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How Is the Pope Elected? | Papal Conclave, Cardinals, Voting, Secrecy, Sistine Chapel, & Facts

Sacred College of CardinalsCardinals attending a mass at St. Peter's Basilica in Vatican City on March 12, 2013, before entering the papal conclave to elect the next pope. Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio of Argentina was elected the next day and became Pope Francis.

A new pope is elected to lead the Roman Catholic Church through a procedure known as the papal conclave, which takes place in Vatican City after a pope dies or resigns. Only cardinals under the age of 80 are eligible to vote, and the selection is typically made from among the cardinals themselves, although this is not a formal requirement. The last conclave was held in May 2025, when Pope Leo XIV was elected to succeed Pope Francis, who died on April 21, 2025..

Conclave

For more details on the papal election process, see papal conclave.

The conclave is held in strict seclusion inside the Sistine Chapel of the Vatican Palace. Upon entering the chapel, all cardinal electors take an oath of secrecy. (Pope Paul VI established a nominal limit of 120 electors in 1975, but all age-eligible cardinals are expected to have the right to vote, even if the number exceeds 120.) Afterward, everyone else, including the master of ceremonies, exits the chapel, leaving only the electors to proceed with the vote. Voting is done by secret ballot. One ballot is held on the first day, and up to four ballots are conducted on each subsequent day—two in the morning and two in the afternoon. Each elector writes the name of his chosen candidate on a ballot paper, which is recorded, threaded together for security, and later burned.

A two-thirds majority is required to elect a new pope. Once this threshold is reached, the newly chosen pope consents to his election and selects his papal name. His election is then signaled to the public by releasing white smoke up a pipe through the chapel’s roof (black smoke signals that the conclave did not reach a majority that day). Finally, the senior cardinal deacon announces the new pope from the balcony of St. Peter’s Basilica with the Latin proclamation “Habemus papam” (“We have a pope”), and the pope addresses and blesses the city and the world, delivering a message traditionally titled Urbi et orbi).

The Editors of Encyclopaedia BritannicaThis article was most recently revised and updated by Gitanjali Roy.

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