Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2018

Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2018
#LightUp
Dates
Final25 November 2018
Host
VenueMinsk-Arena, Minsk, Belarus
Presenter(s)Evgeny Perlin
Zinaida Kupriyanovich
Helena Meraai
Directed byGordon Bonello
Daniel Jelinek
Executive supervisorJon Ola Sand
Executive producerOlga Shlyager
Host broadcasterBelarusian Television and Radio Company (BTRC)
Websitewww.junioreurovision.tv/event/minsk-2018 Edit this at Wikidata
Participants
Number of entries20
Debuting countries Kazakhstan
 Wales
Returning countries Azerbaijan
 France
 Israel
Non-returning countries Cyprus
  • Belarus in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2018Belgium in the Junior Eurovision Song ContestCroatia in the Junior Eurovision Song ContestCyprus in the Junior Eurovision Song ContestDenmark in the Junior Eurovision Song ContestGreece in the Junior Eurovision Song ContestLatvia in the Junior Eurovision Song ContestMacedonia in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2018Malta in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2018Netherlands in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2018Norway in the Junior Eurovision Song ContestPoland in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2018Romania in the Junior Eurovision Song ContestSpain in the Junior Eurovision Song ContestSweden in the Junior Eurovision Song ContestFrance in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2018Switzerland in the Junior Eurovision Song ContestAustralia in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2018Australia in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2018Russia in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2018Portugal in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2018Serbia in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2018Ukraine in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2018Armenia in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2018Bulgaria in the Junior Eurovision Song ContestGeorgia in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2018Lithuania in the Junior Eurovision Song ContestMoldova in the Junior Eurovision Song ContestAlbania in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2018Israel in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2018Azerbaijan in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2018San Marino in the Junior Eurovision Song ContestItaly in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2018Montenegro in the Junior Eurovision Song ContestSlovenia in the Junior Eurovision Song ContestIreland in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2018Kazakhstan in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2018United Kingdom in the Junior Eurovision Song ContestUnited Kingdom in the Junior Eurovision Song ContestWales in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2018
         Competing countries     Countries that participated in the past but not in 2018
Vote
Voting systemEach country's professional jury award 12, 10, 8–1 points to their top 10 songs. International viewers vote for 3–5 songs, and votes are converted to points by proportional representation.
Winning song Poland
"Anyone I Want to Be"
2017 ← Junior Eurovision Song Contest → 2019

The Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2018 was the sixteenth edition of the annual Junior Eurovision Song Contest, organised by the Belarusian Television and Radio Company (BTRC) and the European Broadcasting Union (EBU). It took place in the Belarusian capital city, Minsk on 25 November 2018 at the Minsk-Arena.[1] It was the second time that the contest was held in Belarus, after it staged the 2010 edition at the same venue.

A record twenty countries took part in the contest, with Kazakhstan and Wales participating for the first time. France returned for the first time since 2004, alongside Azerbaijan for the first time since 2013 and Israel after missing the 2017 edition. Cyprus withdrew from the contest. Last year's winner Polina Bogusevich performed her entry again as the interval act, alongside the common song "#LightUp" sung by all the participants.

The winner was Roksana Węgiel, who represented Poland with the song "Anyone I Want to Be". Poland won the Junior Eurovision Song Contest for the first time. Returning country France came second, their best result at the contest, while Australia placed third for the second year in a row. Kazakhstan was the fourth best performing debuting nation, after Croatia and Italy's victories in 2003 and 2014 respectively, and Armenia's second place in 2007, finishing sixth, whilst Wales came last.

  1. ^ Cite error: The named reference Host was invoked but never defined (see the help page).