Georgia will elect one U.S. Senator and 14 members of its U.S. House delegation.
Senator Jon Ossoff (D) is seeking reelection in one of the most competitive races of the 2026 cycle. Ossoff has raised nearly $50M. Sixty-one percent of Ossoff’s contributions are from small contributions. Three Republican men are competing to challenge Ossoff, with Earl Carter raising the most (with nearly $5M).
More men than women are running for Georgia’s open U.S. House seats. The average raised by men is higher than the average raised by women across both parties.
There is a large pool of candidates running for the open GA-1 seat, rated “Solid Republican” by The Cook Political Report. The two Republican women candidates are trailing the men in the money race. James Kingston (R) has raised the most with almost $1.6M.
In GA-10, another open seat considered solidly Republican, Houston Gaines leads the money race; he has raised over $1.6M. No Republican women are competing for the seat. GA-11 is an open seat rated “Solid Republican” by The Cook Political Report. John Cowan leads the money race with over $1.7M raised. The only woman with campaign finance data in the race is Lisa Carlquist (R). She has raised $206,550. Her campaign is almost exclusively self-financed.
Two Democratic women are seeking reelection to the U.S. House: Representative Nikema Williams (GA-5) and Lucy McBath (GA-6). The average raised for the two women ($286,603) is higher than the average for the three Democratic men seeking reelection ($181,433). No Republican women incumbents are running for reelection. [Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene resigned from Congress after having represented GA-14.] Two men, one Democratic and one Republican, are running for the seat; Shawn Harris (D) leads the money race with over $7.1M raised, while Clay Fuller (R) has raised over $1.2M.
This statistic is the average total amount raised to date from individuals (including self-financing).
In open-seat races, self-financing is playing the largest role for Republican women; on average, 49% of their funds are from self-financing.
Democratic women running in open seats in Georgia have the highest proportion of funds from small contributions (50%).
[Representative David Scott (GA-13) passed away on April 23, 2026. His name will remain on the ballot for the upcoming Democratic primary on May 19, as the timing of his death was too late for the state to reprint ballots for the primary. His campaign finance data are included in this analysis.]
This statistic is the average amount from self-financing as a proportion of total raised (from individuals including the candidate) by candidate subgroup. Primary challengers to incumbents are excluded.
This statistic is the average amount of contributions $200 or less as a proportion of total raised (excluding self-financed contributions) by candidate subgroup.