With the addition of the Online Vote cast by the readers, Linda Lampenius and Pete Parkkonen have now been named the winners of Eurojury 2026 with the song “Liekinheitin” for Finland, with a total of 531 points.

    After Denmark won the Jury Vote yesterday with 213 points, Finland managed to overtake them overall with a landslide 334 points in the Online Vote to Denmark’s still respectable 224. This marks the second time Finland has won Eurojury’s Online Vote after they did so in 2023 but this is the first time they have won Eurojury overall.

    For the first time, we have divided the Online Vote by nation. Finland staggeringly collected votes from every single country, besides themselves of course. Among this, they collected 12 points from Australia, Czechia, Denmark, Estonia, France, Germany, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Montenegro, Norway, Portugal, Serbia, Sweden, United Kingdom and the Rest of the World.

    The full results of Eurojury 2026 with Jury and Online Votes combined are as follows:


    The Results of the Online Vote

    This marks the first time since 2022 when Sweden’s Cornelia Jakob won where the overall winner of Eurojury is the winner of the Online Vote. 2023 saw Loreen win by domination the Jury vote, while 2024 saw a first time compromise winner of Italy after the Jury and Online Vote couldn’t agree, with the former voting for France and the latter opting for Croatia.

    The breakdown of scores received solely in the Online Vote can be found below:

    Finland, the winners of Eurojury 2026, finished in second place with the Jury Vote and first place in the Online Vote. Denmark, the runners-up, finished in first place with the Jury Vote and second place in the Online Vote.

    Australia secured third place in both the Jury Vote and Online Vote, securing a third place finish overall. Greece and Sweden complete the top 5 of this year, with Sweden gaining nearly 100 points more in the Online Vote than they did in the Jury Vote.

    Other success stories in the Online Vote include Romania, who gained over 60 points more than they did in the Jury Vote. Moldova also collected over 40 points more. This secured both of them a place in the top 10 overall at the expense of Italy and Czechia.

    The online vote saw fans all over the world submit their top 10 ranked entries in this year’s contest. For the first time in Eurojury this year, we divided the votes into a set of points from all the competing countries plus a set from the Rest of the World.

    A full scoreboard including a breakdown of how each country voted in the jury and online vote can be seen here.

    History of Eurojury

    2024 – Italy (7th in Eurovision) won overall, while France (4th in Eurovision) won the jury vote.

    2023 – Sweden (1st in Eurovision) won overall and won the jury vote.

    2022 – Sweden (4th in Eurovision) won overall, while the United Kingdom (2nd in Eurovision) won the jury vote.

    2021 – Malta (7th in Eurovision) won overall and won the jury vote.

    2020 – Iceland won overall and won the jury vote.

    2019 – The Netherlands (1st in Eurovision) won overall, while Sweden (5th in Eurovision) won the jury vote.

    2018 – Israel (1st in Eurovision) won overall and won the jury vote.

    2017 – Italy (6th in Eurovision) won overall, while Sweden (5th in Eurovision) won the jury vote.

    2016 – France (6th in Eurovision) won overall, while Australia (2nd in Eurovision) won the jury vote.

    2015 – Australia (5th in Eurovision) won overall.

    2014 – United Kingdom (17th in Eurovision) won overall.

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