The letter(s) after each Swedish party name are the abbreviations commonly used in
the Swedish media.
Parties with official representation Parties with representation in the
Riksdag and/or
European Parliament: • According to a threshold rule, any one particular party must receive at least 4% of the votes to be allocated a seat in the Riksdag. • Any party having broken the 1% threshold in the last two European Parliament or Riksdag elections respectively will have their ballots printed and distributed by the authorities.
Minor parties Defunct and historical parties •
Caps (, 18th century) •
Hats (, 18th century) •
Junker Party (1850s) •
Social Democratic Left Party of Sweden (, 1921–1923) •
Communist Party of Sweden – Höglund Faction (, 1924–1926) •
Socialist Party (Socialistiska Partiet, 1929–1948) •
Clerical People's Party (, 1930s) •
National Socialist Workers’ Party (, 1933–1945) •
Swedish Socialist Party (Svenska socialistiska partiet), a Swedish Nazi party, 1943-1948 •
Left Socialist Party (, 1940–1963) •
Revolutionary Socialist Party (, 1950–1951) •
Communist Labour League of Sweden (, 1956–1967) •
Communist League Marxist-Leninists/Communist Party of Sweden/Solidarity Party (, 1967-199?) •
Progress Party (, existed in various forms between 1968 and 2000) •
Marxist–Leninist Struggle League (, 1970–1981) •
Centre Democrats (, 1974–2006) •
Communist Unity Groups (, 1975–1977) • Communist Workers' League of Sweden (, 1977–?) •
Communist Party of Sweden (marxist-leninists)/Communist Workers Party of Sweden (, 1980–1993) •
Communist Party in Sweden (, 1982–1993) • The Marxists (, 1990s) •
Workers' List/People's Democrats (
sv) (, 1990–2002) •
New Democracy (, 1991–2000) •
Alliance Party (, 199X–2006) •
Natural Law Party (, 1992–2004) • (, 1993–2006) •
New Future (, 1993–2006) • (, 1998) •
National Democrats (, 2001–2014) •
Party of the Swedes (, 2008–2015) •
Revolutionary Workers' League of Sweden (, 1975–1983) • Unique Party (, 2006) • Communist League (, 1980–2010) •
Liquor Party (, 2009–2010) •
Socialist Party (, 1971–present) - as of 2019, the Socialist Party actively encourages its members to vote for the Left Party. •
June List (, 2004–2014) – Represented in the European Parliament 2004–2009. Did not participate in the 2019 election. •
Popular Democrats Joke parties •
Donald Duck Party •
Mjölbypartiet == Regional and local parties ==