Our 2021-22 redistricting tracker is no longer updating, but please check out our 2022 midterm election forecast to see how competitive the House map is.

UPDATED Jul. 19, 2022, at 3:50 PM

What Redistricting Looks Like In Every State

An updating tracker of proposed congressional maps — and whether they might benefit Democrats or Republicans in the 2022 midterms and beyond. How this works »

partisan lean of districts:
States with proposed maps
New maps
Majority
Old maps
There are 187 Democratic-leaning seats, 208 Republican-leaning seats and 40 highly competitive seats in the new maps.Change from old maps: +6 Democratic-leaning seats, -6 highly competitive seats.

The latest with redistricting

June 28, 2022

Every state in the union now has a new congressional map in place for the 2022 election. Several of those maps are being challenged in court as illegal gerrymanders, but none seems like a serious possibility to be overturned before the midterms.

Although Republicans went into the cycle with control over drawing more districts, the number of Democratic-leaning seats actually increased as a result of redistricting. The new maps have six more Democratic-leaning seats than the old ones and the same number of Republican-leaning seats. This is due to aggressive map-drawing by Democrats in states such as Illinois as well as court decisions overturning Republican gerrymanders in states like North Carolina.

After accounting for incumbency, however, Republicans are actually the ones who have gained ground from redistricting: The GOP is positioned for a net gain of three to four seats in 2022 just thanks to the new lines alone. Republicans have benefited from their own brazen cartography in states like Florida and courts striking down Democratic gerrymanders in Maryland and New York. Republicans have also shored up their existing position by converting light-red districts into safer seats in states like Texas.

Partisanship aside, there are two other important takeaways from the 2021-22 redistricting cycle. First, the number of swing seats will continue to decline; the new maps have six fewer highly competitive districts than the old ones. And second, people of color will remain underrepresented in Congress.

Latest updates
Icon of the Louisiana state boundaries
June 28
The U.S. Supreme Court stayed a lower court injunction that had blocked Louisiana's congressional districts from being used until the state created a second majority-Black district. The state is now free to use the districts in 2022 and work to comply with the lower court's order by 2024.
Icon of the Louisiana state boundaries
June 20
The Louisiana state legislature adjourned from its special session without adopting a new congressional map. The task now falls to the federal courts.
Icon of the Florida state boundaries
June 17
A Florida state appeals court rejected a lower court injunction that had blocked the implementation of new congressional districts.
How the partisan makeup of each state has changed
Which party gained the most ground in each state’s new map, along with how red or blue its old and new districts are based on partisan lean
Partisan lean
State
Which party gained?
Old map New map
Icon of the Alabama state boundaries Alabama
In litigation
Neither party gained much ground
Icon of the Arizona state boundaries Arizona Republicans gained ground
Icon of the Arkansas state boundaries Arkansas
In litigation
Neither party gained much ground
Icon of the California state boundaries California Neither party gained much ground
Icon of the Colorado state boundaries Colorado Neither party gained much ground
Icon of the Connecticut state boundaries Connecticut Neither party gained much ground
Icon of the Florida state boundaries Florida
In litigation
Republicans gained ground
Icon of the Georgia state boundaries Georgia
In litigation
Neither party gained much ground
Icon of the Hawaii state boundaries Hawaii Neither party gained much ground
Icon of the Idaho state boundaries Idaho Neither party gained much ground
Icon of the Illinois state boundaries Illinois Democrats gained ground
Icon of the Indiana state boundaries Indiana Neither party gained much ground
Icon of the Iowa state boundaries Iowa Neither party gained much ground
Icon of the Kansas state boundaries Kansas Republicans gained ground
Icon of the Kentucky state boundaries Kentucky
In litigation
Neither party gained much ground
Icon of the Louisiana state boundaries Louisiana Neither party gained much ground
Icon of the Maine state boundaries Maine Neither party gained much ground
Icon of the Maryland state boundaries Maryland Republicans gained ground
Icon of the Massachusetts state boundaries Massachusetts Neither party gained much ground
Icon of the Michigan state boundaries Michigan
In litigation
Neither party gained much ground
Icon of the Minnesota state boundaries Minnesota Neither party gained much ground
Icon of the Mississippi state boundaries Mississippi Neither party gained much ground
Icon of the Missouri state boundaries Missouri Neither party gained much ground
Icon of the Montana state boundaries Montana Neither party gained much ground
Icon of the Nebraska state boundaries Nebraska Neither party gained much ground
Icon of the Nevada state boundaries Nevada
In litigation
Democrats gained ground
Icon of the New Hampshire state boundaries New Hampshire Neither party gained much ground
Icon of the New Jersey state boundaries New Jersey Democrats gained ground
Icon of the New Mexico state boundaries New Mexico
In litigation
Democrats gained ground
Icon of the New York state boundaries New York Neither party gained much ground
Icon of the North Carolina state boundaries North Carolina
In litigation
Neither party gained much ground
Icon of the Ohio state boundaries Ohio
In litigation
Neither party gained much ground
Icon of the Oklahoma state boundaries Oklahoma Neither party gained much ground
Icon of the Oregon state boundaries Oregon Democrats gained ground
Icon of the Pennsylvania state boundaries Pennsylvania
In litigation
Neither party gained much ground
Icon of the Rhode Island state boundaries Rhode Island Neither party gained much ground
Icon of the South Carolina state boundaries South Carolina
In litigation
Neither party gained much ground
Icon of the Tennessee state boundaries Tennessee Republicans gained ground
Icon of the Texas state boundaries Texas
In litigation
Neither party gained much ground
Icon of the Utah state boundaries Utah
In litigation
Neither party gained much ground
Icon of the Virginia state boundaries Virginia Neither party gained much ground
Icon of the Washington state boundaries Washington Neither party gained much ground
Icon of the West Virginia state boundaries West Virginia Neither party gained much ground
Icon of the Wisconsin state boundaries Wisconsin Neither party gained much ground

States marked as “in litigation” face pending lawsuits related to approved maps, as tracked by All About Redistricting.