2026 Senate forecast: Model says a favorable map may not secure GOP control

A favorable 2026 Senate map may not be enough for Republicans to keep control of the chamber, according to a statistical forecast that weighs polls, fundamentals and thousands of simulated election outcomes. The model estimates both major parties’ chances of winning each House and Senate race, as well as the odds of controlling each chamber.
It combines national and race-level polls from FiftyPlusOne with fundamental data about past electoral results and the nominees in each contest to estimate the probability of each possible outcome. It starts by constructing 10,001 hypothetical scenarios for the national popular vote for the House of Representatives.
In some simulations, Democrats fare far better than expected across the country; in others, Republicans do. The forecast then adds simulated uncertainty for how the outcomes of Senate races as a group may differ from those in the House. Using these values, it estimates a plausible range of outcomes in each race for each simulated national environment.
For example, a strong Republican Senate candidate in a historically Democratic state might have a 30% chance of victory amid a nationwide "red wave," but just a 5% chance if the House popular vote is tied and Senate Republicans as a whole are underperforming their colleagues in the lower chamber.
Finally, the forecast picks one outcome at random from these ranges for each race in each simulation. For specific seats, the win probabilities presented reflect the share of simulations won by each candidate. For chamber control, they represent the share of simulations in which the given party wins a majority of seats.
The approach underscores how national tides and chamber-specific dynamics can tip the balance—one reason a friendly map alone may not guarantee control in 2026.
