Polls are now closed on P.E.I. Here's how to get the 2025 federal election results
Polling stations across P.E.I. officially closed for counting to begin at 8:30 p.m. AT
Polls are now closed in Prince Edward Island for the 2025 federal general election, though any people already in a polling station lineup at 8:30 p.m. AT will still be allowed to cast their ballots.
According to Elections Canada, there are 127,105 eligible voters on P.E.I., and 122,731 of them were on the registered voters list as of last week.
A total of 40,015 Islanders cast ballots in the four days that advance polling stations were open over the Easter weekend — a 41.27 per cent increase from 28,324 valid advance votes cast in 2021.
That left tens of thousands of Islanders to head to the polls today to cast their ballot. Watch the CBC Prince Edward Island page for stories from Cardigan, Charlottetown, Malpeque and Egmont as major developments occur.
How to see results
CBC News has comprehensive coverage with real-time results, big election night news and analysis about how the vote is unfolding.
You can track federal election results and find out who's winning in your riding on the live results page right here on the CBC P.E.I. website.
Our reporters will keep you updated throughout the evening as polls close and results roll in. You'll also be able to stream the CBC News election special.
TV
The Canada Votes: 2025 Election Special started at 7:30 p.m. AT, hosted by Rosemary Barton, Adrienne Arsenault, Ian Hanomansing, David Cochrane, and Catherine Cullen. The program is providing up-to-the-minute coverage and analysis as the votes are tallied, featuring reporters across the country.
You can watch on CBC TV, CBC News Network, CBC Gem, CBC News App on iOS and Android, and across CBC News streaming platforms.
Local FAST channel
You can get P.E.I.-specific results on CBC P.E.I.'s FAST channel — our 24/7 local streaming channel.
You can stream the channel on CBC Gem (scroll down to the CBC News P.E.I. free streaming news channel), the CBC News App and online.
Social media
Beginning at 9 p.m. AT, Jayme Poisson will host a companion livestream on CBC News' YouTube and TikTok.
She and special guests will answer viewer questions in real-time, check in on how election night is unfolding on social media, talk politics and pop culture, and weigh in on the moments Canadians are talking about.
Radio
CBC Radio is hosting its own election night special, hosted by the World at Six's Susan Bonner and Sunday Magazine's Piya Chattopadhyay.
The radio special began at 7 p.m. ET / 4 p.m. PT on CBC Radio One, the CBC Listen app on iOS and Android, and online.