Elections in Türkiye

Updated April 2026 — reflecting the post-2017 executive presidential system.

The Constitution of Türkiye (1982, as amended) defines the country’s electoral framework. Following the constitutional amendments approved in the referendum of 16 April 2017, which entered into force after the elections of 24 June 2018, Türkiye transitioned from a parliamentary system to an executive presidential system.

Elections are held according to a proportional representation system in a single stage. They adhere to the principles of general, equal, secret, and direct voting, with universal suffrage and the public counting and tallying of votes (Constitution, Art. 67). All elections are administered and supervised by the Supreme Election Council (Yüksek Seçim Kurulu, YSK).

How the system works

Parliamentary and presidential elections are held on the same day every five years. Voters cast two ballots: one for President and one for a closed party list in their electoral district. Seats in the Grand National Assembly are distributed by the D’Hondt method among parties that clear a 7 % nationwide threshold (lowered from 10 % by Law No. 7393 in 2022). The President is elected by an absolute majority of valid votes, with a runoff between the top two candidates if no one reaches a majority in the first round.

Key parameters of the current electoral framework
ParameterValueSource
National parliamentary threshold7 %Law No. 2839, as amended by Law No. 7393 (2022)
Seat allocation methodD’HondtLaw No. 2839, Art. 33
Number of parliamentary seats600Constitution, Art. 75 (post-2017)
Term of office5 years (concurrent)Constitution, Arts. 77, 101
Voting age18Constitution, Art. 67
Candidate eligibility age18 (deputies); 40 (President)Constitution, Arts. 76, 101
Electoral districts (2023 election)87YSK Decision 2023/224

Government structure at a glance

Legislative

The unicameral Grand National Assembly (TBMM): 600 deputies, five-year term, concurrent with the presidential election.

Executive

The President is Head of State and the sole holder of executive authority, supported by Vice Presidents and a Cabinet appointed without a vote of confidence.

Judicial

An independent judiciary divided into civil/criminal and administrative branches, supervised by the Council of Judges and Prosecutors (HSK).

Higher Courts

Anayasa Mahkemesi, Yargıtay, Danıştay, Uyuşmazlık Mahkemesi, Sayıştay — the supreme bodies of Turkish law.

YSK

The Supreme Election Council, the high-judicial body that runs every election and certifies the results.

Parties & Voting

The constitutional framework for parties, voting rights, financing, and the Constitutional Court’s audit role.

Why the site was rebuilt (April 2026)

The previous version of turkishelections.com (2003–2017) described the parliamentary-republic system that ended with the 2017 referendum. This refresh updates every page for the executive presidential system, the 2022 electoral-law amendments, and the abolition of the military court system. A dedicated page, The 2017 Constitutional Reform, summarises what changed and why.

A note on currency of information

Pages that cite live figures — current cabinet, party chairs, parliamentary seat distribution — are stamped with an “as of” date. The institutional and legal framework described elsewhere is stable and changes only with constitutional or statutory amendments.