Opinion polling for the 2022 Israeli legislative election

In the run up to the 2022 Israeli legislative election, various organisations carried out opinion polling to gauge voting intention in Israel during the term of the 24th Knesset. This article lists the results of such polls.

The date range for these opinion polls is from the 2021 Israeli legislative election, held on 23 March, to the present day. Due to the political deadlock that resulted after the previous election and the possibility of a fifth consecutive snap election, polling for the next election started two weeks after the previous election. The election was held on 1 November 2022. In keeping with the election silence tradition, no polls may be published from the end of the Friday before the election until the polling stations close on election day at 22:00.

Polls are listed in reverse chronological order, showing the most recent first and using the dates when the survey fieldwork was done, as opposed to the date of publication. Where the fieldwork dates are unknown, the date of publication is given instead. The highest figure in each polling survey is displayed with its background shaded in the leading party's colour. If a tie ensues, this is applied to the highest figures. When a poll has no information on a certain party, that party is instead marked by a dash (–).

Seat projections
This section displays voting intention estimates referring to the next Knesset election. The figures listed are Knesset seat counts rather than percentages, unless otherwise stated.

Polling graph
This graph shows the polling trends from the 2021 Israeli legislative election until the next election day using a 4-poll moving average. Scenario polls are not included here. For parties not crossing the electoral threshold (currently 3.25%) in any given poll, the number of seats is calculated as a percentage of the 120 total seats.

Polls
Poll results are listed in the table below. Parties that fall below the electoral threshold of 3.25% are denoted by the percentage of votes that they received (N%), rather than the number of seats they would have gotten. 61 seats are required for a majority in the Knesset.


 * Legend
 * Gov.
 * — Sum of the 36th government parties: Yesh Atid, Blue & White and New Hope (now running jointly as National Unity), Yamina (now running jointly with The Jewish Home under the Jewish Home name), Labor, Yisrael Beiteinu, Meretz and Ra'am. The coalition parties are highlighted in blue.
 * Oppisition.
 * – Sum of non-government parties that were regarded to be generally-aligned with former prime minister Benyamin Netanyahu (often referred to by the media as the "Netanhu bloc"): Likud; Shas; UTJ; RZP and OY;
 * Color key:

Scenario polls
Most often, opinion polling about hypothetical scenarios is done in the same survey as for the regular polling. This is why these scenario polls are paired for comparison purposes.

{{legend |#ffffff |Regular poll}} {{legend |#fffdb0 |Scenario poll}}


 * Benjamin Netanyahu supports The Jewish Home


 * Jewish Home drops out


 * Labor and Meretz form an alliance


 * Naftali Bennett rejoins Yamina


 * Itamar Ben-Gvir leading Religious Zionist Party


 * Yair Golan leading Meretz


 * Yoaz Hendel joins Yamina


 * Gadi Eizenkot joins B&W-NH


 * Gadi Eizenkot joins Yesh Atid


 * Blue and White, New Hope merger


 * Amichai Chikli forms a party & Yamina, New Hope merger


 * Yamina drops out


 * Yamina, New Hope merger


 * Yamina, New Hope, Yisrael Beiteinu merger & Labor, Meretz merger


 * Yoaz Hendel joins Yamina, Ayelet Shaked joins Likud, Religious Zionist Party & Otzma Yehudit split, Amichai Chikli forms a party


 * Otzma Yehudit split from Religious Zionist Party


 * Likud leadership

Prime minister
Due to the political deadlock, Shas chairman and Interior Minister Aryeh Deri suggested direct elections for prime minister. Some opinion pollsters have asked voters which party leader they would prefer as prime minister. Their responses are given as percentages in the graphs and tables below.

Approval ratings

 * Naftali Bennett


 * Benny Gantz


 * Yair Lapid


 * Yifat Shasha-Biton


 * Avigdor Liberman


 * Ayelet Shaked

Nitzan Horwitz

Merav Michaeli

Gideon Sa'ar

Yoaz Hendel