2026 UK Local Elections Explained – The Knowledge Loop

2026 UK Local Elections Explained

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Current Affairs · Guide
2026 UK Local Elections Explained
Reform surge, Green breakthrough and what the 7 May 2026 results mean for your council, your household and your community — written in plain English, without political spin.

Published 10 May 2026
20 min read
Local Government
Reform UK
Green Party
Council Tax
New

What this guide is about
On 7 May 2026, English voters went to the polls for the most consequential local council elections in a generation. Reform UK made sweeping gains. Labour suffered its heaviest local losses in decades. The Green Party broke records. This guide explains what happened, why it matters, and what the shift in council control means in practice for households across England.

Key terms defined
Term What it means
Council A local authority responsible for services in your area — refuse collection, social care, planning, roads, libraries, parks and housing support.
No Overall Control When no single party has a majority of seats. Decisions must be reached through negotiation or coalition — which can slow decision-making.
Band D Council Tax The standard reference rate used to compare council tax levels nationally. Your actual bill depends on your property band.
National Equivalent Vote A calculation estimating what local election results would mean if applied to a general election. Illustrative — not a prediction.
Climate Emergency Declaration A commitment adopted by many councils pledging to reduce emissions. Several Reform councils have rescinded theirs since 2025.
Section 114 Notice Issued when a council cannot balance its budget — effectively a declaration of financial distress. Prevents new spending commitments.
Unitary Authority A single-tier council combining county and district functions. Many councils are being reorganised into unitary authorities under devolution plans.
Exceptional Financial Support Emergency government funding for councils that cannot balance their budgets. 29 councils received £1.33bn in 2025–26.

Part 1 — What happened: the results

Elections were held on 7 May 2026 for 5,066 seats across 136 English local authorities. Voter turnout was the highest since 2010.

1,428
Seats won by Reform UK
+1,426 from 2022

+363
Green seats gained
4 councils won

−1,375
Labour seats lost
34 councils lost

13
Councils won
by Reform UK

22
Councils in
no overall control

27%
Reform UK equivalent vote
vs Labour 15%

Important caveat on the National Equivalent Vote
If applied to a general election, Reform would have 284 seats, Labour 110, Conservatives 96, Lib Dems 80. This is illustrative only — local elections differ from general elections in turnout, candidate quality and tactical voting. It signals public mood, not the next general election result.

Part 2 — What each party’s result means
Reform UK — the big winner

Reform won 1,428 seats and control of 13 councils — including Durham, Nottinghamshire, Lincolnshire, Kent and Staffordshire. Nigel Farage spent over £5 million on the campaign.

The promises: Freeze or cut council tax, scrap net zero, slash bureaucracy, run councils with a “DOGE-style” efficiency focus.

The 2025 reality check: Every Reform council elected in 2025 raised council tax — by an average of 3.94% for 2026-27. Claimed savings of over £700m have been disputed by accountants. Care home closure plans in Derbyshire and Lancashire triggered fierce opposition — including from Reform’s own grassroots members.

Green Party — historic breakthrough

The Greens gained 363 seats and won 4 councils. They elected their first ever directly elected mayor — Zoë Garbett in Hackney, ending 55 years of Labour control. They are now the second party on Manchester City Council with 21 councillors.

What drove it: A platform combining climate action with housing affordability — rent controls, warm homes, free retrofits. They won in urban, multicultural, working-class wards Labour had held for decades.

The challenge ahead: Running councils is different from campaigning. Green administrations face the same financial constraints as every other authority — ballooning social care demand, limited central funding and the complexities of local government reorganisation.

Labour — historic losses

Labour lost 1,375 seats and 34 councils — including Hackney, Gateshead and Southwark, which it had controlled for generations. Losses came from both directions: Reform took traditional working-class heartlands in the North and Midlands; the Greens took urban progressive voters in London and major cities.

Conservatives — collapse in their heartlands

The Conservatives lost 552 seats and 6 councils — including collapse in county council strongholds like Norfolk, West Sussex and Essex. Reform is now the dominant force across much of rural and suburban England. Whether the two right-of-centre parties reach a formal arrangement will define Conservative politics ahead of the next general election.

Part 3 — What it means for your household
Council tax

Regardless of which party controls your council, the financial pressure on local government is severe. The government allows councils to raise Band D council tax by up to 5% per year without a referendum. Most are raising it close to the maximum.

Council type What to expect
Reform councils All raised council tax in 2025 despite promises to freeze or cut it. Average rise: 3.94% for 2026-27. Residents should expect further rises as councils confront structural funding shortfalls.
Green councils Green policy supports fairer national funding but councils have limited powers. Council tax rises are likely given the same structural pressures every council faces.
No overall control 29 councils received £1.33bn in Exceptional Financial Support from government in 2025-26. No overall control increases uncertainty and risk of service disruption.

Social care

Adult social care and children’s SEND services account for up to 78% of some councils’ annual budgets. This is where the financial pressure falls hardest.

