News and analysis right to your inbox. Click to get Ballotpedia’s newsletters!

Redistricting in New York ahead of the 2026 elections

From Ballotpedia
Jump to: navigation, search
Election Policy VNT Logo.png

Redistricting

State legislative and congressional redistricting after the 2020 census

General information
State-by-state redistricting proceduresMajority-minority districtsGerrymandering
The 2020 cycle
United States census, 2020Congressional apportionmentRedistricting committeesDeadlines2022 House elections with multiple incumbentsNew U.S.House districts created after apportionmentCongressional mapsState legislative mapsLawsuitsStatus of redistricting after the 2020 census
Redrawn maps
Redistricting before 2024 electionsRedistricting before 2026 elections
Ballotpedia's Election Administration Legislation Tracker



BP-Initials-UPDATED.png Redistricting is the process of enacting new district boundaries for elected offices, particularly for offices in the U.S. House of Representatives and state legislatures. This article covers redistricting activity in New York after the 2024 elections and before the 2026 elections.



On February 28, 2024, Gov. Kathy Hochul (D) signed a new congressional map into law. The state Assembly voted 115-35 to approve the map on February 27. The state Senate voted 45-18 to approve the map the same day.[1][2][3]

According to Nicholas Fandos of The New York Times, "Although a pair of swing districts would become more Democratic, lawmakers in Albany left the partisan makeup of 24 of the state’s 26 districts largely intact. The middle-ground approach reflected a desire to avoid another protracted court fight like the one in New York that helped swing control of the House to Republicans in 2022, while still better positioning Democrats in key districts."[2]

On January 21, 2026, state judge Jeffrey Pearlman ruled that New York's 11th Congressional District unconstitutionally diluted Black and Latino voting power and ordered the state's redistricting commission to redraw the congressional map by February 6, 2026.[4]

This article documents the redistricting effort in New York ahead of the 2026 elections. To read about redistricting in New York after the 2020 census, click here.

Click below to read more about:
  • New York redistricting
    New York's mid-decade congressional redistricting
  • Court challenges
    Litigation over the redrawn map
  • National context
    Redistricting in other states ahead of the 2026 elections


Redistricting in New York ahead of the 2026 elections

On January 21, 2026, a state judge ruled that the 11th District unconstitutionally diluted Black and Latino voting power, ordering the state's redistricting commission to redraw the map.[4] Republicans appealed the ruling on January 26, 2026.[5]

Comparison of old and new congressional map

The map below reflects New York's current congressional boundaries, enacted on February 28, 2024. If a new map is passed, this section will show a comparison of the old and new map.

Timeline of mid-decade redistricting in New York

The timeline below tracks New York redistricting updates ahead of the 2026 elections, including map proposal and approval and major court filings. For more information about litigation over the new congressional map, click here.

  • February 4, 2026

    The state redistricting commission was under an automatic stay pending an appeal of a ruling that struck down the state's 11th Congressional District.[6]

View all

Court challenges

If you are aware of any relevant lawsuits that are not listed here, please email us at editor@ballotpedia.org.

As of January 29, 2026, New York had not enacted a new map ahead of the 2026 elections.

To read about litigation over the map passed after the 2020 census, click here.

National overview

See also: Redistricting ahead of the 2026 elections

As of February 2026, six states had congressional district maps that were subject to change before the 2026 elections, and six states—California, Missouri, North Carolina, Ohio, Texas, and Utah—had new congressional maps. Three states were reportedly exploring voluntary redistricting, and three states had congressional maps that were subject to change due to litigation. Before 2025, only two states had conducted voluntary mid-decade redistricting since 1970.[7]

The map below shows redistricting activity between the 2024 and 2026 elections.

The table below shows redistricting activity between the 2024 and 2026 elections as well as the pre-redistricting U.S. House delegation in each state.

Status of congressional redistricting ahead of the 2026 elections
StateReason for redistrictingStatusMethod of redistrictingU.S. House delegation before redistrictingPotential result of new maps
New map enacted
CaliforniaVoluntary redistrictingVoters approved the use of a new map on Nov. 4, 2025.Commission43 D - 9 R+5 D
MissouriVoluntary redistrictingGov. Mike Kehoe (R) signed new map into law on Sept. 28, 2025.Legislature-dominant6 R - 2 D+1 R
North CarolinaVoluntary redistrictingLegislature passed new map into law on Oct. 22, 2025Legislature-dominant10 R - 4 D+1 R
OhioRequired by law to redistrictRedistricting commission approved a new map on Oct. 31, 2025Legislature-dominant10 R -5 D+2 R
TexasVoluntary redistrictingU.S. Supreme Court ruled the new Texas map could be used in 2026Legislature-dominant25 R -12 D with 1 vacancy+5 R
UtahChanged due to litigationCourt approved new plaintiff-submitted mapLegislature-dominant4 R - 0 D+1 D
Net+3 R
New map possible
FloridaVoluntary redistrictingSpecial session to occur April 2026Legislature-dominant20 R - 8 D-
GeorgiaSubject to change due to litigationLitigation ongoingLegislature-dominant9 R - 5 D-
LouisianaSubject to change due to litigationLitigation ongoingLegislature-dominant4 R - 2 D-
MarylandVoluntary redistrictingHouse approved new mapLegislature-dominant7 D - 1 R-
New YorkSubject to change due to litigationLitigation ongoingHybrid19 D - 7 R-
VirginiaVoluntary redistrictingConstitutional amendment to allow redistricting pending voter approvalHybrid6 D - 5 R-

See also

External links

Footnotes