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This article contains a list of presidents of Chile from the establishment of the first government junta in 1810, at the beginning of the Chilean War of Independence, to the present day.
No. | Portrait | Name (Birth–Death) |
Term of office | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
— | Mateo de Toro y Zambrano (1727–1811) |
18 September 1810 | 26 February 1811 † | President of the First Government Junta. Died in office. | |
— | Juan Martínez de Rozas (1759–1813) |
27 February 1811 | 2 April 1811 | Interim President of the First Government Junta. | |
— | Fernando Márquez de la Plata (1740–1818) |
2 April 1811 | 4 July 1811 | President of the First Government Junta. | |
— | Juan Antonio Ovalle (1750–1819) |
4 July 1811 | 20 July 1811 | President of the First National Congress. | |
— | Martín Calvo Encalada (1756–1828) |
20 July 1811 | 11 August 1811 | ||
11 August 1811 | 4 September 1811 | President of the Provisional Executive Authority. | |||
— | Juan Enrique Rosales (1755–1825) |
4 September 1811 | 16 November 1811 | President of the Executive Court. | |
— | José Miguel Carrera (1785–1821) |
16 November 1811 | 13 December 1811 | President of the Provisional Government Junta. | |
13 December 1811 | 8 January 1812 | Provisional Supreme Authority. | |||
8 January 1812 | 8 April 1812 | President of the Provisional Government Junta. | |||
— | José Santiago Portales y Larraín (1764–1835) |
8 April 1812 | 6 August 1812 | President of the Provisional Government Junta. | |
— | Pedro José Prado Jaraquemada (1754–1827) |
6 August 1812 | 6 December 1812 | ||
— | José Miguel Carrera (1785–1821) |
6 December 1812 | 30 March 1813 | ||
— | Juan José Carrera (1782–1818) |
30 March 1813 | 13 April 1813 | ||
— | Francisco Antonio Pérez (1764–1828) |
13 April 1813 | 23 August 1813 | President of the Superior Governmental Junta. | |
— | José Miguel Infante (1778–1844) |
23 August 1813 | 11 January 1814 | ||
— | Agustín Eyzaguirre (1768–1837) |
11 January 1814 | 7 March 1814 |
No. | Portrait | Name (Birth–Death) |
Term of office | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
— | Antonio José de Irisarri (1786–1868) |
7 March 1814 | 14 March 1814 | Interim Supreme Director. | |
1 | Francisco de la Lastra (1777–1852) |
14 March 1814 | 23 July 1814 | Supreme Director. | |
— | José Miguel Carrera (1785–1821) |
23 July 1814 | 2 October 1814 | President of the Government Junta. Chilean defeat in the Battle of Rancagua, Spain regains control of Chile. |
No. | Portrait | Name (Birth–Death) |
Term of office | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
— | Mariano Osorio (1777–1819) |
3 October 1814 | 26 December 1815 | Royal Governor of Chile | |
— | Casimiro Marcó del Pont (1770–1819) |
26 December 1815 | 12 February 1817 | Royal Governor of Chile. Chilean victory in the Battle of Chacabuco, Spanish control ends. |
No. | Portrait | Name (Birth–Death) |
Term of office | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2 | Bernardo O'Higgins (1778–1842) |
16 February 1817 | 28 January 1823 | Supreme Director. | |
— | Agustín Eyzaguirre (1768–1837) |
28 January 1823 | 4 April 1823 | President of the Government Junta. | |
3 | Ramón Freire (1787–1851) |
4 April 1823 | 9 July 1826 | Interim Supreme Director. | |
No. | Portrait | Name (Birth–Death) |
Term of office | Party | Election | Notes | Vice President[a] | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
— | Manuel Blanco Encalada (1790–1876) |
9 July 1826 | 9 September 1826 | Independent | 1826 | Elected as Interim President. Resigned. | Agustín Eyzaguirre | ||
— | Agustín Eyzaguirre (1768–1837) |
9 September 1826 | 25 January 1827 | – | Interim Vice-President under Manuel Blanco Encalada, assumed the presidency after his resignation. | Vacant | |||
— | Ramón Freire (1787–1851) |
25 January 1827 | 15 February 1827 | Pipiolos | Provisional President. | ||||
1 | 15 February 1827 | 8 May 1827 | 1827 | Resigned. | Francisco Antonio Pinto | ||||
2 | Francisco Antonio Pinto (1785–1858) |
