According to the announced schedule, results will arrive in a specific order, with votes for individual candidates being processed first, followed by national party lists, and finally lists for national minorities.

These elections were marked by exceptionally high voter turnout, which, according to preliminary estimates, could reach around 80 percent. Official data on overall turnout has not yet been released.

According to information gathered shortly before 7 PM, the highest turnout was recorded in the third electoral district in Budapest, where 85.64 percent of voters cast their ballots. This is the electoral district where Péter Magyar, the leader of the Tisza party, was a candidate, and where Prime Minister Viktor Orbán also voted. The Fidesz candidate in this district is Attila Steiner, State Secretary in the Ministry of Energy.

According to data from the public opinion research agency Medián, Péter Magyar's Tisza party won 55.5 percent of the votes, while Viktor Orbán's Fidesz is expected to receive 37.9 percent.

The far-right movement "Our Homeland" (Mi Hazánk) could, according to the same estimates, secure 3.9 percent of the votes.

When these results are translated into mandates, Tisza is close to a two-thirds majority in parliament, with an estimated 131 to 139 parliamentary seats. Fidesz, on the other hand, is projected to have between 59 and 67 mandates.

The Hungarian parliament has a total of 199 parliamentary seats.

It is important to emphasize that this data is not based on a traditional exit poll but represents a mandate estimate based on a large-sample survey conducted over the last three days.