How to follow the US election on the BBC
BBC News is on hand with a wealth of coverage throughout the US election night and beyond.
The latest news, analysis and results will be available from 22:00 GMT (17:00 EST) on Tuesday, 5 November, across all platforms and whether you are in the UK or overseas.
Online
Around the world, you’ll be able to follow all the developments in the race between Kamala Harris and Donald Trump on the BBC News website and app.
A round-the-clock live page with a live stream is at the heart of our offer. It will feature the expertise of our North America correspondent Anthony Zurcher, and input from BBC News reporters stationed in battleground states around the US.
Readers in the UK can sign up here for Anthony’s US Election Unspun newsletter, and readers outside the UK can sign up here.
Make sure also to keep checking our 2024 US election page, which is being continually updated with detailed analysis and explainers of the latest events.
TV
Special programming from Washington gets under way on the BBC News Channel at 22:40 GMT (17:40 EST), before the first polls close on the US east coast. Viewers in the UK will also be able to watch on BBC One, or on BBC iPlayer.
The programme will be anchored by CaitrÃona Perry and Sumi Somaskanda – who’ll be joined by US special correspondent Katty Kay and others. You’ll also hear from North America editor Sarah Smith and senior North America correspondent Gary O’Donoghue.
BBC correspondents around the world will also have their say on events – and the BBC Verify team are on hand to fact-check claims that emerge during the night.
UK viewers will see BBC Breakfast presenter Jon Kay join the Washington results broadcast at 06:00 GMT (01:00 EST). Special programming continues until 10:00 GMT (05:00 EST) on Wednesday.
Radio and Sounds
Special coverage from Washington starts at 22:00 GMT (17:00 EST) with Ros Atkins and Nuala McGovern.
Listeners in the UK will be able to tune in on BBC Radio 4 or BBC Radio 5 Live. Listeners outside the UK can hear the same broadcast on the BBC World Service.
At 06:00 GMT (01:00 EDT), UK listeners can choose between the Today programme on BBC Radio 4, presented by Justin Webb from Washington, or Breakfast on BBC Radio 5 Live. World Service listeners will hear Newsday at that time.
On BBC Sounds, global audiences can listen to continuous US election coverage as the results come in.
Our flagship US news podcast Americast will record special episodes, not just analysing events as they unfold throughout the night, but also in the days after.
The Global News Podcast will release a special bonus episode as the results are called in. And the Global Story will tell the story of the night, follow the results and what they mean for the world. Find all the US news and politics podcasts in the BBC Sounds US Election collection.
The BBC on the ground
BBC reporters will be following the race as it plays out in key swing state locations. As well as Washington DC, where Harris will be overnight, our teams will be reporting from in and around:
- Phoenix, Arizona
- West Palm Beach, Florida, where Trump will be overnight
- Atlanta, Georgia
- Dearborn and Detroit, Michigan
- Las Vegas, Nevada
- Charlotte, North Carolina
- Raleigh, North Carolina
- Cincinnati, Ohio
- Allentown, Pennsylvania
- Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
- Madison, Wisconsin
- Milwaukee, Wisconsin
- Los Angeles, California
- SIMPLE GUIDE: How to win the electoral college
- EXPLAINER: What Harris or Trump would do in power
- GLOBAL: How this election could change the world
- IN PICS: Different lives of Harris and Trump
- POLLS: Who is winning the race for the White House?