Trending Surveys
The latest public surveys people are talking about
State of the Nation: Cost of Living 2026
CitizenVoice flagship report. The definitive picture of how UK households are earning, spending and coping in 2026 - tracked across income, essentials, debt and outlook.
by CitizenVoice Research
Trust in Westminster 2026
How much do you trust Parliament, government and politicians to act in your interest? A snapshot of UK political trust.
by CitizenVoice Team
The NHS at 80: Public Verdict 2026
CitizenVoice flagship report. As the NHS approaches its 80th year, the public delivers its verdict on access, funding, reform and what must change.
by CitizenVoice Research
Generation Rent: The UK Housing Report 2026
CitizenVoice flagship report. Renting, buying, building and the widening generational divide - the full picture of housing in Britain in 2026.
by CitizenVoice Research
Cost of Living Pulse: June 2026
Our monthly check-in on how UK households are coping with everyday costs - from the weekly shop to rent, energy and childcare.
by CitizenVoice Team
Working from home: is the office winning again?
My company just mandated four days in the office. Curious whether the rest of the UK is being pulled back too and how people feel about it.
by Priya from Birmingham
Latest Results
Anonymous aggregate results from public surveys
UK Voting Priorities
2 respondents
Which issue matters most when choosing a political party?
State of the Nation: Cost of Living 2026
1 respondents
How would you describe your household finances right now?
Trust in Westminster 2026
1 respondents
How much do you trust the UK government to act in your best interest?
AI Insights
Published, privacy-safe summaries of what the data shows
State of the Nation: Cost of Living 2026
The 2026 cost-of-living picture is one of quiet borrowing. Most households are coping on paper but a third now fund everyday essentials on credit, and optimism about the year ahead splits sharply along housing and generational lines. This is the report's defining finding: the squeeze has moved from cutting back to borrowing to stand still.
The NHS at 80: Public Verdict 2026
At nearly 80, the NHS holds a unique place in British life: the public believes it is failing and refuses to give up on it. The diagnosis varies by generation, but the prescription is shared - fix access and staffing, fund it properly, and leave free-at-the-point-of-use alone.
Trust in Westminster 2026
Political trust in Britain is scraping along the bottom, but democratic intent has not collapsed with it. People want delivery, not slogans - and the young are disillusioned with politics, not with the issues themselves.
Cost of Living Pulse: June 2026
Britain's cost-of-living squeeze has moved from the energy crisis to the checkout. Food now tops the list of pressures, nearly two-thirds of households feel worse off than last year, and cutbacks have spread beyond luxuries into everyday essentials.
UK Opinion Trends
High-level participation trends across the platform
Survey responses — last 8 weeks
Most active topics
- 1Politics3
- 2NHS & Healthcare2
- 3Cost of Living1
- 4Films & TV1
- 5Music1
Community Surveys
Featured polls created by CitizenVoice members
Working from home: is the office winning again?
My company just mandated four days in the office. Curious whether the rest of the UK is being pulled back too and how people feel about it.
by Priya from Birmingham
Should pubs and bars close earlier on weeknights?
Our city centre is noisy until 2am midweek. I want to know if others think earlier closing would improve things or just kill the night-time economy.
by James from Sheffield
Is the school run safe in your area?
Cars mounting pavements outside our primary school every morning. Parents - is it like this everywhere? What actually works?
by Emma from Cardiff
Do you actually trust online reviews?
Bought a 4.8-star kettle that broke in a week. How much do people really trust reviews on shopping sites these days?
by Tom from Glasgow
Where the UK is Talking
National and regional participation — anonymised summaries only
By nation
Regional summaries appear once enough people have taken part (minimum group size protects anonymity).
Most active regions
Regional breakdowns are shown only when groups are large enough to stay anonymous.
We only ever publish national and regional summaries — never individual locations or identities.



