2026 United States House of Representatives elections in Tennessee
District lines to be used from the 2026 elections, per HB 7003 signed by the Governor of Tennessee on May 7, 2026[ 1] Interactive map version
The 2026 United States House of Representatives elections in Tennessee will be held on November 3, 2026, to elect the nine U.S. representatives from the State of Tennessee , one from all nine of the state's congressional districts . The elections will coincide with other elections to the House of Representatives, elections to the United States Senate , and various state and local elections .
On May 6, 2026, Tennessee Republicans released a newly proposed congressional map that would draw out Rep. Steve Cohen (D-TN) of Memphis, shifting the state's delegation from an 8–1 Republican majority to a 9–0 Republican majority. The map passed both chambers and was signed into law by governor Bill Lee on May 7.[ 2] The enactment of the new map extended the congressional filing deadline to May 15.[ 3] The primary elections will take place on August 6, 2026.[ 4]
2026 Tennessee's 1st congressional district election
The 1st district is based in northeast Tennessee, encompassing all of Carter , Cocke , Greene , Hamblen , Hancock , Hawkins , Johnson , Sullivan , Unicoi , and Washington counties and parts of Jefferson and Sevier counties, and includes the Tri-Cities region. The incumbent is Republican Diana Harshbarger , who was re-elected with 78.1% of the vote in 2024.[ 5]
Presumptive nominee [ edit ]
Diana Harshbarger
Executive branch officials
Campaign finance reports as of March 31, 2026
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Diana Harshbarger (R)
$945,558
$591,911
$1,804,416
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 8]
Kristi Burke, artist and YouTuber[ 9]
Herman Garcia, small business owner[ 10]
David Kerr, Marine Corps veteran[ 11]
Campaign finance reports as of March 31, 2026
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Kristi Burke (D)
$53,773
$26,240
$27,533
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 8]
Independent candidates [ edit ]
Joshua Ray Ashburn[ 12]
Richard G. Baker[ 12]
Billy Cody[ 12]
Chris Campbell[ 12]
Tyler Brice Mitchell McClain[ 12]
2026 Tennessee's 2nd congressional district election
The 2nd district is located in eastern Tennessee, anchored by Knoxville . The incumbent is Republican Tim Burchett , who was re-elected with 69.3% of the vote in 2024.[ 5]
Presumptive nominee [ edit ]
Tim Burchett
Executive branch officials
Campaign finance reports as of March 31, 2026
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Tim Burchett (R)
$1,161,955
$956,393
$933,753
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 18]
Presumptive nominee [ edit ]
Michaela Barnett, political organizer[ 19]
Campaign finance reports as of March 31, 2026
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Michaela Barnett (D)
$190,931
$159,963
$30,968
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 18]
Independent candidates [ edit ]
2026 Tennessee's 3rd congressional district election
The 3rd district encompasses most of the Chattanooga metro in eastern Tennessee, along with several suburban and rural areas near Knoxville and the Tri-Cities. The incumbent is Republican Chuck Fleischmann , who was re-elected with 67.5% of the vote in 2024.[ 5]
Presumptive nominee [ edit ]
Chuck Fleischmann
Executive branch officials
Campaign finance reports as of March 31, 2026
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Chuck Fleischmann (R)
$1,849,782
$557,642
$4,549,192
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 21]
Anna Golladay, small business owner[ 22]
Bryan Martin[ 12]
Independent candidates [ edit ]
Dean Arnold[ 12]
Jean Howard-Hill[ 12]
Rodney Joe King[ 12]
Donnie Lynn Ownby[ 12]
Edward John Roland[ 12]
2026 Tennessee's 4th congressional district election
The 4th district encompasses the southern part of Middle Tennessee , including Murfreesboro and Lynchburg . The incumbent is Republican Scott DesJarlais , who was re-elected with 70.0% of the vote in 2024.[ 5]
Scott DesJarlais
Executive branch officials
Campaign finance reports as of March 31, 2026
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Tom Davis (R)
$9,741
$8,459
$3,496
Scott DesJarlais (R)
$380,918
$317,023
$429,914
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 25]
Jacob Anders, author & historian (now running as an independent candidate) [ 27]
