We know that the results of the 2017 General Election will be coming through constituency by constituency through the night.

But when will we have a good idea about who is going to win?

And when will we know who will be the next prime minister?

Follow our guide below and you'll know when stay glued to the TV and when to get up and make a brew.

Voting continues until 10pm and then the votes are counted.

A few results should be through by midnight which may give an insight into whether Theresa May, Jeremy Corbyn or someone else with be the next resident at Number 10.

How can I watch the election results on TV?

David Dimbleby

Television coverage kicks off after 10pm.

The BBC's election night show will be hosted by David Dimbleby. ITV's is hosted by Tom Bradby with former Labour politician Ed Balls and Conservative George Osborne as special guests.

Sky News' coverage is co-hosted by Adam Boulton and Sophy Ridge.

Channel 4 is hosting an alternative election night special with David Mitchell and Jeremy Paxman.

When will we know the overall winner?

That depends how close the result is.

Officially it takes 326 seats for an overall majority in the House of Commons - the solid measure of victory.

So it depends how long it takes for the results to be announced in enough seats for someone to have a majority. That probably means some time before 6am on Friday morning.

If nobody has a majority then there will be a hung Parliament. And we may not know for sure who's doing to be Prime Minister for days, if that happens.

But there's good news if you don't want to wait.

The broadcasters will publish the results of an exit poll shortly after 10pm.

This is a poll of people who have voted.

And while traditional opinion polls are unreliable, exit polls are a different matter. They've usually been pretty accurate.

So the exit poll, shortly after 10pm today, may give us a good idea who has won.

Even so, it's still just an estimate. We won't know for sure until Friday morning.

When will we know the winner of Huddersfield, Colne Valley, Dewsbury, Batley and Spen, Calder Valley and Halifax seats?

We are not expecting any Kirklees’ results before 3am but all four should be known between 6am and 9am.

Calderdale results are expected at around 5am.

The Huddersfield results may be a little later.

We've done a guide on all you need to know about the general election in Huddersfield, Colne Valley, Dewsbury, Batley and Spen, Calder Valley and Halifax seats.

When are the results announced for each constituency?

Local councils are responsible for counting votes.

And they've provided an estimate for when they think they'll be able to announce the result.

But it's only an estimate - not a guarantee.

11pm: Sunderland races to be first

Actor and TV presenter Ross Kemp joins Sunderland Labour MP Julie Elliott on her campaign around Sunderland

Houghton & Sunderland South will want to keep its title of first seat to declare - announcing at just 10.48pm in 2015.

But there's limited excitement here, as this is a safe Labour seat.

  • Houghton & Sunderland South
  • Sunderland Central

Midnight: Make a coffee

Labour is sure to pick up another early declaration in Washington & Sunderland West, while Tory former minister Justin Tomlinson would need a disaster to lose his 11,786 majority in Swindon North.

  • Washington & Sunderland West
  • Swindon North

1am: The early signs

The first marginal seat is likely to be declared. That's Nuneaton, in Warwickshire, the type of marginal seat that Labour need to win in order to claim the keys to Number 10.

Vale of Clwyd is another early marginal that could tell us if Labour's going to gain any Tory ground. The north Wales seat was won by the Conservatives by just 237 votes in 2015.

Darlington will see Labour Shadow Minister Jenny Chapman try to persuade last time's UKIP voters to back her. If two-thirds back her Tory rival, her 3,158 majority is toast.

It's even riskier in Wrexham, where barely a third of UKIP voters going blue would defeat Labour.

  • Antrim North
  • Battersea
  • Foyle
  • Newcastle upon Tyne Central
  • Newcastle upon Tyne East
  • Nuneaton
  • Putney
  • Broxbourne
  • Darlington
  • Lagan Valley
  • Swindon South
  • Tamworth
  • Tooting
  • Tyrone West
  • Wrexham

2am: Some hard truth from UKIP Country

Former UKIP leader Nigel Farage

Declarations begin to pile up - so much that our guide switches to half-hourly.

