Voters in the UK can choose either to call from their landline using the long digit number for the country of their choice or from their mobile phones using the shortcode 7-digit number for the country of their choice.
The numbers to be used will be given during the programmes. The only voting by way of mobile app promoted during the programme for UK viewers will be via a mobile phone shortcode launched from the app. No text voting via the app is available in the UK. More information about how to telephone vote through the official Eurovision mobile apps on smartphones can be found here.
The app is distributed by a third party and the BBC does not control nor is responsible for any app content or functionality. Vote lines are opened and closed as specified in the programmes. Votes received outside the specified times will not be counted, but may still be charged. Voting times may change. The six countries who are automatically through to the Grand Final UK, France, Germany, Spain, Italy and the host, The Netherlands are featured in the two semi-finals but the public will not be able to vote for them.
The scoring for the semi-finals will be the same as the Grand Final. There will be two separate sets of votes awarded; the points from the juries and the points from the televote see below from each of the Eurovision countries. The ten highest scoring acts in each Semi Final once all the points have been combined will go through to the Grand Final and are revealed in no particular order.
Any votes from the UK for the UK act will not count and the call may still be charged. In the Grand Final, the final scores of the songs shall be calculated on the basis of both the results of the public televoting and the results of the national juries appointed. For the national jury vote of each country, the score of each song in each country shall be determined as follows: 12 points shall be allocated to the song having obtained the best rank from the national jury; 10 points to the song having obtained the second-best rank from the national jury, 8 points to the song having obtained the third-best rank from the national jury, 7 points to the next, and so on down to 1 point for the song having obtained the tenth-best rank from the national jury.
In calculating the combined ranks from each jury member ranking, an exponential weight model is used. For more information please see the Eurovision website. Separately, the points awarded from the public vote from each country for each song shall be determined as follows: an additional 12 points shall be allocated to the song having obtained the highest number of votes from the UK televoting; 10 points to the song having obtained the second-highest number of votes from the UK televoting, 8 points to the song having obtained the third-highest number of votes from the UK televoting, 7 points to the next, and so on down to 1 point for the song having obtained the tenth-highest number of votes from the UK televoting.
The jury and public televote points will be presented separately. Each country will award 58 points from the national jury 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 10, and 12 and 58 points from the public vote 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 10, and This means that each country will award a total of points. Therefore the theoretical highest number of points one act could get from any one country is 24 12 each from the national jury and the televoting.
The winner of the Grand Final shall be the song which has obtained the highest number of points from the combined calculation of the total points from all of the televoting results and the total points awarded from all of the national juries' from all participating countries.
Each national jury will consist of 5 members including a chairperson. The members shall be professionals within the music industry and nationals of the relevant country. The members of each national jury will watch the live transmission of the 2nd dress rehearsal for both the Grand Final and the Semi Final in which that country is voting.
After the transmission they will vote in accordance with the European Broadcasting Union Rules. For resolving a tie in the national jury ranking — the system will look at the individual results of the jury members and the overall rank will be determined by firstly looking at these individual ranks and then if necessary the age of the jury members. For resolving a tie after the points from the result of televotes and the result of the national juries have been combined, the winner in that tie shall be the song that received the most points from all the country televotes.
If there is a tie in the total number of points awarded via the televotes. If the tied songs have received points from the same number of countries, the highest number of point scores shall be decisive. If the winner still cannot be determined by this procedure, the number of times ten points have been awarded shall be the deciding factor.
If necessary, this method shall continue until account has been taken of the number of times one point has been awarded. In the very unlikely case that after applying the above procedure there is still a tie; the tie shall be resolved by giving precedence to the country which was earlier in the running order for the respective show in question.
More information can be found in the published Rules on the Eurovision website. Voters in the UK can choose either to call from their landline using the long digit number for the song s of their choice or from their mobile phones using the shortcode 7-digit number for the song s of their choice. To vote from your mobile in the UK, please call the short 7-digit number announced for your chosen song s.
Calls from mobiles to the short 7-digit number cost 15p per vote and should cost less than calling the long digit number from your mobile so please, if you can, dial the short 7-digit number from your mobile. Telephone calls to the short 7-digit number initiated via the Eurovision app will be charged as above. Voters must obtain permission from the bill payer before voting. The BBC can only guarantee that votes individually entered directly through the telephone numbers promoted on the show will count.
Voting by way of mobile app promoted during the programme is via a connection to these telephone numbers. The televotes would be counted and combined as normal, but the results would be announced by the presenters according to the countries' placement after the jury vote. Meaning, the country that was ranked last with the juries would receive their televote score first and so on up the list, with the country that the juries ranked first receiving their televote result last.
When it gets down to the last country still needing to receive their points, the presenters would announce how many points it would need to pass the country currently in the lead in order for it to win.
As of , commentators read out how their respective country's public voted in the grand final upon its conclusion, with the results posted on screen. Eurovision Song Contest Wiki Explore. Turkey Ukraine United Kingdom Yugoslavia. Page history. Each five-member jury ranked the songs and the top-ten songs linear method got , 10 and 12 points. The televoters from each country ranked the songs and the top-ten songs got , 10 and 12 points. Tie between two or more songs - : If two or more songs gained the same points, they would share the position.
In there were four winners! If two or more songs tie but not for first place, they would share the position. If still tied, both countries would be declared joint winners. The song which was earlier in the running order - : If two or more songs gained the same points, the best of these songs was the song which: Has received the most points from all the Televoters combined Has obtained points from the highest number of countries Received the highest number of point scores, then the highest number of point scores, 8-points scores, etc.
The song which was earlier in the running order Presentation of the voting and points : The scores of the voting have never been made public, leaving room for lots of speculation. Attempts to reconstruct the voting by interviewing jury members over the following five decades did not lead to any reliable outcome.
After that the results of all the televoting from all the countries were bundled and given combined. Televoting or jury failure - : If a televoting failure occured in the country or if a country wasn't big enough to provide a valid televoting result, a backup eight-member jury were used instead by the country. If a jury failure occured in the country or if the country's jury result wasn't approved, only televoting was used by that country. Votes must be cast one at a time and you can change your vote before you submit but once you have submitted your vote it cannot be changed.
How does the Eurovision voting system work? Eurovision was originally judged by juries before being opened to the public for a televote. The juries from each country award 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 10 and 12 points to their favourite songs, and reveal those jury scores through their national spokesperson in the usual time-consuming yet exciting way.
Viewers from each country also vote, with points from awarded to the most popular acts amongst the viewers. These scores are revealed in reverse order: the country that receives the least amount of votes from the public will be awarded their points first.
See how many times the UK has won Eurovision before. Spokespersons from each country read out the jury results — those all-important douze points — during the live show. Then the Eurovision presenters will read out the results of the European public vote, beginning with the county that received the lowest number of votes and finishing with the country that received the highest.
The country with the highest number of votes wins the competition and gets to host it the next year.
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