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F.Y.R. Macedonia in the Eurovision Song Contest

Macedonia
Yugoslavia
Republic of Macedonia
Member station Macedonian Radio Television
National selection events
Participation summary
Appearances 17 (8 finals)
First appearance 1998
Best result 12th: 2006
Worst result 16th SF: 2011, 2013
External links
MRT page
Macedonia's page at Eurovision.tv
Song contest current event.png For the most recent participation see
Macedonia in the Eurovision Song Contest 2017

Macedonia, presented in the contest as Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, has participated in the Eurovision Song Contest 17 times since its official debut in 1998. The country had attempted to participate in 1996, but failed to qualify from the audio-only qualifying round. Macedonia is one of the most unsuccessful countries in the contest, having failed to crack the Top 10 in the 8 appearances it has made it to the final. Macedonia's best result in the contest is Elena Risteska's 12th-place finish in 2006. Macedonia has failed to qualify from the semi-final round in nine of the last ten contests (2008–17), the exception being Kaliopi, who finished 13th in the 2012 final.

Macedonia's first appearance in the contest was in 1998. However, the country had already made efforts to enter the contest two years before at the Eurovision Song Contest 1996's pre-selection round, where it submitted its first song entry, "Samo ti" (Само ти) sung by Kaliopi, which failed to qualify to the final thus eliminating the nation from competing for the first time. Macedonia's efforts to enter the contest were again hindered in 1997, when another new system was introduced where countries with the lowest average scores over the previous four years were excluded from participating.

The country's best result was in 2006, when Elena Risteska sang "Ninanajna" (Нинанајна) in Athens, Greece and came 12th. Macedonia is the only country to have qualified from every semi-final from 2004 to 2007 (other countries have qualified for every final but due to them finishing in the top 10 the previous year, they did not have to compete in the semi-final). Despite never finishing in the top 10, their record of qualifying for every final was only broken in 2008, when the jury vote used in the semi-final chose Sweden as a finalist, despite Tamara, Vrčak and Adrian having come 10th in the televote and not saved by the jury. Since then, only in 2012 Macedonia have made the final.


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