Tory Thurrock is a fascinating three-way marginal. A UKIP surge slashed the Conservative majority over Labour to just 536 last time. There were more than 15,000 UKIP votes so if the party is sliding, this seat will show which way.

Amber Rudd may be the Home Secretary but she's defending a smaller majority than many Tory big guns. Labour will still need a big swing, though, to overturn her 4,796 advantage in Hastings & Rye.

Labour has a 12,703 majority in Wales' Blaenau Gwent, but there was a wobble last month when control of the council was lost amid an independent surge.

Tory David Nuttall is defending a majority of just 378 in traditional two-way fight Bury North - while in Bury South Labour's Ivan Lewis has a higher dam of nearly 5,000.

  • Angus
  • Antrim East
  • Belfast East
  • Blaenau Gwent
  • Bury North
  • Bury South
  • Cambridgeshire North West
  • Carmarthen East & Dinefwr
  • Ceredigion
  • Clwyd South
  • Down North
  • East Kilbride, Strathaven & Lesmahagow
  • Epping Forest
  • Falkirk
  • Fareham
  • Fife North East
  • Glenrothes
  • Halton
  • Hastings & Rye
  • Kenilworth & Southam
  • Kilmarnock & Loudoun
  • Kirkcaldy & Cowdenbeath
  • Llanelli
  • Na h-Eileanan an Iar
  • Newcastle upon Tyne North
  • Oxford East
  • Peterborough
  • Ribble Valley
  • Rutherglen & Hamilton West
  • Strangford
  • Surrey East
  • Thurrock

2.30am: Corbyn stays - but will his marginals?

Jeremy Corbyn pictured in Hebden Bridge on May 15

By the time Jeremy Corbyn's safe seat of Islington North declares, if things are really good - or really bad - he'll have inkling of whether he gets to keep his other job, as Labour leader.

We'll also see if the Tories manage to take Labour's most marginal seat, City of Chester, where the majority is just 93.

Ynys Mon is Labour's most marginal seat in Wales, with Albert Owen clinging on by 229 votes ahead of confident nationalists Plaid Cymru.

UKIP enjoyed its second-biggest surge in the country in Tory Castle Point, Essex, in 2015. But with signs the party is flagging and nearly 9,000 more voters to convince, don't count on victory.

Mhairi Black, of the SNP, will find out if she's held back Paisley & Renfrewshire South from Labour again.

Semi-professional wrestler Philip Broughton will try and nab Hartlepool for UKIP. He came second in 2015 and sitting Labour MP Iain Wright has stood down.

  • Antrim South
  • Arfon
  • Burnley
  • Caerphilly
  • Castle Point
  • Dundee East
  • Dundee West
  • Hartlepool
  • Inverclyde
  • Islington North
  • Islington South & Finsbury
  • Leigh
  • Ludlow
  • Mitcham & Morden
  • Montgomeryshire
  • Motherwell & Wishaw
  • Paisley & Renfrewshire South
  • South Shields
  • Stirling
  • Taunton Deane
  • Torfaen
  • Totnes
  • Vale of Clwyd
  • Warwickshire North
  • Wimbledon
  • Ynys Mon

3am: A flood of key marginals

Liberal Democrats leader Tim Farron
Liberal Democrats leader Tim Farron

Lib Dem leader Tim Farron will hope his high profile keeps him in Westmorland & Lonsdale. But there's no UKIP candidate, so expect a Tory boost.

As we drown in results we get a few more key bellwethers - Northampton North, Bristol North West, Burton and Watford.

Welsh seat Gower has the smallest majority in the country - just 27 votes tipping in favour of Tory Byron Davies.

Ultra-Corbynista Chris Williamson is hoping to crush a Tory majority of 41 in Derby North, Britain's second-slimmest marginal where the Greens stood aside to give Labour a better chance.

For the geeks among you, Dunbartonshire East had the highest turnout in the country in 2015 at 81.9% - helping the SNP's John Nicolson oust Lib Dem Jo Swinson by just over 2,000 votes. She's fighting to win it back.

Labour's George Howarth should make it victory number nine in Knowsley, the second-safest seat in the country.