8 May 1827 | 16 July 1829 | – | Vice-President under Ramón Freire, assumed the presidency after his resignation. | Vacant | |||
— | Francisco Ramón Vicuña (1775–1849) |
16 July 1829 | 19 October 1829 | — | For health reasons, Francisco Antonio Pinto made the President of the Senate, Francisco Ramón Vicuña, Delegate President. | ||||
(2) | Francisco Antonio Pinto (1785–1858) |
19 October 1829 | 2 November 1829 | 1829 | Resigned. | Joaquín Vicuña | |||
— | Francisco Ramón Vicuña (1775–1849) |
2 November 1829 | 7 November 1829 | — | President of the Senate. Deposed during the Chilean Civil War of 1829–30. | Vacant | |||
— | Ramón Freire (1787–1851) |
7 November 1829 | 8 November 1829 | — | President of the Government Junta. Deposed during the Civil War. | ||||
— | Francisco Ramón Vicuña (1775–1849) |
8 November 1829 | 7 December 1829 | — | President of the Senate. Restoration of its original mandate. Resigned during the Civil War. | ||||
Vacant 7 December 1829 – 24 December 1829 |
Civil War. There was no president in this period. | ||||||||
— | José Tomás Ovalle y Bezanilla (1787–1831) |
24 December 1829 | 18 February 1830 | Pelucones | — | President of the Government Junta. | |||
— | Francisco Ruiz-Tagle Portales (1790–1860) |
18 February 1830 | 1 April 1830 | — | Provisional President. Resigned. | José Tomás Ovalle y Bezanilla | |||
— | José Tomás Ovalle y Bezanilla (1787–1831) |
1 April 1830 | 8 March 1831 | — | Provisional Vice-President under Francisco Ruiz-Tagle, assumed the presidency after his resignation. End of the Chilean Civil War of 1829–30 with the Battle of Lircay. Resigned for health reasons, died 2 weeks later. | Vacant | |||
— | Fernando Errázuriz Aldunate (1777–1841) |
8 March 1831 | 21 March 1831 | — | Provisional President appointed by the Congress. | ||||
21 March 1831 | 18 September 1831 | — | The Congress appointed José Joaquín Prieto as president and Fernando Errázuriz as vice president, but Prieto did not take office and instead resigned immediately, making Fernando Errázuriz president automatically. |
No. | Portrait | Name (Birth–Death) |
Term of office | Party | Election | Notes | Vice President[a] | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
3 | Joaquín Prieto (1786–1854) |
18 September 1831 | 18 September 1836 | Pelucones | 1831 | Diego Portales[b] | |||
18 September 1836 | 18 September 1841 | Conservative | 1836 | Post abolished | |||||
4 | Manuel Bulnes (1799–1866) |
18 September 1841 | 18 September 1846 | 1841 | |||||
18 September 1846 | 18 September 1851 | 1846 | |||||||
5 | Manuel Montt (1809–1880) |
18 September 1851 | 18 September 1856 | 1851 | Government victory in the Chilean Civil War of 1851. | ||||
18 September 1856 | 18 September 1861 | National | 1856 |
No. | Portrait | Name (Birth–Death) |
Term of office | Party | Election | Notes | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
6 | José Joaquín Pérez (1801–1889) |
18 September 1861 | 18 September 1866 | National | 1861 | |||
18 September 1866 | 18 September 1871 | 1866 | ||||||
7 | Federico Errázuriz Zañartu (1825–1877) |
18 September 1871 | 18 September 1876 | Liberal | 1871 | |||
8 | Aníbal Pinto (1825–1884) |
18 September 1876 | 18 September 1881 | 1876 | ||||
9 | Domingo Santa María (1825–1889) |
18 September 1881 | 18 September 1886 | 1881 | ||||
10 | José Manuel Balmaceda (1840–1891) |
18 September 1886 | 29 August 1891 | 1886 | Resigned in the Chilean Civil War of 1891 and handed over power to Manuel Baquedano. Killed himself on 19 September 1891, a day after his term would have ended. | |||
— | Claudio Vicuña Guerrero (1833–1907) |
Did not take office | July 1891 | Won the presidential election, although he never assumed because of the Congressist victory in the Chilean Civil War of 1891. | ||||
— | Manuel Baquedano (1823–1897) |
29 August 1891 | 31 August 1891 | Military | — | Head of Provisional Government. |
No. | Portrait | Name (Birth–Death) |
Term of office | Party | Election | Notes | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
— | Jorge Montt (1845–1922) |
