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October Term 2025 (2025–2026)

Term statistics

How the justices are voting this termFull vote records for 43 of 70 decided cases

Decided cases

70

Unanimous

53%

23 of 43 scored cases

Median days to decision

99

From oral argument to opinion

Most common split

9–0

Justice agreement

Percentage of decided cases in which each pair of justices voted on the same side of the judgment
JusticeRobertsThomasAlitoSotomayorKaganGorsuchKavanaughBarrettJackson
Roberts84%88%74%77%93%95%93%70%
Thomas84%90%67%65%88%88%90%63%
Alito88%90%67%64%90%93%90%62%
Sotomayor74%67%67%93%74%74%71%95%
Kagan77%65%64%93%76%72%74%88%
Gorsuch93%88%90%74%76%88%98%69%
Kavanaugh95%88%93%74%72%88%88%70%
Barrett93%90%90%71%74%98%88%67%
Jackson70%63%62%95%88%69%70%67%

Vote splits

9–0
21
6–3
8
8–1
6
5–4
4
8–0
2
5–3
1
7–2
1

Majority opinions written

Methodology

  • Two justices "agree" in a case when they land on the same side of the judgment — voting with the majority (including concurrences) or in dissent together.
  • Vote records come from Oyez. A case counts toward these statistics only when at least 8 substantive votes are on record, so partial data can understate coverage but is never invented.
  • Recusals and cases decided without full vote records are excluded from the matrix and split counts; the decided-case total covers all publicly tracked merits decisions this term.

How this site is generated · Argument and decision days · October Term 2025 (2025–2026) cases