The Greens are hoping for a surge on the Isle of Wight, despite coming third after Tories and UKIP in 2015, since well-known MP Andrew Turner stood down.

Labour can face little more humiliation in Glasgow, where its last fortress - the city council - fell last month and all six Westminster seats are already held by the SNP. Labour lost 40 Scottish seats in 2015 and has just one, so it can't get much worse.

Barely half the people in Merthyr Tydfil & Rhymney voted in 2015, the lowest turnout in Wales, and Labour lost overall control of the council in Keir Hardie's heartland last month.

Labour's Tulip Siddiq is looking over her shoulder in Hampstead & Kilburn, where the Tories recorded their biggest surge of any Labour seat in 2015. Her majority is just 1,138.

  • Aberavon
  • Aberconwy
  • Airdrie & Shotts
  • Alyn & Deeside
  • Amber Valley
  • Ayrshire North & Arran
  • Barking
  • Barnsley Central
  • Barnsley East
  • Basildon & Billericay
  • Basildon South & Thurrock East
  • Belfast North
  • Belfast South
  • Belfast West
  • Bexleyheath & Crayford
  • Bishop Auckland
  • Blackburn
  • Bolton North East
  • Bolton South East
  • Bootle
  • Bournemouth East
  • Bournemouth West
  • Brecon & Radnorshire
  • Brent Central
  • Brent North
  • Bristol North West
  • Burton
  • Canterbury
  • Carlisle
  • Chorley
  • Christchurch
  • Cleethorpes
  • Clwyd West
  • Coatbridge, Chryston & Bellshill
  • Coventry North East
  • Coventry North West
  • Coventry South
  • Crawley
  • Cynon Valley
  • Dagenham & Rainham
  • Delyn
  • Derby South
  • Derbyshire South
  • Dunbartonshire East
  • Dunbartonshire West
  • Dunfermline & Fife West
  • Dwyfor Meirionnydd
  • Ealing Central & Acton
  • Ealing North
  • Ealing Southall
  • Easington
  • East Lothian
  • Eastleigh
  • Enfield Southgate
  • Erewash
  • Exeter
  • Glasgow Central
  • Glasgow East
  • Glasgow North
  • Glasgow North East
  • Glasgow North West
  • Glasgow South
  • Glasgow South West
  • Gosport
  • Hammersmith
  • Hampstead & Kilburn
  • Harrogate & Knaresborough
  • Havant
  • Hertfordshire North East
  • Holborn & St Pancras
  • Hornsey & Wood Green
  • Hull East
  • Hull North
  • Hull West & Hessle
  • Huntingdon
  • Hyndburn
  • Isle of Wight
  • Islwyn
  • Jarrow
  • Kettering
  • Knowsley
  • Lanark & Hamilton East
  • Londonderry East
  • Makerfield
  • Merthyr Tydfil & Rhymney
  • Middlesbrough
  • Midlothian
  • Moray
  • Neath
  • Newport East
  • Newport West
  • Northampton North
  • Northampton South
  • Ochil & Perthshire South
  • Paisley & Renfrewshire North
  • Perth & Perthshire North
  • Renfrewshire East
  • Rhondda
  • Rochford & Southend East
  • Rother Valley
  • Rotherham
  • Somerton & Frome
  • Southend West
  • Stafford
  • Stockton North
  • Stone
  • Streatham
  • Swansea East
  • Swansea West
  • Telford
  • Torbay
  • Warwick & Leamington
  • Watford
  • Wellingborough
  • Wentworth & Dearne
  • Westmorland & Lonsdale
  • Worcester

3.30am: Decision time for Danczuk

Former Labour MP and independent candidate Simon Danczuk

Clacton was UKIP's first ever general election victory but MP Douglas Carswell had a spectacular break-up with the party and quit Westminster. Has the spell of Farage been broken in this former Tory seat?

Equally unusual is Rochdale, where Simon Danczuk is standing as an independent after he was kicked out of Labour for sexts to a 17-year-old. His majority was 12,442. Will voters side with him or a red rosette?