31 August 1891 | 10 November 1891 | Military | — | President of the Government Junta. | ||
10 November 1891 | 26 December 1891 | — | Head of the Executive Power. | |||||
11 | 26 December 1891 | 18 September 1896 | Independent | October 1891 | ||||
12 | Federico Errázuriz Echaurren (1850–1901) |
18 September 1896 | 12 July 1901 † | Liberal | 1896 | Died in office. | ||
— | Aníbal Zañartu (1847–1902) |
12 July 1901 | 18 September 1901 | — | Minister of the Interior acting as vice president. | |||
13 | Germán Riesco (1854–1916) |
18 September 1901 | 18 September 1906 | 1901 | ||||
14 | Pedro Montt (1849–1910) |
18 September 1906 | 16 August 1910 † | National | 1906 | Died in office. | ||
— | Elías Fernández Albano (1845–1910) |
16 August 1910 | 6 September 1910 † | — | Minister of the Interior acting as vice president. Died in office. | |||
— | Emiliano Figueroa (1866–1931) |
6 September 1910 | 23 December 1910 | Liberal Democratic | — | Minister of Justice acting as vice president. | ||
15 | Ramón Barros Luco (1835–1919) |
23 December 1910 | 23 December 1915 | Liberal | 1910 | |||
16 | Juan Luis Sanfuentes (1858–1930) |
23 December 1915 | 23 December 1920 | Liberal Democratic | 1915 | |||
17 | Arturo Alessandri (1868–1950) |
23 December 1920 | 11 September 1924 | Liberal | 1920 | Deposed in a coup d'état. | ||
— | Luis Altamirano (1876–1938) |
11 September 1924 | 23 January 1925 | Military | — | President of the Government Junta of 1924. Deposed in a coup d'état. | ||
— | Pedro Dartnell (1874–1944) |
23 January 1925 | 27 January 1925 | — | President of the Government Junta of 1925. Resigned. | |||
— | Emilio Bello Codesido (1868–1963) |
27 January 1925 | 12 March 1925 | Liberal Democratic | — | President of the Government Junta of 1925. |
No. | Portrait | Name (Birth–Death) |
Term of office | Party | Election | Notes | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
(17) | Arturo Alessandri (1868–1950) |
12 March 1925 | 1 October 1925 | Liberal | — | Restoration of his original mandate. Resigned. | ||
— | Luis Barros Borgoño (1858–1943) |
1 October 1925 | 23 December 1925 | — | Minister of the Interior acting as vice president. | |||
18 | Emiliano Figueroa (1866–1931) |
23 December 1925 | 10 May 1927 | Liberal Democratic | 1925 | Resigned. | ||
— | Carlos Ibáñez del Campo (1877–1960) |
10 May 1927 | 21 July 1927 | Independent | — | Vice President. | ||
19 | 21 July 1927 | 26 July 1931 | 1927 | Resigned. | ||||
— | Pedro Opaso (1876–1957) |
26 July 1931 | 27 July 1931 | Liberal Democratic | — | President of the Senate acting as vice president. Resigned. | ||
— | Juan Esteban Montero (1879–1948) |
27 July 1931 | 20 August 1931 | Radical | — | Minister of the Interior acting as vice president. Resigned to run for presidency. | ||
— | Manuel Trucco (1875–1954) |
20 August 1931 | 15 November 1931 | — | Minister of the Interior acting as vice president. | |||
— | Juan Esteban Montero (1879–1948) |
15 November 1931 | 4 December 1931 | Radical | — | Vice President. | ||
20 | 4 December 1931 | 4 June 1932 | 1931 | Deposed in a coup d'état. |
No. | Portrait | Name (Birth–Death) |
Term of office | Party | Election | Notes | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
— | Arturo Puga (1879–1970) |
4 June 1932 | 16 June 1932 | Military | — | President of the Government Junta. Resigned. | ||
— | Carlos Dávila (1887–1955) |
16 June 1932 | 8 July 1932 | Socialist | — | President of the Government Junta. | ||
8 July 1932 | 13 September 1932 | Provisional President of the Socialist Republic. Resigned. |
No. | Portrait | Name (Birth–Death) |
Term of office | Party | Election | Notes | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
— | Bartolomé Blanche (1879–1970) |
13 September 1932 | 2 October 1932 | Military | — | Provisional President. Resigned. | ||
— | Abraham Oyanedel (1874–1954) |
2 October 1932 | 24 December 1932 | Independent | — | President of the Supreme Court acting as vice president. | ||
21 | Arturo Alessandri (1868–1950) |
24 December 1932 | 24 December 1938 | Liberal | 1932 | |||
