Meanwhile, it put the Conservatives and Reform in joint third place on 15 seats each, the Liberal Democrats on 12, and the Scottish Greens on 10.
đ¨đHOLYROOD 2026 VOTING INTENTION
Seat extrapolation from Professor Sir John Curtice (assuming uniform movement):
đĄSNP 53đľCon 15đŁRef. 15đ´Lab 24đ LD. 12đ˘Grn. 10@CalumAM | @geoffaberdein | @akmaciver pic.twitter.com/m9mopkOhec
â Holyrood Sources (@HolyroodSources) January 15, 2025
The 2021 election saw the SNP win 64 seats, Conservatives 31, Labour 22, Scottish Greens eight and the Liberal Democrats four.
For Holyrood Sources podcast host, and former Scottish Conservatives director of communications, Andy Maciver, the poll confirmed a number of âemerging trendsâ.
âThe first is that Labour is now realising, as the Tories have experienced for so many years, that when your Westminster party sneezes, you catch a cold,â he said.
âThe second is that, even without a leader in Scotland, Reform UK is attracting the votes of people, particularly on the unionist right, who clearly feel the mainstream has failed them.
âAnd the third is that if Reform UKâs vote sticks then, for the first time, we may be in a situation where finding two parties who can together command a Holyrood majority could be a substantial hurdle.â
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For Professor Sir John Curtice of Strathclyde University, the results indicate Labour leader Anas Sarwarâs popularity is not enough to offset votersâ âdisappointmentâ with the performance of the UK Labour Government at Westminster.
âHis once seemingly bright prospects of becoming Scotlandâs next first minister have diminished markedly since Julyâ, he said.
âNevertheless, the SNP are currently still heading for significant losses in next yearâs Holyrood election, and could well find it difficult to form a stable administration.â
He added that while voters âhave their doubtsâ about the SNPâs record in office since 2021 â particularly on health â they are âeven more doubtfulâ about Labourâs performance at Westminster.
The poll also showed John Swinney is the most popular choice to be next First Minister, with 25% of respondents saying they thought the SNP leader would be the best in the role, ahead of Anas Sarwar on 16%.
Sir John Curtice (Image: Colin Mearns)
38% said they did not know who would make the best First Minister.
Sir John also pointed to the two leadersâ differing fortunes among people who voted for their respective parties in 2021.
The poll suggested fewer than two in five of those who voted Labour in 2021 âpositively approveâ of Mr Sarwarâs performance as party leader.
In contrast it indicates two thirds of those who voted SNP in 2021 approve of Mr Swinneyâs performance â even though the party remains âwell shortâ of the popularity it enjoyed in the last Holyrood election.
Dr Eilidh Whiteford, True North senior adviser and former SNP MP, said the results showed Mr Swinney had âarrested the declineâ in his partyâs fortunes since taking over the reins last year.
However, she cautioned that the party would be âwell advised to avoid complacencyâ.
âThe support of just 33% of the electorate is hardly a ringing endorsement and it would be a big mistake to think that having steadied the ship they can continue with business as usual,â she said.
âTheir revival of fortunes has more to do with the absence of an inspiring alternative than with renewed enthusiasm for their performance in government.
âMeanwhile, the saga of Operation Branchform drags on and may yet threaten to derail the SNPâs 2026 plans, with unpredictable consequences.â
Fieldwork for the Survation poll was carried out via online interviews between January 7 and 13 2025, using a sample of 1,024 Scottish residents aged 16 and above.