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Statewide opinion polling for the United States presidential election, 2016

United States presidential election polling, 2016
United States
2012 ←
November 8, 2016 (2016-11-08) → 2020
Leading presidential 2016 candidate by electoral vote count. States in gray have no polling data. Polls from lightly shaded states are older than September 1, 2016. This map only represents the most recent statewide polling data; it is not a prediction for the 2016 election.

General election polls 2016 Clinton v Trump.svg

    Hillary Clinton 210
    Donald Trump 139*
  Margin of error between Clinton and Trump
176*
  Margin of error between Trump and McMullin
6
  No data
4

*No margin of error recorded for Nebraska's congressional districts. Maine and Nebraska both award 1 electoral vote per congressional district and 2 statewide electoral votes. Trump leads in Nebraska's 1st congressional district and Nebraska's 3rd congressional district while Clinton leads in Maine's 1st congressional district. Nebraska's 2nd congressional district could possibly be within the margin of error and Maine's 2nd congressional district is within the margin of error.

(270 electoral votes needed to win)


Incumbent before election

Barack Obama
Democratic

President-elect

TBD


General election polls 2016 Clinton v Trump.svg

*No margin of error recorded for Nebraska's congressional districts. Maine and Nebraska both award 1 electoral vote per congressional district and 2 statewide electoral votes. Trump leads in Nebraska's 1st congressional district and Nebraska's 3rd congressional district while Clinton leads in Maine's 1st congressional district. Nebraska's 2nd congressional district could possibly be within the margin of error and Maine's 2nd congressional district is within the margin of error.

(270 electoral votes needed to win)

Barack Obama
Democratic

TBD

This article is a collection of statewide polls for the United States presidential election, 2016. The polls listed here provide early data on opinion polling between the Democratic candidate, the Republican candidate, the Libertarian candidate, and the Green candidate. Prior to the parties' conventions, presumptive candidates were included in the polls. Not all states will conduct polling for the election due to various factors. States that are considered swing states usually put out more polls as more attention is given to the results. For determining a statistical tie, the margin of error provided by the polling source is applied to the result for each candidate. This article displays each candidate's potential electoral vote total and is not a prediction of the current state of the election.


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