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IMAGO / Ralph Peters
Monitor Election and Social Research

Voting behaviour by age and gender

An analysis of voting behaviour by age group and gender

When it comes to the distribution of votes, elections consistently reveal differences based on age and gender. Whilst some of these differences follow well-known age-related patterns, the federal election in 2025 also revealed new phenomena. The high levels of support for parties on the fringes of the party system raise questions about the extent to which these differences are also reflected in political attitudes and which issues are decisive for young people. Drawing on representative data, this study sheds light on current developments in the voting behaviour of young people.

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Clear age differences are consistently evident in voting behaviour, with both age effects and cohort effects playing a role in the parties’ performance. The voting behaviour of the youngest age groups exhibits further distinctive features. Based on representative data, this study reaches the following conclusions:

 

  • Gender differences are regularly evident in voting behaviour. In the 2025 federal election, the Union was the only party with a virtually balanced gender ratio among its electorate.
  • Differences in voting behaviour are also consistently evident across age groups. Certain age-related effects, such as the CDU/CSU’s above-average performance among older voters, have remained stable over time, whilst generational effects play a lesser role.
  • In the 2025 federal election, both recurring age-related differences — such as the above-average performance of the CDU/CSU and the SPD among the over-60s — and new differences — such as the significantly above-average performance of Die Linke among the under-35s—were evident.
  • The voting behaviour of young people generally follows broader trends. The youngest voter group stands out due to particularly pronounced volatility and an increasing gender effect.
  • Furthermore, fragmentation is evident in increasing gender, urban-rural and educational effects, which are particularly pronounced among young people.
  • The electoral influence of younger people is limited: the 18–29 age group accounts for only 13 per cent of all eligible voters.
  • Voters under the age of 30 have a below-average turnout rate.

Please note that this study is only available in German.

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Contact Dr. Jochen Roose
Portrait von Dr. Jochen Roose
Policy Advisor Electoral and Social Research
jochen.roose@kas.de +49 30 26996-3798

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About this series

The publications of the Election and Social Research Monitor are part of our Monitor publication series. The Monitor series deals with one main topic at a time from the perspective of KAS experts and places it in the political and social context on the basis of a few key points.