Campaign finance reports as of March 31, 2026
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Victoria Broderick (D)
$42,165
$45,914
$3,943
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 25]
Independent candidates [ edit ]
Jacob Anders, author & historian[ 12]
Clay Faircloth, pastor[ 12]
Campaign finance reports as of March 31, 2026
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Jacob Anders (I)
$568.00
$573.88
$0
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 25]
2026 Tennessee's 5th congressional district election
The 5th district comprises a southern portion of Davidson County ; portions of Wilson and Williamson Counties ; and the entirety of Maury , Lewis , and Marshall Counties . The incumbent is Republican Andy Ogles , who was re-elected with 56.9% of the vote in 2024.[ 5]
Andy Ogles
Executive branch officials
Campaign finance reports as of March 31,2026
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Charlie Hatcher (R)
$545,994
$331,991
$214,002
Andy Ogles (R)
$447,537
$424,397
$85,061
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 31]
Mike Cortese, Nashville Metro councilmember (running in the fourth district) [ 33]
Joyce Neal, adjunct professor (running in the fourth district) [ 33]
James Torino, healthcare executive (running in the ninth district) [ 33]
Chaz Molder
U.S. representatives
State legislators
Organizations
Campaign finance reports as of March 31, 2026
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Mike Cortese (D)
$533,689
$383,404
$150,285
Chaz Molder (D)
$1,825,648
$551,473
$1,274,175
Joyce Neal (D)
$6,615
$3,217
$1,543
James Torino (D)
$117,034
$17,349
$99,685
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 31]
Independent candidates [ edit ]
James A. Johnson[ 12]
Micheál (Me-Haul) O'Leary[ 12]
Lowell Andre Reynolds, music producer and audio engineer (running in the seventh district) [ 33]
Andy Ogles vs. Chaz Molder
Poll source
Date(s) administered
Sample size[ a]
Margin of error
Andy Ogles (R)
Chaz Molder (D)
Undecided
Impact Research (D)[ 39] [ A]
May 11–13, 2026
558 (LV)
± 4.1%
47%
41%
12%
2026 Tennessee's 6th congressional district election
The 6th district encompasses the eastern portions and suburbs of Nashville and extends across northern Middle Tennessee . It includes the cities of Hendersonville and Gallatin , as well as the eastern portion of Lebanon . The district continues eastward across the Cumberland Plateau , including the regional centers of Cookeville and Crossville , and reaches as far as Scott County , where East Tennessee begins.
The incumbent is Republican John Rose , who was re-elected with 68.0% of the vote in 2024;[ 5] he is retiring to run for governor.[ 40]
Campaign finance reports as of March 31, 2026
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Johnny Garrett (R)
$1,707,665
$278,642
$1,429,023
Jon Henry (R)
$67,166
$17,827
$99,749
Van Hilleary (R)
$1,181,118
$203,344
$977,774
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 44]
Campaign finance reports as of March 31, 2026
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Mike Croley (D)
$14,730
$8,462
$6,328
Chaney Mosley (D)
$52,595
$9,870
$42,725
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 44]
Independent candidates [ edit ]
Chris Monday, graphic designer, Republican candidate for this seat in 2018 and independent candidate for this seat in 2020 [ 23]
Angus Purdy[ 12]
Andrew Koontz, real estate agent (running in the seventh district) [ 23]
Campaign finance reports as of March 31, 2026
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Andrew Koontz (I)
$5,100
$130
$4,970
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 44]
2026 Tennessee's 7th congressional district election
The 7th district is centered in Middle Tennessee , anchored by significant portions of Nashville and its western suburbs. The district includes most of Franklin as well as the western half of Williamson County , along with nearby communities such as Ashland City , Pleasant View , Dickson , Springfield , and part of White House .
To the northwest, the district prominently includes Clarksville , one of the state's largest cities anchored by Fort Campbell .
Beyond that the district stretches southward to the Alabama border, encompassing a large swath of predominantly rural counties.
The incumbent is Republican Matt Van Epps , who won a special election following the resignation of Republican Mark Green with 53.9% of the vote.
