- Source: 2021 Worthing Borough Council election
- Britania Raya
- 2021 Worthing Borough Council election
- Worthing Borough Council
- Worthing Borough Council elections
- 2022 Worthing Borough Council election
- 2011 Worthing Borough Council election
- 2016 Worthing Borough Council election
- 2019 Worthing Borough Council election
- Worthing
- 2021 Crawley Borough Council election
- 2024 Runnymede Borough Council election
The 2021 Worthing Borough Council election took place on 6 May 2021 to elect members of Worthing Borough Council, on the same day as other UK local elections. This election was originally scheduled to take place on 7 May 2020, but was delayed a year due to the COVID-19 pandemic; 2021 was originally scheduled to be an off-year for Worthing Borough Council elections. A third of the council was up for election, a total of 13 councillors. Candidates elected in 2016 had their term expire at this election.
The Conservative Party was seeking to maintain its majority, which it had held in the town since 2004. In the 2018 election, the Labour Party emerged as the largest opposition party in Worthing; this election was the first since the incorporation of the borough council in 1974 in which it was technically possible for Labour to win a majority.
The Labour Party and The Conservative Party won 6 seats each in this election, with the Liberal Democrats winning 1. Labour gained 5 seats and held 1; a net gain of 5 seats. The Conservatives lost 5 seats to Labour, but gained one from UKIP in Northbrook Ward, and held 5; a net loss of 4 seats. The Liberal Democrats held on to their seat in Tarring Ward.
The Conservative majority was cut to 1. With a Conservative councillor then becoming an independent and a loss in a by-election, it would become a minority administration before the 2022 elections.
Results summary
Ward results
= Broadwater
== Castle
== Central
== Durrington
=This ward had no election in 2019, so changes are shown from 2018.
= Gaisford
== Goring
== Heene
== Marine
== Northbrook
=This ward had no election in 2019, so changes are shown from 2018.