For some parties, the numbers hint at expansion, revival and generational breakthroughs. For others, they raise deeper questions about leadership, organisational decline, ideological fatigue and the limits of welfare politics.
Also Read: The first verdict before the final one: BJP leads in Bengal, Assam; UDF ahead in Kerala while Vijay factor looms in TN
From Mamata Banerjee’s fight for survival in Bengal to Vijay’s disruptive arrival in Tamil Nadu, and from the Congress-led UDF’s possible comeback in Kerala to the BJP’s attempt to cement itself as India’s dominant pan-regional force, the 2026 exit polls are shaping up as much more than a preview of results day.
They are an early verdict on where Indian politics may be heading next.
West Bengal
What do the exit polls mean for the Trinamool Congress?
For the All India Trinamool Congress (TMC), the exit polls point to the most serious electoral challenge of the Mamata Banerjee era.Most projections suggest the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has either caught up with the ruling party or moved within striking distance of power in the 294-member Assembly. The poll of polls places both the BJP and TMC at 145 seats each — just short of the majority mark of 148.
| Poll agency | BJP | TMC | Others |
| People’s Pulse | 95–110 | 178–187 | 2–3 |
| P-Marq | 150–175 | 118–138 | 2–6 |
| JVC | 138–159 | 131–152 | 0–2 |
| Matrize | 146–161 | 125–140 | 6–10 |
| Poll of Polls | 145 | 145 | 5 |
For Mamata Banerjee, this election was never simply about retaining power. It was about protecting the political fortress she built over nearly 15 years.
If the exit polls translate into results, it would suggest that the BJP’s long-term organisational push into Bengal may finally have broken through the TMC’s welfare-heavy electoral coalition.
Also Read: Bengal on the brink? Exit polls project edge to BJP in a tight race with TMC in Assembly elections
The implications would be enormous.
A defeat — or even a severely reduced mandate — would weaken Banerjee’s national opposition credentials and intensify questions around whether the TMC’s model of welfare populism and Bengali sub-nationalism is beginning to hit political limits.
Yet the TMC also has reasons for caution against overreading the numbers.
Bengal has historically been one of the hardest states for pollsters to accurately decode. In 2021, several surveys projected a close fight or BJP surge after the party’s strong Lok Sabha performance in 2019. Instead, the TMC stormed back over 210 seats.
The party still believes women voters, welfare beneficiaries and rural Bengal may once again outperform polling assumptions.
What do the exit polls mean for the BJP in West Bengal?
For the BJP, the exit polls suggest that a decade-long eastern expansion strategy may finally be approaching its defining breakthrough.
Even projections that stop short of a majority point to dramatic growth in a state where the party was once electorally marginal.
If the BJP manages to form the government, it would fundamentally alter the national political map.
A Bengal victory would hand the BJP control over India’s third-largest state by population, deepen its footprint in eastern India and strengthen Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s claim of nationwide electoral dominance.
It would also validate the party’s strategy of combining aggressive cadre expansion, hyper-local caste and community mobilisation, central welfare delivery and polarised campaigning.
For Suvendu Adhikari and the Bengal BJP leadership, a strong performance would also mark political vindication after years of attempting to convert parliamentary momentum into Assembly power.
But the exit polls also expose a structural risk for the BJP.
If the party once again falls narrowly short despite massive campaigning, it could revive the perception that Bengal remains resistant to the BJP’s final push — a state where parliamentary gains do not automatically translate into Assembly victories.
What do the exit polls mean for Congress and the Left in West Bengal?
For the Congress and the Left Front, the exit polls underline how dramatically Bengal’s political landscape continues changing.
Most projections place them on the margins of the contest, with little indication that either formation has significantly recovered from the collapse of the old Left-era bipolar structure.
The larger danger for both lies not merely in losing seats, but in becoming electorally irrelevant in a state they once dominated.
The Left, which ruled Bengal uninterrupted for 34 years, now risks becoming a peripheral force trapped between the BJP’s aggressive opposition politics and Mamata Banerjee’s welfare-driven mass appeal.
For the Congress, Bengal increasingly resembles a state where it survives only through pockets rather than as a standalone political force.
If the BJP emerges stronger, the anti-TMC opposition space may narrow even further, leaving little room for either the Congress or the Left to reclaim statewide relevance.
Assam
What do the exit polls mean for the BJP in Assam?
