welsh Assembly, constituencies of the devolved legislature were established.
Section 2 of the Government of Wales Act 1998 stipulates that the constituencies for the National Assembly for Wales be the same as the constituencies used for elections to the United Kingdom Parliament. The same act sets out the creation of five regions which would use the same borders as the five European Parliamentary constituencies in Wales which themselves were set out in the European Parliamentary Constituencies Order 1994, used for elections to the European Parliament between 1994 and 1999. The electoral regions set out are still used, despite the abolishment of the five European Parliamentary constituencies for an all-Wales constituency, and the withdrawal of the UK from the European Union. Although minor border adjustments to the regions have taken place.

2007 change in boundaries

In 2006, the Government of Wales Act 2006 was enacted. When enacted the act reinforced the link between Assembly and UK Parliamentary constituencies, and that the number of electoral regions is five.
Following the fifth periodic review of Westminster constituencies, new borders for the constituencies and electoral regions were defined by the Parliamentary Constituencies and Assembly Electoral Regions Order 2006.
The order detailed the abolition of three constituencies, with three new constituencies to replace them. Nine constituencies were subject to "substantial" border adjustments involving the transfer of more than 3,000 inhabitants between constituencies. A further eight constituencies were subject to boundary changes resulting in the redistribution of fewer than 3,000 inhabitants between each constituency, and a further four constituencies were subject to minor boundary adjustments that led to minimal transfers of inhabitants between constituencies. The remaining sixteen constituencies were not subject to any boundary or name modifications.
The three new constituencies straddled the border of the electoral regions of Mid and West Wales and North Wales, leading to adjustments in the boundaries of both electoral regions, in addition to minor adjustments to the constituency of Montgomeryshire also leading to minor regional boundary adjustments. In south Wales, the boundaries of the electoral regions, South Wales West, and South Wales Central were altered to accommodate changes to the boundaries of Bridgend, and Vale of Glamorgan constituencies.
The changes in the boundaries for constituencies and electoral regions of the Senedd came into force for the 2007 National Assembly for Wales election.

Delinking from UK parliament constituencies

Section 13 of the Parliamentary Voting System and Constituencies Act 2011 states that:
This details that any further changes to the UK Parliament constituencies in Wales specified in the act will not be applied to Assembly constituencies.
In a session of the House of Commons where the then secretary of state for Wales, Cheryl Gillan was questioned on the Labour party's opposition to the decoupling of the two constituencies, she replied:
Boundaries of Senedd constituencies and electoral regions were initially not overseen by any statutory review body, following the delinking of Senedd and UK Parliament constituencies in 2011. With the responsibility for proposing alterations to the boundaries of UK Parliament constituencies in Wales, and reporting to the UK Government, lay with the Boundary Commission for Wales. At the time, both constituencies had the same boundaries. Organisations such as the Electoral Reform Society Cymru indicated a preference for coterminosity. However, such coterminosity was merely desired and was not enforced by law, meaning any changes to UK Parliament constituencies in Wales did not need to be mirrored for Senedd constituencies. The 2023 review of Westminster constituencies reduced the number of UK Parliament constituencies in Wales from 40 to 32, and were used from the 2024 UK election. While the Senedd is to introduce larger constituencies composed of pairings of the 32 from 2026.

2020 renaming

On 6 May 2020, the Senedd and Elections Act 2020 came into force, renaming the Assembly constituencies and Assembly electoral regions of the National Assembly for Wales, to the Senedd constituencies and Senedd electoral regions of "Senedd Cymru" or "the Welsh Parliament", known in both Welsh and English as the Senedd.

2024–25 boundary review

The Senedd Cymru Act 2024, passed by the Senedd in May 2024, gave the responsibility for conducting boundary reviews of Senedd constituencies to the Democracy and Boundary Commission Cymru. The commission would be responsible to conduct reviews for specifically both the 2026 Senedd election and the 2030 Senedd election, as well as regular reviews thereafter. The 2026 review was time-constricted, therefore the 2030 review, the first full boundary review in 18 years, would provide the commission with more flexibility.
The Senedd Cymru Act 2024 legislated that the 2026 election should use 16 six-member constituencies, replacing the existing 40 constituencies and five regions, with the Democracy and Boundary Commission Cymru conducting the review. The law set out that they must be contiguous pairings of the 32 UK Parliament constituencies used in Wales since 2024, and to only use a single name in both Welsh and English, unless it could be considered unacceptable for a single name. The review commenced in July 2024, with initial proposals revealed in September 2024, and revised proposals in December 2024. A major change in the revised proposals was the use of mostly Welsh-language names only to meet the condition in law, therefore all had only one name, its Welsh name. The decision received support from Cymdeithas yr Iaith, but opposition from Andrew RT Davies, former leader of the Welsh Conservatives. In March 2025, the commission published its final determinations, for the 16 constituencies. The original initial proposal boundaries were re-adopted, while all constituencies were made to use Welsh-only names, with a reiteration of both support and opposition from Cymdeithas and Davies respectively, as well as consultation respondents. By law, the Senedd must put these final determinations into effect for the 2026 Senedd election without alteration.

Multi-member constituencies (from 2026)

The following is a list of the constituencies set to be used under the multi-member general ticket system from the 2026 Senedd election. All constituencies are named in Welsh and each constituency will have six members.
Senedd constituencyUK parliament constituencies
italic=noAberafan Maesteg
italic=noRhondda and Ogmore
Rhondda ac Ogwr
italic=noBangor Aberconwy
italic=noYnys Môn
italic=noBlaenau Gwent and Rhymney
Blaenau Gwent a Rhymni
italic=noCaerphilly
Caerffili
italic=noCardiff North
Gogledd Caerdydd
italic=noCardiff East
Dwyrain Caerdydd
italic=noCardiff West
Gorllewin Caerdydd
italic=noCardiff South and Penarth
De Caerdydd a Phenarth
italic=noNewport East
Dwyrain Casnewydd
italic=noNewport West and Islwyn
Gorllewin Casnewydd ac Islwyn
italic=noCeredigion Preseli
italic=noMid and South Pembrokeshire
Canol a De Sir Benfro
italic=noClwyd East
italic=noClwyd North
italic=noAlyn and Deeside
italic=noWrexham
Wrecsam
italic=noDwyfor Meirionnydd
italic=noMontgomeryshire and Glyndŵr
Maldwyn a Glyndŵr
italic=noCaerfyrddin
italic=noLlanelli
italic=noBrecon, Radnor and Cwm Tawe
italic=noNeath and Swansea East
Castell Nedd a Dwyrain Abertawe
italic=noSwansea West
Gorllewin Abertawe
italic=noGower
Gŵyr
italic=noMerthyr Tydfil and Aberdare
italic=noPontypridd
italic=noMonmouthshire
Sir Fynwy
italic=noTorfaen
italic=noVale of Glamorgan
Bro Morgannwg
italic=noBridgend
Pen-y-bont ar Ogwr