  • In Derbyshire, Reform planned to close 8 care homes — described as a “betrayal of local people”
  • In Lancashire, plans to close 5 care homes and 5 day centres were abandoned after grassroots opposition — including from Reform’s own members
  • Your right to a social care needs assessment is statutory — it applies regardless of who controls your council
  • SEND services are in crisis across all councils regardless of party — the election changes who is in charge, not the underlying funding gap

Part 4 — Climate, net zero and your home

The 2026 results create a stark geographical divide on climate policy. What your council does — or stops doing — on net zero and home energy efficiency has direct financial implications for households.

LSE Grantham Research Institute finding — March 2026
7 out of 9 Reform-controlled councils scrapped their climate targets after the 2025 elections. 3 successfully rescinded their Climate Emergency Declarations. Climate denial was expressed by Reform councillors in at least 5 councils — Kent, Durham, Nottinghamshire, Lincolnshire and Lancashire.

Schemes cancelled or at risk in Reform areas
  • Electric vehicle upgrade projects and heat pump installations — Durham
  • Solar investment on council buildings — Durham (£25m saving claimed; disputed)
  • Climate Change, Biodiversity and Carbon Reduction Committee — Derbyshire (scrapped the week Reform took power)
  • Net zero carbon targets — West Northamptonshire, North Northamptonshire and others
  • Free home retrofit assessment schemes in Reform-controlled areas
What Green councils are doing
Council Climate action
Mid Suffolk (Green since 2023) Running the Cosy Homes scheme — free retrofit assessments and grant-backed support for home insulation and energy efficiency.
Lewes (Green-Lib Dem coalition) Cabinet backed retrofit finance schemes for low-income households.
Wealden (coalition) Adopted a 2025 climate strategy centred on fabric-first home decarbonisation.
Hackney (Green mayor from 2026) Mayor Zoë Garbett campaigned on warm homes, cleaner air and better transport. 2026-27 programmes to be confirmed.

What this means for your energy bills
Home retrofit — insulation, heat pumps, solar panels — is the single most effective way to permanently reduce household energy bills. Council support schemes make retrofit accessible to those who could not navigate the system alone. Reform councils withdrawing from these schemes does not prevent you accessing national government grants — but it removes the local infrastructure that helps people find and apply for them.

Part 5 — Two Englands: the practical divergence

The 2026 results accelerate a growing divide. Where you live will increasingly determine what local services look like and what support is available to you.

Reform-controlled areas
  • Council tax rises despite pre-election promises of cuts
  • Climate targets scrapped or weakened
  • Risk of care home closures and privatisation
  • Net zero language removed from planning documents
  • Claimed savings figures disputed by independent analysts
Green-controlled areas
  • Free or subsidised home retrofit assessments
  • Rent control advocacy and affordable housing priority
  • Enhanced climate emergency policies
  • More favourable planning for low-carbon development
  • Same financial pressures as every council — tax rises likely

10 key facts at a glance
1
Reform UK won 1,428 seats and control of 13 councils on 7 May 2026 — their biggest ever electoral performance.
2
Labour lost 1,375 seats and 34 councils. The Greens won 363 seats, 4 councils and their first ever directly elected mayor in Hackney.
3
22 councils fell into no overall control — creating uncertainty for service delivery and decision-making.
4
Every Reform council elected in 2025 raised council tax — averaging 3.94% for 2026-27 — despite pre-election promises to freeze or cut it.
5
7 out of 9 Reform councils scrapped their climate targets since May 2025 (LSE Grantham Research Institute, March 2026).
6
Reform councils spent up to 78% of their annual budget on statutory services including social care — severely limiting room for cuts elsewhere.
7
29 councils received £1.33bn in Exceptional Financial Support in 2025-26. The financial crisis in local government predates and transcends the election.
8
On the National Equivalent Vote, Reform would have 284 seats if applied to a general election — more than Labour and Conservatives combined.
9
The Green Party won 14% of the equivalent vote — level with the Liberal Democrats — and is now the second party on Manchester City Council.
10
Voter turnout on 7 May 2026 was the highest in a local election since 2010, reflecting the stakes felt across the political spectrum.

What you can do
Find out who controls your council
  • Go to gov.uk/find-local-council — enter your postcode to find your council
  • Check your council’s website to see which party is now in administration
  • Sign up to council newsletters or attend public cabinet meetings
If you are worried about council tax
  • Check whether you qualify for Council Tax Support — up to 100% discount for low-income households
  • Apply through your council’s website — criteria vary by area
  • Use turn2us.org.uk to check your full benefit entitlement
If you want home energy support
  • Check the Great British Insulation Scheme — available nationally regardless of your council’s political stance
  • Contact your energy supplier about the Warm Home Discount (£150 off winter bills)
  • Use simpleenergyadvice.org.uk to find retrofit grants in your area
If you need social care support
  • Your right to a social care needs assessment is statutory — it applies regardless of which party controls your council
  • Contact your council’s adult social care team directly
  • If a care home near you is threatened with closure, attend council meetings and contact your local councillor

A note on perspective
This guide presents the facts without taking a political position. The 2026 results reflect genuine and deep divisions about what kind of country people want to live in — on climate, public services, immigration and economic management. What matters for this guide is what those choices mean for households in practice.


Published by The Knowledge Loop Company | www.theknowledgeloop.com
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