The exit polls in Assam point towards another decisive consolidation of BJP power under Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma.
| Poll agency | NDA | CONG+ | Others |
| P-Marq | 82–94 | 30–40 | 1–5 |
| Matrize | 85–95 | 25–32 | 6–12 |
| JVC | 88–101 | 23–33 | 2–5 |
| People’s Pulse | 68–72 | 22–26 | 5 |
| Janmat Polls | 87–98 | 29–30 | 0 |
| Poll of Polls | 92 | 30 | 4 |
A strong mandate would confirm Assam as one of the BJP’s most secure political strongholds outside the Hindi belt.
It would also reinforce Sarma’s growing stature within the national BJP ecosystem as one of the party’s most electorally effective regional leaders.
The numbers suggest that despite anti-incumbency and opposition consolidation attempts, the BJP may have succeeded in maintaining its broad coalition of Assamese nationalism, Hindu consolidation and welfare-driven governance.
For the BJP nationally, another comfortable Assam victory would strengthen its strategic hold over the Northeast and further cement the region’s transformation from a Congress bastion into a saffron stronghold.
What do the exit polls mean for Congress in Assam?
For the Congress, the Assam projections point to a familiar but increasingly urgent problem: pockets of revival without statewide conversion.
While the opposition alliance appears to have retained support in certain regions and communities, the exit polls suggest it may still be far from mounting a serious statewide challenge to the BJP.
The larger concern for the Congress is strategic.
Assam was once among the party’s most important eastern strongholds. Repeated defeats now risk normalising BJP dominance across the Northeast.
If the projections hold, the Congress may once again confront questions around leadership coherence, organisational depth and whether anti-incumbency alone is enough to challenge the BJP’s highly centralised election machinery.
Tamil Nadu
What do the exit polls mean for the DMK?
The exit polls suggest that M.K. Stalin and the DMK-led alliance remain ahead in Tamil Nadu — but with a significantly more complicated political landscape emerging underneath.
| Poll agency | NDA | SPA | Others |
| Axis My India | 22–32 | 92–100 | 98–120 |
| People’s Pulse | 65–80 | 125–145 | 2–6 |
| Matrize | 87–100 | 122–132 | 10–18 |
| P-Marq | 65–85 | 125–145 | 16–32 |
| Poll of Polls | 95 | 122 | 17 |
Most agencies project the DMK-led Secular Progressive Alliance comfortably above the majority mark of 118.
For Stalin, a second straight victory would be historically significant.
Tamil Nadu has long witnessed cyclical anti-incumbency between the DMK and AIADMK. Breaking that cycle would suggest the DMK has successfully converted welfare governance and administrative stability into a durable electoral coalition.
But the exit polls also contain warning signs.
The rise of Vijay’s Tamilaga Vettri Kazhagam (TVK) appears to have disrupted traditional vote arithmetic, especially among younger and urban voters.
Even where TVK does not win seats, its emergence could reshape future elections by fragmenting the anti-DMK vote or eating into sections of the DMK’s aspirational urban base.
The Axis My India projection — which places the TVK-led bloc between 98 and 120 seats — is especially striking because it hints at a potentially dramatic realignment of Tamil Nadu politics into a genuine three-cornered contest.
What do the exit polls mean for the AIADMK?
For the AIADMK, the exit polls are a reminder of how difficult the post-Jayalalithaa era continues to be.
While the party remains competitive in pockets such as the Kongu belt and parts of northern Tamil Nadu, most surveys suggest it may still be unable to reclaim statewide dominance.
The biggest threat may not simply be the DMK. It may be Vijay.
TVK’s emergence directly targets sections of voters the AIADMK and NDA hoped to consolidate — especially younger voters, urban middle classes and politically disengaged anti-DMK voters. If TVK continues to grow, the AIADMK risks being squeezed between the DMK’s welfare-heavy incumbency advantage and Vijay’s aspirational outsider politics.
For a party still attempting to rebuild after the deaths of J. Jayalalithaa and M. Karunanidhi reshaped Tamil Nadu politics, the exit polls suggest the road back to power may become even more fragmented.
What do the exit polls mean for Vijay and TVK?
The exit polls may have delivered the biggest symbolic victory to Vijay even before counting day.
Whether TVK wins a handful of seats or performs beyond expectations, the party already appears to have altered the conversation in Tamil Nadu politics.
The numbers suggest Vijay has emerged as a serious political magnet, sometimes referred to as the ‘X Factor’, among younger voters and first-time entrants to the electorate.
His anti-corruption messaging, governance-focused campaign and outsider positioning appear to have resonated with urban aspirational voters looking beyond the traditional Dravidian framework.
But the exit polls also underline the central question around TVK: can social popularity become electoral machinery?