Matt Van Epps
Executive branch officials
Campaign finance reports as of March 31, 2026
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Matt Van Epps (R)
$1,982,057
$1,846,902
$135,155
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 49]
Campaign finance reports as of December 31, 2025
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Vincent Dixie (D)
$177,458
$176,124
$1,333
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 49]
Independent candidates [ edit ]
Andrew J. Koontz[ 12]
Lowell Reynolds[ 12]
Campaign finance reports as of December 31, 2025
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Jonathan Thorp (I)
$20,099
$26,337
$0
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 49]
2026 Tennessee's 8th congressional district election
The 8th district encompasses rural West Tennessee as well as taking in the eastern suburbs of Memphis , including Bartlett , Lakeland , Germantown , and Collierville , as well as the cities of Jackson , Paris , and Dyersburg . The incumbent is Republican David Kustoff , who was re-elected with 72.3% of the vote in 2024.[ 5]
Presumptive nominee [ edit ]
David Kustoff
Executive branch officials
Organizations
Campaign finance reports as of May 31, 2026
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
David Kustoff (R)
$1,813,311
$1,041,265
$2,831,507
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 56]
Dewey Gordon Bryan[ 23]
Jordan D. Hinders[ 12]
Heidi Kuhn, Shelby County Criminal Court clerk[ 12]
Leonard Perkins, retired USAF air traffic controller[ 57]
Independent candidates [ edit ]
Adam D. Austill[ 12]
Wendell "Wells" Blankenship[ 12]
Antonio Futch[ 12]
Pamela Jeanine "P." Moses[ 12]
Horace Taylor[ 58]
Henry J. Ward II[ 12]
2026 Tennessee's 9th congressional district election
The 9th district is based in Memphis , as well as a portion of Tipton County . The incumbent is Democrat Steve Cohen , who was re-elected with 71.3% of the vote in 2024.[ 5] He initially ran for re-election but withdrew his candidacy in May 2026 due to the Tennessee redistricting.[ 59]
Justin Pearson
U.S. Senators
U.S. representatives
State legislators
Aftyn Behn , state representative from the 51st district (2023–present)[ 63]
Shaundelle Brooks , state representative from the 60th district (2025–present)[ 63]
Vincent Dixie , state representative from the 24th district (2019–present)[ 63]
Bob Freeman , state representative from the 56th district (2019–present)[ 63]
Ronnie Glynn , state representative from the 67th district (2023–present)[ 63]
Yusuf Hakeem , state representative from the 28th district (2019–present)[ 63]
Torrey Harris , state representative from the 91st district (2021–present)[ 63]
Gloria Johnson , state representative from the 90th district (2013–present)[ 63]
Sam McKenzie , state representative from the 15th district (2021–present)[ 63]
Charlane Oliver , state representative from the 19th district (2023–present)[ 64] [non-primary source needed ]
Jason Powell , state representative from the 53rd district (2013–present)[ 63]
Joe Towns , state representative from the 84th district (1995–present)[ 63]
Party officials
Organizations
Steve Cohen (withdrawn)
State legislators
Organizations
Candidates in italics withdrew before the primary election took place.
Campaign finance reports as of March 31, 2026
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Steve Cohen (D)
$658,569
$395,281
$1,982,620
Justin Pearson (D)
$1,106,297
$718,434
$387,864
Jim Torino (D)
$117,034
$17,349
$99,685
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 76]
Poll source
Date(s) administered
Sample size[ a]
Marginof error
Steve Cohen
Justin Pearson
Undecided
Data for Progress (D)[ 77] [ B]
January 30 – February 3, 2026
354 (LV)
5.2%
45%
44%
11%
Campaign finance reports as of March 31, 2026
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Charlotte Bergmann (R)
$11,735
$7,446
$7,729
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 76]
Independent candidates [ edit ]
Dennis Clark[ 12]
Michelle Davis Head[ 12]
^ a b Key: A – all adults RV – registered voters LV – likely voters V – unclear
Partisan clients
^ Poll sponsored by Molder's campaign
^ Poll sponsored by the Justice Democrats , which supports Pearson
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^ a b "2026 Election United States House - Tennessee 1st" . fec.gov . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved May 1, 2026 .
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^ "Kerr announces bid for Congress in 1st District" . Elizabethton Star . January 23, 2026. Retrieved January 23, 2026 .
^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw "Candidates for United States House of Representatives as of May 15, 2026" (PDF) . Tennessee Secretary of State . Retrieved May 15, 2026 .
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^ a b c d e f g h "2026 House Ratings" . Inside Elections .
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^ "Tim Burchett" . Ballotpedia . Retrieved June 24, 2026 .
^ a b "2026 Election United States House - Tennessee 2nd" . fec.gov . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved May 1, 2026 .
^ Feinberg, Allie (September 23, 2025). "Three candidates file paperwork to challenge U.S. Rep Tim Burchett in 2026" . Knoxville News Sentinel . Retrieved September 23, 2025 .
^ a b Gilliland, Lew (November 3, 2025). "Trump endorses Fleischmann for reelection in 2026" . Chattanooga Times Free Press . Retrieved November 7, 2025 .
^ a b "2026 Election United States House - Tennessee 3rd" . fec.gov . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved May 1, 2026 .
^ Rayner, Ruby (February 7, 2026). "Democrat Anna Golladay will challenge Chuck Fleischmann for Congress in 2026" . Chattanooga Times Free Press . Retrieved February 8, 2026 .
