Vote at 16 in Belgium! New Government pledges to lower voting age for European Elections
Some positive news for 2020! The new Belgian Government announced this week that 16 and 17 year olds will finally be granted the right to vote in European elections.
Belgium will now be the third EU Member State after Austria and Malta to grant 16 year olds the right to vote at European level. The announcement has been years in the making, and is a testament to the hard work and strong voices of our Belgian Member Organisations, Le Forum des Jeunes, Rat der deutschsprachigen Jugend and Vlaamse Jeugdraad!
The Youth Forum is happy to see the initiative gaining momentum across Europe, with a growing number of countries and regions already implementing vote at 16, or discussing proposals to implement it, at national and local levels. The European Parliament also recognised the value of including 16 and 17 year olds in democratic elections when it endorsed the move to lower the voting age back in 2015.
Young people have the right to be meaningfully included in democratic processes. Combined with effective citizenship education that gives young people access to the information and tools that they need to engage, voting at 16 can have a powerful effect. Enabling citizens to build a habit of voting at a young age and engaging them in decisions that affect them, allows them to become more active, informed citizens throughout their lives.
The news from Belgium this week marks a great step forward, but why stop there? Youth rights are universal and young people are entitled to a say on elections at all levels of democracy. The European Youth Forum urges the Belgian Government to extend the proposal to include 16 and 17 year olds in all elections and hopes that more national governments will follow suit to build more representative democracies!
Related articles & publications

How Lviv and its young people are changing the culture of education
In Lviv, the European Youth Capital 2025, learning has long gone beyond school desks and university lecture halls. It begins where curiosity meets courage: with the desire to explore, try, make mistakes, improve and create something new. It is precisely this vision of education that has shaped one of the key directions of the European Youth Capital 2025 programme, as well as the new Lviv youth strategy, which will guide the municipality’s work on youth in the years to come.

Fresh Faces, Big Decisions: General Assembly 2025 wraps up in Brussels
On May 9 and 10 2025, hundreds of young people gathered in Brussels for our General Assembly (GA). They all came together for two days of democratic decisions, in depth discussions and conversations around the issues that really impact and matter to young people all over Europe.
Join the European Youth Capital 2028 Focus Group
Do you have experience in fostering young people's participation in cities? Have you implemented European youth policies at a local level, or through the European Youth Capital title?