Tamil Nadu elections have historically depended as much on booth-level organisation, caste alliances and cadre networks as charisma.
If the stronger TVK projections prove accurate, Vijay may emerge not merely as a spoiler but as a long-term third pole capable of fundamentally altering Tamil Nadu’s two-party equilibrium.
What do the exit polls mean for the BJP in Tamil Nadu?
For the BJP, the Tamil Nadu projections remain deeply mixed.
While the party appears stronger than it was a decade ago, the exit polls suggest it may still be struggling to independently break through in a state where Dravidian politics remains structurally dominant.
The BJP’s alliance with the AIADMK appears to have helped it stay electorally relevant, but the emergence of TVK complicates the opposition arithmetic.
If Vijay continues to attract anti-DMK and youth-heavy voters, it could limit the BJP-led NDA’s long-term expansion potential in the state.
At the same time, even incremental gains in Tamil Nadu would remain strategically valuable for the BJP nationally because the state represents one of the party’s last major southern frontiers.
Kerala
What do the exit polls mean for the UDF and Congress?
The Kerala exit polls suggest the Congress-led United Democratic Front may be on the verge of a major political comeback after a decade in opposition.
| Poll agency | UDF | LDF | Others |
| Axis My India | 78–90 | 49–62 | 0–3 |
| Matrize | 70–75 | 60–65 | 2–4 |
| P-Marq | 72–79 | 62–69 | 3 |
| People’s Pulse | 75–85 | 55–65 | 0– |
For the Congress, a Kerala victory would carry significance far beyond the state. At a time when the party continues to struggle in several regions nationally, reclaiming Kerala would provide one of its most important psychological and organisational boosts.
The projections suggest voters may be reverting to Kerala’s traditional pattern of alternating between the UDF and LDF.
If the Congress returns to power, it would strengthen the party’s claim that anti-incumbency against the Left remains structurally embedded in Kerala politics despite Pinarayi Vijayan’s personal popularity.
A victory would also give the Congress a stronger southern anchor at a time when it is attempting to rebuild nationally.
What do the exit polls mean for the LDF in Kerala?
For the Left Democratic Front and Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan, the exit polls suggest that the political durability of the Left may finally be under strain after two consecutive terms.
The LDF made history in 2021 by breaking Kerala’s decades-old pattern of alternating governments.
But if the exit polls hold, the coalition may now be confronting accumulated anti-incumbency, governance fatigue and voter desire for rotation.
For the CPI(M), the implications are especially significant nationally.
Kerala remains the Left’s single most important surviving bastion in India.
A defeat would not erase the Left’s organisational depth in the state, but it would reinforce the shrinking geography of Left power nationally.
What do the exit polls mean for the BJP in Kerala?
The exit polls suggest the BJP may once again remain a marginal player in Kerala despite sustained campaigning and attempts to expand beyond isolated pockets. For the BJP, Kerala remains both an ideological and electoral challenge.
The party has repeatedly attempted to break the UDF-LDF bipolar structure but has struggled to convert vote share into seats.
If the projections hold, the BJP may once again be forced to confront the reality that while it has expanded nationally, Kerala continues to resist its larger political narrative.
Puducherry
What do the exit polls mean for the NDA in the Union Territory?
The Puducherry exit polls suggest the NDA may retain a clear structural advantage in the Union Territory.
| Poll agency | NDA | SPA | Others |
| Axis My India | 16–20 | 6–8 | 2–7 |
| People’s Pulse | 16–19 | 10–12 | 1–2 |
| JVC Exit Poll | 15–17 | 11–13 | 1–3 |
| Praja Poll | 19–25 | 6–10 | 0 |
| Poll of Polls | 19 | 8 | 3 |
For the BJP and its allies, a strong Puducherry performance would reinforce the party’s growing southern footprint.
Though small in size, Puducherry remains politically symbolic because it offers the BJP another opportunity to demonstrate coalition viability in southern India.
The numbers suggest the NDA may have successfully consolidated older voters and traditional support blocs.
What do the exit polls mean for Congress in Puducherry?
The Puducherry exit polls suggest the NDA may retain a clear structural advantage in the Union Territory.
Also Read: Puducherry exit polls 2026: NDA likely to win 16-19 seats, TVK may gain youth vote
For the BJP and its allies, a strong Puducherry performance would reinforce the party’s growing southern footprint.
Though small in size, Puducherry remains politically symbolic because it offers the BJP another opportunity to demonstrate coalition viability in southern India.
The numbers suggest the NDA may have successfully consolidated older voters and traditional support blocs.