Scottish Secretary David Mundell, the only Tory north of the border, has a majority of just 798 in Dumfriesshire, Clydesdale and Tweeddale. But the Tories have been on the march in Scotland. Polls have tipped them up to a dozen seats.

Former NUS chief Wes Streeting was one of just 10 Labour candidates to grab a seat off the Tories in 2015. But this time he has to fight London's Ilford North without a UKIP rival to split the vote.

Labour Brexiteer Kate Hoey has a huge majority in Remain-backing Vauxhall, but she's sparked anger by campaigning with Nigel Farage. Some voters may punish her.

If you still need predictions, Lincoln and Dover have both swung with every election result since the 1980s.

  • Aldershot
  • Blaydon
  • Cambridgeshire South
  • Cities of London & Westminster
  • Clacton
  • Dover
  • Dulwich & West Norwood
  • Dumfries & Galloway
  • Dumfriesshire, Clydesdale & Tweeddale
  • Durham, City of
  • Durham North
  • Durham North West
  • Edmonton
  • Enfield North
  • Great Grimsby
  • Harlow
  • Heywood & Middleton
  • Ilford North
  • Ilford South
  • Kensington
  • Lincoln
  • Linlithgow & Falkirk East
  • Livingston
  • Maldon
  • Mansfield
  • Newbury
  • Penrith & The Border
  • Preston
  • Redcar
  • Reigate
  • Rochdale
  • Sedgefield
  • Shrewsbury & Atcham
  • Slough
  • Stockton South
  • Thornbury & Yate
  • Tunbridge Wells
  • Ulster Mid
  • Vauxhall
  • Wallasey
  • Warley
  • Welwyn Hatfield
  • West Bromwich East
  • West Bromwich West
  • Westminster North
  • Wigan
  • Workington
  • Wrekin, The
  • Wycombe
  • Wyre & Preston North

4am: The power list

Conservatives could take Birmingham Northfield from Labour.

And they also have a chance of making a gain from Labour in Dudley North .

Labour big names John McDonnell and Diane Abbott would need an upset to lose their seats, Hayes & Harlington and Hackney North & Stoke Newington.

And Tory big names David Davis, Philip Hammond, Michael Fallon and Boris Johnson should all keep their seats.

Those are the catchily-named Haltemprice & Howden, Runnymede & Weybridge, Sevenoaks and Uxbridge & Ruislip South.

Now, you used to be able to say there were more pandas in Scotland than Tory MPs. Well in 2015 you could say it of Lib Dems and Labour too.

Orkney and Shetland is the only Lib Dem Scottish seat and also the party's closest marginal, beating the SNP by just 817 votes.

And Ian Murray will be hoping Labour doesn't complete its Scottish humiliation by holding onto its only seat, Edinburgh South.

Former First Minister Alex Salmond will be hoping to keep his 8,687 majority in Gordon.

Brexit-backing Stoke-on-Trent Central had the UK's lowest turnout at just 51.3% in 2015, but showed UKIP's Paul Nuttall the door just months ago when Remainer Gareth Snell increased Labour's majority in a by-election.

Lib Dem Vince Cable is trying to snatch Twickenham, holder of England's highest turnout in 2015 at 77.2%, back from the Tories two years after he was outsted.

If the 'Lib Dem Fightback' is anywhere it should be here - or in former yellow seats like Bath, Colchester, Sutton & Cheam, Solihull and Yeovil, among 27 Lib Dem seats that went blue in 2015.

London's slimmest marginal Croydon Central will see Labour challenge Tory housing minister Gavin Barwell's majority of just 165.

Things got very bitter in Ealing Central and Acton, where Tory Joy Morrissey threatened Labour's Rupa Huq with legal action as she bids to nab her 274 majority. Greens and UKIP pulled out to help each side.

Lib Dem veteran Simon Hughes is trying to win back the South London Bermondsey & Old Southwark seat he lost to Labour in 2015.

And Labour's Clive Lewis, who also took his Norwich South seat from a Lib Dem, wants to hold on.

