Midterm vs Presidential Elections: What's the Difference and Why Midterms Matter

Every two years, Americans head to the polls for a federal election. But not all election years are created equal. Presidential elections dominate the news cycle every four years, drawing record turnout and wall-to-wall media coverage. In between, midterm elections decide control of Congress, determine who governs 36 or more states, and shape policy for years to come — yet far fewer voters show up. Understanding the differences between these two types of elections is essential for any engaged citizen, especially as the 2026 midterm elections approach on November 3, 2026.

The Basic Structure: What Is on the Ballot

The most obvious difference between midterm and presidential elections is right in the name: a presidential election includes the race for the White House, while a midterm does not. But beyond that top-line distinction, the two types of elections share many of the same down-ballot contests — and midterms often feature races that have a more direct impact on voters' daily lives.

Presidential Election Ballots

In a presidential election year (2020, 2024, 2028, etc.), voters choose among candidates for President and Vice President. In addition, the ballot typically includes:

Midterm Election Ballots

In a midterm year (2018, 2022, 2026, etc.), there is no presidential contest, but the ballot still carries enormous weight:

Voter Turnout: The Midterm Drop-Off

The single most striking difference between midterms and presidential elections is how many people vote. Historically, midterm turnout runs 15 to 20 percentage points lower than presidential-year turnout. Here are the numbers from recent cycles:

The pattern is consistent: tens of millions of Americans who vote in presidential years simply do not show up for midterms. Young voters, racial and ethnic minorities, and lower-income Americans tend to see the steepest drop-off, which means the midterm electorate looks demographically different from the presidential-year electorate.

Why Midterm Turnout Drops

Several factors contribute to the midterm participation gap:

Why Midterms Matter: Real-World Consequences

Despite lower turnout, midterm elections regularly produce outcomes that reshape American governance. Consider these examples:

2018: The Blue Wave in the House

Democrats flipped 40 House seats in 2018, gaining a commanding majority and ending unified Republican control of Congress. This shift gave Democrats subpoena power over the executive branch, blocked additional attempts to repeal the Affordable Care Act, and set the stage for the first impeachment of President Trump. At the state level, Democrats flipped seven governor's mansions, including Michigan, Wisconsin, Kansas, and Nevada, altering the political landscape heading into the 2020 census and redistricting.

2022: A Historically Unusual Midterm

The party holding the White House almost always loses seats in midterms — the average loss for the president's party since World War II is about 26 House seats. But in 2022, Democrats defied expectations, losing only 9 House seats and actually gaining a Senate seat (expanding from 50 to 51). Analysts attributed the unusual result to voter backlash over the Supreme Court's Dobbs decision overturning Roe v. Wade, as well as concerns about election-denying candidates. Several ballot measures on abortion rights in states like Kansas, Michigan, California, Vermont, and Kentucky also drove turnout.

2010: The Tea Party Wave

Republicans gained 63 House seats in 2010, the largest midterm swing since 1938. They also gained 6 Senate seats and flipped 6 governor's mansions. This wave gave Republicans control of redistricting in key states after the 2010 census, shaping congressional maps for the following decade. The midterm also effectively ended President Obama's ability to pass major legislation through Congress for the remainder of his term.

How Midterm and Presidential Results Differ

Because the midterm electorate is smaller, older, and whiter than the presidential electorate, midterm results often diverge from presidential-year results in predictable ways:

What to Expect in 2026

The 2026 midterms will be the first major national election after the 2024 presidential contest. Key factors to watch:

How to Make Your Midterm Vote Count

Given the lower turnout in midterm elections, individual votes carry more weight than in presidential years. Here are practical steps to prepare:

The Bottom Line

Presidential elections get the spotlight, but midterm elections are where much of the governing work of American democracy is decided. Congress, governors, state legislatures, and ballot measures all carry real consequences for healthcare, education, taxes, infrastructure, and civil rights. The 2026 midterms on November 3 will be no exception. The voters who show up will shape the direction of the country for years to come — and with turnout historically lower in midterms, every vote carries outsized influence.

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