^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n "Candidate Lists | Tennessee Secretary of State" . sos.tn.gov . Tennessee Secretary of State. Retrieved March 18, 2026 .
^ "Scott DesJarlais" . Ballotpedia . Retrieved June 24, 2026 .
^ a b c "2026 Election United States House - Tennessee 4th" . fec.gov . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved May 1, 2026 .
^ Carter, Terri (June 18, 2025). " 'No Kings' protest reaches into Franklin County" . Herald Chronicle . Retrieved November 22, 2025 . Victoria Broderick, who plans to run against incumbent U.S. Rep. Scott DesJarlais, R-Tennessee, in the 2026 election...
^ "Jacob Anders" . Ballotpedia . Retrieved May 2, 2026 .
^ "2026 Endorsements CFE Members" . Center for Freethought Equality . Retrieved December 4, 2025 .
^ Joyce, Matt (October 15, 2025). "Charlie Hatcher announces candidacy for Congress" . Williamson Herald . Retrieved October 16, 2025 .
^ Rau, Nate (October 27, 2025). "President Trump endorses TN Rep. Andy Ogles" . Axios . Retrieved January 6, 2026 .
^ a b "2026 Election United States House - Tennessee 5th" . fec.gov . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved May 1, 2026 .
^ Powell, Jay (September 4, 2025). "Columbia mayor Chaz Molder 'building a new coalition,' seeks 5th District seat against Ogles in 2026" . The Daily Herald . Retrieved September 4, 2025 .
^ a b c d Hornbostel, Austin (July 10, 2025). "This Nashville council member wants Rep. Andy Ogles' seat in Congress" . The Tennessean . Retrieved July 10, 2025 .
^ "Cohen endorses candidates for redrawn congressional districts" . Retrieved May 25, 2026 .
^ Jones, Vivian (February 9, 2026). "Former US Rep. Jim Cooper backs Chaz Molder in Ogles challenge" . The Tennesseean .
^ a b "DCCC Announces First Round of Candidates Named to Coveted 2026 'Red to Blue' Program" . February 23, 2026. Retrieved February 23, 2026 .
^ "Local leader endorses Chaz Molder" . Yahoo News . May 23, 2026. Retrieved May 25, 2026 .
^ "Tennessee Elections" . Retrieved December 5, 2025 .
^ Bado, Kirk A. (June 17, 2026). "Exclusive: Internal Poll Gives Dems Hope in TN-05" . National Journal . Retrieved June 17, 2026 .
^ a b Jones, Vivian (March 20, 2025). "US Rep. John Rose launches 2026 bid for Tennessee governor" . The Tennessean . Retrieved March 20, 2025 .
^ Rau, Nate (July 8, 2025). "State Rep. Johnny Garrett announces bid for Congress" . Axios . Retrieved July 8, 2025 .
^ McCall, J. Holly (July 12, 2025). "Former Tennessee congressman Hilleary announces run for 6th Congressional District" . Tennessee Lookout . Retrieved July 14, 2025 .
^ Housler, Kaitlin (July 16, 2025). "Knox County Mayor Glenn Jacobs Endorses Johnny Garrett in TN-06 U.S. House Race" . Tennessee Star . Retrieved October 8, 2025 .
^ a b c "2026 Election United States House - Tennessee 6th" . fec.gov . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved May 1, 2026 .
^ Friedman, Adam (July 8, 2025). "Game on: Fields fill for Tennessee's open 6th and 7th U.S. House seats; a Democrat in District 5" . Tennessee Lookout . Retrieved September 12, 2025 .
^ Brent Carl Fleshman (January 16, 2026). "6th Congressional District candidate speaks in Cookeville" . Herald-Citizen . Retrieved February 4, 2026 .
^ Rau, Nate (May 12, 2026). "Former Nashville Mayor Megan Barry pulls papers to run for Congress" . Axios . Retrieved May 13, 2026 .
^ "Matt Van Epps" . Ballotpedia . Retrieved June 24, 2026 .
^ a b c "2026 Election United States House - Tennessee 7th" . fec.gov . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved May 1, 2026 .
^ "March 12: Tennessee Lawmakers' Per Diem; Vincent Dixie Stands Pat" . Nashville Banner . March 12, 2026. Retrieved March 18, 2026 .
^ Broderick, Kelly (January 12, 2026). "Rep. Aftyn Behn announces she will not seek TN-07 nomination" . News Channel 5 Nashville (WTVF) . Retrieved January 12, 2026 .
^ Joslin, Stacey Shrader (January 23, 2026). "Candidates Line Up for U.S. House Seat" . www.tba.org . Retrieved March 18, 2026 .