  • Aberdeen North
  • Aberdeen South
  • Aberdeenshire West & Kincardine
  • Aldridge-Brownhills
  • Ayr, Carrick & Cumnock
  • Ayrshire Central
  • Banff & Buchan
  • Barrow & Furness
  • Bassetlaw
  • Bath
  • Beckenham
  • Bermondsey & Old Southwark
  • Bethnal Green & Bow
  • Beverley & Holderness
  • Birkenhead
  • Birmingham Northfield
  • Blackley & Broughton
  • Bolton West
  • Bosworth
  • Bracknell
  • Brentwood & Ongar
  • Bromley & Chislehurst
  • Broxtowe
  • Camberwell & Peckham
  • Cannock Chase
  • Cardiff Central
  • Cardiff North
  • Cardiff South & Penarth
  • Cardiff West
  • Carmarthen West & Pembrokeshire South
  • Carshalton & Wallington
  • Chelmsford
  • Chelsea & Fulham
  • Cheltenham
  • Chesham & Amersham
  • Chesterfield
  • Chingford & Woodford Green
  • Colchester
  • Copeland
  • Croydon Central
  • Croydon North
  • Croydon South
  • Cumbernauld, Kilsyth & Kirkintilloch East
  • Derbyshire Mid
  • Don Valley
  • Dudley North
  • Dudley South
  • East Ham
  • Edinburgh East
  • Edinburgh North & Leith
  • Edinburgh South
  • Edinburgh South West
  • Edinburgh West
  • Eltham
  • Erith & Thamesmead
  • Esher & Walton
  • Feltham & Heston
  • Folkestone & Hythe
  • Fylde
  • Garston & Halewood
  • Gateshead
  • Gedling
  • Gloucester
  • Gordon
  • Gower
  • Greenwich & Woolwich
  • Hackney North & Stoke Newington
  • Halesowen & Rowley Regis
  • Haltemprice & Howden
  • Hampshire North West
  • Harwich & Essex North
  • Hayes & Harlington
  • Hendon
  • Herefordshire North
  • Hertford & Stortford
  • Hertfordshire South West
  • Hertsmere
  • High Peak
  • Hornchurch & Upminster
  • Ipswich
  • Lancashire West
  • Leicestershire North West
  • Lewisham East
  • Lewisham West & Penge
  • Leyton & Wanstead
  • Lichfield
  • Liverpool Riverside
  • Liverpool Wavertree
  • Liverpool West Derby
  • Meriden
  • Monmouth
  • Newcastle-under-Lyme
  • Norfolk Mid
  • Norfolk South
  • Norwich South
  • Ogmore
  • Old Bexley & Sidcup
  • Orpington
  • Pendle
  • Plymouth Moor View
  • Plymouth Sutton & Devonport
  • Pontypridd
  • Poplar & Limehouse
  • Preseli Pembrokeshire
  • Rayleigh & Wickford
  • Richmond Park
  • Romford
  • Rossendale & Darwen
  • Ruislip, Northwood & Pinner
  • Runnymede & Weybridge
  • Saffron Walden
  • St Helens North
  • St Helens South & Whiston
  • Salisbury
  • Scunthorpe
  • Sevenoaks
  • Shropshire North
  • Skipton & Ripon
  • Solihull
  • Southport
  • Staffordshire South
  • Stevenage
  • Stoke-on-Trent Central
  • Stoke-on-Trent North
  • Stoke-on-Trent South
  • Stratford-on-Avon
  • Stroud
  • Suffolk West
  • Sutton & Cheam
  • Sutton Coldfield
  • Tonbridge & Malling
  • Tottenham
  • Twickenham
  • Uxbridge & Ruislip South
  • Vale of Glamorgan
  • Walsall North
  • Walsall South
  • Walthamstow
  • Wealden
  • West Ham
  • Weston-Super-Mare
  • Wiltshire South West
  • Wirral South
  • Witham
  • Woking
  • Worcestershire Mid
  • Worcestershire West
  • Wythenshawe & Sale East
  • Yeovil

4.30am: Theresa May's big mandate

Theresa May at her polling station in Maidenhead

Theresa May will have a good idea of whether she's staying in Number 10 by the time she (probably) wins Maidenhead - it's the Tories' second-safest seat.