22 | Pedro Aguirre Cerda (1879–1941) |
24 December 1938 | 25 November 1941 † | Radical | 1938 | Died in office. | ||
— | Jerónimo Méndez (1887–1959) |
25 November 1941 | 2 April 1942 | — | Minister of the Interior acting as vice president. | |||
23 | Juan Antonio Ríos (1888–1946) |
2 April 1942 | 27 June 1946 † | 1942 | Died in office. | |||
— | Alfredo Duhalde (1898–1985) |
27 June 1946 | 3 August 1946 | — | Minister of the Interior acting as vice president. Resigned to run for presidency. | |||
— | Vicente Merino (1889–1977) |
3 August 1946 | 13 August 1946 | Independent | — | Minister of the Interior acting as vice president. | ||
— | Alfredo Duhalde (1898–1985) |
13 August 1946 | 17 October 1946 | Radical | — | Vice President. Resigned. | ||
— | Juan Antonio Iribarren (1885–1966) |
17 October 1946 | 3 November 1946 | — | Minister of the Interior acting as vice president. | |||
24 | Gabriel González Videla (1898–1980) |
3 November 1946 | 3 November 1952 | 1946 | ||||
25 | Carlos Ibáñez del Campo (1877–1960) |
3 November 1952 | 3 November 1958 | Independent | 1952 | |||
26 | Jorge Alessandri (1896–1986) |
3 November 1958 | 3 November 1964 | 1958 | ||||
27 | Eduardo Frei Montalva (1911–1982) |
3 November 1964 | 3 November 1970 | Christian Democratic | 1964 | |||
28 | Salvador Allende (1908–1973) |
3 November 1970 | 11 September 1973 † (Died in office) |
Socialist | 1970 | Dies in a military coup; he killed himself while the presidential palace was under attack. |
No. | Portrait | Name (Birth–Death) |
Term of office | Party | Notes | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
29 | Augusto Pinochet (1915–2006) |
11 September 1973 | 17 June 1974 | Military | President of the Government Junta. | ||
17 June 1974 | 17 December 1974 | Supreme Chief of the Nation. | |||||
17 December 1974 | 11 March 1990 | Military regime. |
No. | Portrait | Name (birth–death) |
Term of office | Party | Elected | Notes | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Took office | Left office | Time in office | |||||||
30 | Patricio Aylwin (1918–2016) |
11 March 1990 | 11 March 1994 | 4 years | Christian Democratic | 1989 | Elected for a four-year term according to Temporary Provisions of the Constitution of 1980. Supported by the center-left coalition Concertación. | ||
31 | Eduardo Frei Ruiz-Tagle (born 1942) |
11 March 1994 | 11 March 2000 | 6 years | 1993 | Elected for an eight-year term according to the Constitution of 1980. Days before his inauguration, the Constitutional reform of 1994 reduced the presidential term from eight to six years. Supported by the center-left coalition Concertación. | |||
32 | Ricardo Lagos (born 1938) |
11 March 2000 | 11 March 2006 | 6 years | Party for Democracy | 2000 | The Constitutional reform of 2005 reduced the presidential term from six to four years. Supported by the center-left coalition Concertación. | ||
33 | Michelle Bachelet (born 1951) |
11 March 2006 | 11 March 2010 | 4 years | Socialist | 2006 | First female president of Chile. Supported by the center-left coalition Concertación. | ||
34 | Sebastián Piñera (1949–2024) |
11 March 2010 | 11 March 2014 | 4 years | National Renewal | 2010 | First democratically elected conservative president since 1958. Supported by the Coalition for Change. | ||
(33) | Michelle Bachelet (born 1951) |
11 March 2014 | 11 March 2018 | 4 years | Socialist | 2013 | Second term. Supported by the center-left coalition New Majority. | ||
(34) | Sebastián Piñera (1949–2024) |
11 March 2018 | 11 March 2022 | 4 years | Chile Vamos | 2017 | Second term. Ran as an independent candidate supported by the center-right coalition Chile Vamos. Previously suspended his party membership during his first term (2010–2014). Died in a helicopter crash less than two years after leaving office. | ||
35 | Gabriel Boric (born 1986) |
11 March 2022 | Incumbent | 2 years, 252 days | Social Convergence | 2021 | Youngest president. Supported by the coalition Apruebo Dignidad. | ||
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