Graphical summary The chart below shows opinion polls conducted about whether the United Kingdom should rejoin the
European Union or stay out over the course of six years after it officially left the EU in January 2020. The trend lines are
local regressions (LOESS), with a blue line showing support over rejoining the EU, a red line showing support to stay out of it and a grey one showing support for neither of the two options. Starting by the summer of 2021, poll votes show more support for rejoining the EU than staying out of it, while Brexit support declined over time, dropping below 40% in March of the following year and never reaching this threshold again. As time passed, support for staying out declined sharply in 2022, with only about a third of votes supporting it in the summer of 2023. Since mid-2021, support for rejoining the European Union increased consistently in the next three years, and while the gap became smaller in the second half of 2024, a rise in pro-rejoin support occurred in 2025.
National polls Polling of British voters on whether the
United Kingdom should rejoin the
European Union. Polling includes only those that explicitly ask how the responder would vote in a hypothetical referendum on the United Kingdom rejoining the European Union, rather than repeating the remain/leave question of the 2016 referendum.
2026 2025 2024 2023 2022 2021 2020 Specialist opinion polling Conditioning Accession on Euro Adoption and joining the Schengen Area During the United Kingdom's membership of the European Union, it did not join the border control free
Schengen Area. It also did not seek to adopt the Euro and attained an
opt-out as a part of the Maastricht Treaty negotiations. In July 2025, YouGov asked:
If the only basis on which the European Union was willing to allow the UK to rejoin was that it would now have to participate in all major EU policy areas that the UK previously held opt-outs for (i.e. on top of all the previous EU rules, the UK would now also have to join the Euro, and have to participate in the Schengen passport-free travel zone), would you support or oppose the UK rejoining the European Union? The results were that 36% would be in favour of rejoining, 42% would oppose and 13% were undecided.
Conditioning Accession on Euro Adoption WeThink, the public polling arm of Omnisis, began including a supplementary question as a part of its Brexit polling assessing how Euro adoption would influence voting intentions on a hypothetical referendum on re-joining the European Union. Prior to January 2024, Opinium, as published by WeThink, asked the following two questions;
Would the requirement to adopt the Euro as currency change your decision? Would the requirement to adopt the Euro as currency change your decision to rejoin the EU if you would vote to rejoin? referendum on EU membership tomorrow?The available responses were;
I would still want the UK to rejoin the EU if adopting the Euro was a requirement I would not want the UK to rejoin the EU if adopting the Euro was a requirement I would only want the UK to rejoin the EU if we were able to keep Sterling as our currency Young voters Starting in April 2023,
Savanta – commissioned by
Peston,
ITV's flagship political discussion programme – conducts polls of young people aged 18 to 25 on a range of issues, including their views on the UK rejoining the European Union.
Change of relationship From November 2024,
Opinium starting polling regarding a change of relationship with the EU. The available responses were;
We should rejoin the EU We should remain outside the EU but negotiate a closer relationship with them than we have now We should remain outside the EU and keep the same relationship with the EU as we have now We should remain outside the EU and negotiate a more distant relationship with them than we have now Holding a referendum In January 2023, Savanta published a poll of 2,065 British adults, which included a question regarding support for a referendum on the UK rejoining the EU. A combined total of 65% were in favour of such a referendum now or at some point in the future and 24% were opposed to such a referendum.
Question: When do you think, if at all, there should next be a referendum on whether or not the UK should re-join or stay out of the European Union? Scotland polls There has also been polling of voters in
Scotland on whether the
United Kingdom should rejoin the
European Union.
2026 2025 2024 In the European Union Fifth anniversary polling In 2021, for the fifth anniversary of the UK's EU membership referendum,
Euronews commissioned an opinion poll conducted by Redfield & Wilton Strategies of attitudes to the European Union and Brexit in the EU's four largest countries. Redfield & Wilton polled 1,500 people in each member-state between the 6th and 7th of June 2021. The poll included the following question about how responders would feel about the UK re-joining the EU:
Polling on a Franco-German four-tier EU Structure Following reports in 2023 of a Franco-German proposal for a four-tiered EU structure, YouGov Eurotrack conducted polling in several EU Member States. This polling included attitudes towards further EU enlargement. People from
Denmark,
France,
Germany,
Italy,
Spain, and
Sweden were asked; Fieldwork was conducted between the 6th and 26th of October 2023. ==See also==