The Tories will want to snatch Berwickshire, Roxburgh and Selkirk, in the Borders and Scotland's most marginal seat, from the SNP's Calum Kerr. He has a majority of 328.

Tactical voting by Tories reportedly kept Lib Dem Nick Clegg in Sheffield Hallam in 2015. But Labour still recorded its biggest vote rise in any rival's seat.

And expect Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt to slide back with ease into South West Surrey despite a bid to unseat him by the National Health Action Party.

  • Argyll & Bute
  • Birmingham Erdington
  • Blackpool North & Cleveleys
  • Blackpool South
  • Bolsover
  • Bury St Edmunds
  • Chipping Barnet
  • Corby
  • Eastbourne
  • Eddisbury
  • Filton & Bradley Stoke
  • Hampshire East
  • Hazel Grove
  • Leeds Central
  • Leeds East
  • Lewisham Deptford
  • Maidenhead
  • Mole Valley
  • Newry & Armagh
  • Newton Abbot
  • Redditch
  • Romsey & Southampton North
  • Scarborough & Whitby
  • Selby & Ainsty
  • Sheffield Brightside & Hillsborough
  • Sheffield Central
  • Sheffield Hallam
  • Sheffield Heeley
  • Sheffield South East
  • Somerset North
  • South Holland & The Deepings
  • South Ribble
  • Staffordshire Moorlands
  • Stockport
  • Suffolk Central & Ipswich North
  • Suffolk Coastal
  • Surrey Heath
  • Surrey South West
  • Thirsk & Malton
  • Tynemouth
  • Tyneside North
  • Weaver Vale
  • Windsor
  • Witney
  • Wolverhampton North East
  • Wolverhampton South East
  • Wolverhampton South West

5am: D-Day for Paul Nuttall

UKIP leader Paul Nuttall

As dawn breaks Boston and Skegness is a big moment for UKIP. Leader Paul Nuttall is standing in the Brexit-backing seat where his party won the highest vote share (apart from Clacton) in 2015. If he loses badly, he could be ousted.

Ed Miliband would need an upset not to glide home in Doncaster North.

Labour's Ruth Cadbury could be in trouble in Brentford & Isleworth. UKIP won 3,203 votes last time but has no candidate this time. And her majority is less than a sixth of that.

Expect similar woes for former Labour leadership candidate Mary Creagh, whose Wakefield seat has been cleared by UKIP to give the Tories a bigger shot at her 2,613 majority.

Labour Unite union aide Dan Carden should be parachuted into Liverpool Walton, the safest seat in the country, after previous MP Steve Rotheram won the metro mayor election.

Bristol West may well be the Greens' best shot at a historic second MP. Molly Scott Cato will have to crush Labour cellist Thangam Debbonaire's 5,673 majority.

Ranil Jayawardena should slide effortlessly into No1 Tory safe seat Hampshire North East, while Loughborough - despite being a bellwether seat - has a strong majority for Tory ex-education secretary Nicky Morgan.

If the Tories are on the march they'll win back Wirral West, one of just 10 seats Labour nabbed off them in 2015.

And they're looking to gain pro-Brexit Halifax. Theresa May launched the Tory campaign in the knife-edge marginal where Labour has a majority less than 500.

PS: If you don't know who's won by now, put your money on bellwether Dartford - whose result has predicted an astonishing 14 elections in a row.