^ "Jonathan Thorp (Tennessee)" . Ballotpedia . Retrieved March 18, 2026 .
^ "David Kustoff" . Ballotpedia . Retrieved June 24, 2026 .
^ "RJC endorses 16 congressional incumbents, including 4 Jews" . San Diego Jewish World . March 12, 2026. Retrieved March 13, 2026 .
^ "2026 Election United States House - Tennessee 8th" . fec.gov . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved May 1, 2026 .
^ "Leonard Perkins announces candidacy for US House district 8 seat" . WBBJ-TV . January 9, 2026. Retrieved January 9, 2026 .
^ "FEC Form 2 for Report FEC-1956880" . docquery.fec.gov . Retrieved March 31, 2026 .
^ a b Finton, Lucas; Schermele, Zachary (May 15, 2026). "Rep. Steve Cohen of Memphis, after 19 years in Congress, ends reelection bid" . Knoxville News Sentinel . Retrieved May 15, 2026 .
^ Friedman, Adam (October 8, 2025). "Memphis state Rep. Justin Pearson to challenge U.S. Rep. Steve Cohen in 2026 Democratic primary" . Tennessee Lookout . Retrieved October 8, 2025 .
^ a b c d e f g h i j k Lacy, Akela (June 16, 2026). "Bernie Sanders Backs Justin J. Pearson, House Candidate at the Heart of Tennessee Voting Rights Fight" . The Intercept . Retrieved June 24, 2026 .
^ "Cohen endorses candidates for redrawn congressional districts" . Action News 5 . Retrieved May 25, 2026 .
^ a b c d e f g h i j k Taylor, Sarah Grace (May 15, 2026). "May 15: Justin Pearson's New Opponent; Megan Barry Changes Her Mind" . Nashville Banner . Retrieved May 15, 2026 .
^ @Justinjpearson (May 15, 2026). "Thank you to the fearless TN State Senator Charlane Oliver for your fearless leadership and unwavering support! Proud of this endorsement from my fellow organizer in office here in Tennessee. 🙌🏾" (Tweet ). Retrieved June 20, 2026 – via X (formerly Twitter) .
^ a b Bowman, Bridget (October 8, 2025). " 'Tennessee Three' legislator Justin Pearson launches primary challenge against longtime House Democrat" . NBC News . Retrieved October 8, 2025 .
^ "Our Candidates" .
^ Moore, Elena; Fowler, Stephen (March 5, 2026). "A run for their money: Young candidates rival older incumbents in midterm fundraising" . NPR . Retrieved June 24, 2026 .
^ "Justin J. Pearson for Congress in Tennessee's 9th District" . Our Revolution . Retrieved May 28, 2026 .
^ Bravender, Robin (January 22, 2026). "Sunrise eyes Dem incumbent knockouts in Michigan, Tennessee" . Politico . Retrieved January 25, 2026 .
^ "Our Endorsed Candidates" . Track AIPAC .
^ Cochrane, Emily (April 1, 2026). "One of the Democrats' Generational Battles: He's 76, His Opponent Is 31" . The New York Times . Retrieved April 16, 2026 .
^ "Endorsees" . DMFI PAC . Retrieved December 17, 2025 .
^ "Steve Cohen" . J Street PAC. Retrieved April 24, 2026 .
^ "Jewish Dems Endorsed Candidates" . Jewish Democratic Council of America . Retrieved January 2, 2026 .
^ "2026 Planned Parenthood Action Fund Endorsed Candidates" . www.plannedparenthoodaction.org . Planned Parenthood Action Fund . Retrieved April 8, 2026 .
^ a b "2026 Election United States House - Tennessee 9th" . fec.gov . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved May 1, 2026 .
^ Weigel, David [@daveweigel] (March 12, 2026). "New poll of #TN09 shared w me by @justicedems: Steve Cohen (inc): 45%, Justin Pearson: 44%. 1/30-2/3, 354 likely primary voters. Numbers are before messaging (when pollsters read bad info about one candidate and good info about the other)" (Tweet ). Retrieved March 12, 2026 – via X (formerly Twitter) .
^ "State Sen. Brent Taylor announces run for 9th Congressional District" . Fox13 . Retrieved May 7, 2026 .
^ Stockard, Sam (May 12, 2026). "Tennessee's new 9th District draws Republican race" . Tennessee Lookout . Retrieved May 14, 2026 .
^ a b Jarrett, Kim (May 7, 2026). "Taylor says he will run in new 9th Congressional District" . Johnson City Press . Retrieved May 7, 2026 .
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