In Honduras, the last electoral cycle revealed that more than half of all reported incidents occurred before election day, underscoring the importance of preparedness and early risk detection. To address this, national institutions and international partners developed the Electoral Early Warning System (SAT‑E), led by the National Human Rights Commission of Honduras (CONADEH) with support from UNDP, UN Women, and EU financing. The platform was designed to anticipate risks and enable preventive actions, with civil society monitors and CONADEH staff covering all 18 regions of the country, supported by analyst teams in the capital.
SAT‑E’s digital platform centralized and visualized data in real time, using dashboards, geospatial mapping, and automated triage to detect patterns, identify hotspots, and coordinate responses. This innovation replaced fragmented manual processes, creating a unified operational picture that strengthened accountability and preventive action.
During its three‑and‑a‑half‑month implementation, spanning campaigns, election day, and the inauguration, SAT‑E received 719 reports nationwide, of which 553 were verified and referred to competent institutions. The high verification rate highlighted the credibility of reporting channels and the scale of actionable incidents. Gender‑based electoral violence was also documented, with 61 reports—52 verified—showing intimidation and threats against women in political roles, pointing to the need for targeted protection measures.
Risks peaked on election day, 30 November 2025, when 143 reports were recorded in a single day. Real‑time monitoring allowed authorities to respond quickly, including extending polling hours to compensate for delays caused by technical failures and late openings. This demonstrated how monitoring directly safeguarded electoral rights by ensuring voters could still participate despite disruptions.
The evidence gathered now informs future electoral planning and reforms, providing a baseline for comparing risks across cycles. SAT‑E showed that coordinated, evidence‑based monitoring can strengthen governance, uphold human rights, and reinforce public confidence in elections. Looking ahead, Honduras aims to build on this experience by further strengthening institutional frameworks, ensuring transparency, and maintaining readiness for upcoming electoral processes.