  • Altrincham & Sale West
  • Ashfield
  • Ashford
  • Banbury
  • Basingstoke
  • Batley & Spen
  • Beaconsfield
  • Bedford
  • Bedfordshire Mid
  • Bexhill & Battle
  • Birmingham Hodge Hill
  • Birmingham Ladywood
  • Birmingham Selly Oak
  • Birmingham Yardley
  • Boston & Skegness
  • Bradford East
  • Bradford West
  • Braintree
  • Brentford & Isleworth
  • Bridgend
  • Brigg & Goole
  • Bristol East
  • Bristol South
  • Bristol West
  • Caithness, Sutherland & Easter Ross
  • Calder Valley
  • Cambridge
  • Charnwood
  • Chester, City of
  • Chichester
  • Colne Valley
  • Dartford
  • Daventry
  • Derbyshire Dales
  • Devon North
  • Dewsbury
  • Doncaster Central
  • Doncaster North
  • Dorset South
  • Dorset West
  • Ellesmere Port & Neston
  • Epsom & Ewell
  • Faversham & Kent Mid
  • Fermanagh & South Tyrone
  • Finchley & Golders Green
  • Grantham & Stamford
  • Guildford
  • Halifax
  • Hampshire North East
  • Harrow East
  • Harrow West
  • Hemsworth
  • Hereford & Herefordshire South
  • Hexham
  • Hitchin & Harpenden
  • Inverness, Nairn, Badenoch & Strathspey
  • Kingston & Surbiton
  • Kingswood
  • Leeds West
  • Lewes
  • Liverpool Walton
  • Loughborough
  • Louth & Horncastle
  • Maidstone & The Weald
  • Manchester Central
  • Manchester Gorton
  • Manchester Withington
  • Middlesbrough South & Cleveland East
  • New Forest East
  • New Forest West
  • Newark
  • Norfolk North
  • Normanton, Pontefract & Castleford
  • Northamptonshire South
  • Nottingham East
  • Nottingham North
  • Nottingham South
  • Oldham West & Royton
  • Orkney & Shetland
  • Penistone & Stocksbridge
  • Poole
  • Pudsey
  • Richmond (Yorks)
  • Ross, Skye & Lochaber
  • Rugby
  • Rushcliffe
  • Rutland & Melton
  • St Albans
  • Salford & Eccles
  • Sefton Central
  • Sherwood
  • Sleaford & North Hykeham
  • Somerset North East
  • Spelthorne
  • Stourbridge
  • Stretford & Urmston
  • Suffolk South
  • Sussex Mid
  • Wakefield
  • Warrington North
  • Wells
  • Wirral West
  • Wokingham
  • Worsley & Eccles South
  • Wyre Forest
  • Yorkshire East

5.30pm: Moment of truth in Shipley

MP Philip Davies

An often forgotten quirk of election night is how many Labour seats (small urban areas) declare early, and Tory seats in the shires declare late.

It took until 5.44am for the Conservatives to overtake Labour in 2015, yet the party won by 98 seats in the end.

Expect drama in Hove, where Labour's Peter Kyle is defending a majority of just over 1,000 against the Tories.

And keep an eye on Birmingham Edgbaston, where Labour Brexiteer Gisela Stuart stood down. Will some of her 2,706 majority now go Hard Brexit Blue?

Speaker John Bercow should be re-elected unopposed in Buckingham.

And anti-feminist MP Philip Davies will be fighting off a challenge from the Women's Equality Party in Yorkshire seat Shipley.

  • Aylesbury
  • Berwickshire, Roxburgh & Selkirk
  • Birmingham Edgbaston
  • Buckingham
  • Cambridgeshire South East
  • Elmet & Rothwell
  • Gravesham
  • Great Yarmouth
  • Hemel Hempstead
  • Horsham
  • Hove
  • Leeds North East
  • Leeds North West
  • Norwich North
  • Shipley
  • Sittingbourne & Sheppey
  • Southampton Itchen
  • Southampton Test
  • Warrington South
  • Winchester

6am: Green delight and Esther's Return

Green candidate for Brighton Pavilion Caroline Lucas

Green co-leader Caroline Lucas will find out if she's kept party's Westminster foothold in Brighton Pavilion, while Tory Simon Kirby defends a 690 majority against a 'progressive alliance' in bellwether Brighton Kemptown.

Shadow minister Cat Smith will have to fight hard against a right-wing alliance in Lancaster and Fleetwood, where she made a rare gain from the Tories in 2015. UKIP aren't standing this time and Theresa May paid a visit in the campaign's final days. She could be in trouble.

