2026 Portland, Oregon City Council election

Last updated

2026 Portland City Council elections
  2024 November 5, 20242028 

6 seats in District 3 and District 4
7 seats needed for a majority

The 2026 Portland, Oregon City Council elections will be held on November 3, 2026, to elect 6 members of the Portland City Council. This will be the second election under the new city council form of government adopted following Portland's 2022 charter reform and the second to use ranked-choice voting.

Contents

In the previous election, all 12 members of the new city council were elected for the first time. Council members in District 1 and District 2 were elected to 4-year terms, while members in District 3 and District 4 were elected to 2-year terms, expiring at the end of 2026. [1] All members elected in 2026 will serve 4-year terms, creating a staggered schedule where half of the city council is up for election every 2 years. [1]

District 3

District 3 represents most of Southeast Portland south of Interstate 84 and west of Interstate 205, as well as a small sliver of Northeast Portland east of 47th Avenue and south of Prescott Avenue. Neighborhoods represented include Brentwood-Darlington, Brooklyn, Buckman, Creston-Kenilworth, Foster-Powell, Hosford-Abernethy (includes Ladd's Addition), Kerns, Laurelhurst, Madison South, Montavilla, Mt. Scott-Arleta, Mt. Tabor, North Tabor, Richmond, Rose City Park, Roseway, South Tabor, Sunnyside, and Woodstock. [2]

Candidates

Declared

District 4

District 4 represents all of Portland west of the Willamette River (its Northwest, Southwest, and South sextants) as well as the Eastmoreland, Reed, and Sellwood-Moreland neighborhoods in southeast Portland. Neighborhoods represented include Arlington Heights, Arnold Creek, Ashcreek, Bridlemile (includes Glencullen), Collins View, Crestwood, Downtown, Eastmoreland, Far Southwest, Forest Park, Goose Hollow, Hayhurst (includes Vermont Hills), Hillsdale, Hillside, Homestead, Linnton, Maplewood, Markham, Marshall Park, Multnomah (includes Multnomah Village), Northwest District (includes Uptown, Nob Hill, Alphabet Historic District), Northwest Heights, Northwest Industrial, Old Town Chinatown, Pearl District, Reed, Sellwood-Moreland, South Burlingame, South Portland (includes Corbett, Fulton, Lair Hill, Terwilliger, and the Johns Landing and South Waterfront developments), Southwest Hills, Sylvan-Highlands, and West Portland Park (includes Capitol Hill). [2]

Candidates

Declared

References

  1. 1 2 Macuk, Anthony (September 19, 2024). "Yes, some Portland councilors will serve shortened terms after this year's election". KGW. Portland, Oregon. Retrieved November 9, 2025.
  2. 1 2 "Portland 2023". Districtr. Retrieved August 22, 2023.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "2026 Election (and archived 2024 data)". www.portland.gov. October 24, 2025. Retrieved November 8, 2025.
  4. Peel, Sophie (November 8, 2025). "Portland Cop Eli Arnold Will Run for City Council Again". Willamette Week. Retrieved November 8, 2025.