Esther McVey - dubbed McVile for her welfare cuts as a Tory minister - will have an easier job of it in Tatton. She's been parachuted into George Osborne's old safe seat and we've heard rumours Theresa May's folk have shown their interest in her already.

  • Arundel & South Downs
  • Bedfordshire North East
  • Bedfordshire South West
  • Birmingham Hall Green
  • Birmingham Perry Barr
  • Bognor Regis & Littlehampton
  • Bradford South
  • Bridgwater & Somerset West
  • Brighton Kemptown
  • Brighton Pavilion
  • Bromsgrove
  • Camborne & Redruth
  • Cambridgeshire North East
  • Chatham & Aylesford
  • Cheadle
  • Derby North
  • Derbyshire North East
  • Devon East
  • Devon South West
  • Dorset Mid & Poole North
  • Dorset North
  • Down South
  • Forest of Dean
  • Gainsborough
  • Gillingham & Rainham
  • Hackney South & Shoreditch
  • Henley
  • Keighley
  • Lancaster & Fleetwood
  • Leicester South
  • Leicestershire South
  • Morecambe & Lunesdale
  • Norfolk North West
  • Norfolk South West
  • Oldham East & Saddleworth
  • Oxford West & Abingdon
  • Portsmouth North
  • Portsmouth South
  • Reading East
  • Reading West
  • Rochester & Strood
  • Tatton
  • Tewkesbury
  • Tiverton & Honiton
  • Truro & Falmouth
  • Wantage
  • Worthing East & Shoreham
  • Worthing West
  • York Central
  • York Outer

6.30am: Labour campaign chief ends a long night

Labour campaign chief Andrew Gwynne will have had a bad campaign indeed if he loses his 10,511 majority in Denton & Reddish.

The Lib Dems will hope for revivals in Cornwall North and St Austell & Newquay.

If Labour's mounting a fightback it should take Waveney, which it lost to the Tories in 2010.

  • Broadland
  • Cornwall North
  • Denton & Reddish
  • Devizes
  • Milton Keynes South
  • St Austell & Newquay
  • Stalybridge & Hyde
  • Waveney
  • Wiltshire North

7am: Final moments of truth for Mackinlay and Vaz

Labour candidate Keith Vaz

Expect fireworks in Thanet South, where Tory Craig Mackinlay was charged with alleged election fraud with days to go. In his favour is the fact his UKIP rival is not, this time, Nigel Farage.

Also in the headlines has been Keith Vaz, but he shouldn't struggle too badly. He has a majority of more than 18,000 in Leicester East.

Morley & Outwood is where Ed Balls suffered the biggest humiliation of the 2015 election, losing by a whisker of 422 to Tory opera singer Andrea Jenkyns. If the polls are right this time, she'll strengthen her majority.

St Ives in Cornwall - traditionally the last constituency to declare, at 3.26pm in 2015 - could go back from the Tories to the Lib Dems if Tim Farron is having a good night.

By now, it'll all be academic - we should almost certainly know who's won the election.

  • Ashton Under Lyne
  • Chippenham
  • Congleton
  • Cotswolds, The
  • Crewe & Nantwich
  • Harborough
  • Huddersfield
  • Leicester East
  • Leicester West
  • Luton North
  • Luton South
  • Macclesfield
  • Meon Valley
  • Milton Keynes North
  • Morley & Outwood
  • St Ives
  • Thanet North
  • Thanet South
  • Devon Central

And that's it! Until lunchtime ...

There are a few seats expected to trickle on even though by this point, no one will pay any attention to them.

There could be some last gasp good news for the Lib Dems.

The party lost Berwick-upon-Tweed near the Scottish borders to the Tories in 2015. If the fightback's real, so should the prospect of victory be here.

The torture is never-ending for Labour campaign chief Ian Lavery, whose Wansbeck seat is among the last to declare.

  • Berwick-upon-Tweed
  • Blyth Valley
  • Cornwall South East
  • Devon West & Torridge
  • Wansbeck