The leaders of Fianna Fáil, Sinn Féin and Fine Gael have all been re-elected to the Dáil.
Fine Gael leader Simon Harris was re-elected to the Dáil for the four-seater Wicklow constituency. He topped the poll with 16,869 first preference votes, surpassing the quota of 11,415.
Fianna Fáil leader Micheál Martin was elected in Cork South-Central, winning the first of the five seats in the constituency.
Mr Martin topped the poll with 14,526 first preference votes. The Cork South-Central quota was 10,451.
Sinn Féin's Mary Lou McDonald has been elected in the four-seat Dublin Central constituency after she exceeded the quota of 6,551 on the third count.
Fine Gael's Paschal Donohoe looks likely to hold his seat in Dublin Central, while Gary Gannon of the Social Democrats also looks secure.
Independent candidate Gerard Hutch - also known as 'The Monk' - is contesting the fourth seat along with Labour's Marie Sherlock and Fianna Fáil's Mary Fitzpatrick.
Counting will resume there in the morning.
Three-seat Meath West was the first constituency to fill all its seats.
Sinn Féin's Johnny Guirke won the first seat in the constituency on the third count, with Aontú's Peadar Tóibín winning the second seat.
Fianna Fáil's Aisling Dempsey, the daughter of former minister Noel Dempsey, won the third seat after the fifth and final count.
Earlier, Fianna Fáil's Jack Chambers was elected in Dublin West after the first count, topping the five-seat constituency with 9,447 first preference votes.
Paul Donnelly of Sinn Féin was also elected in Dublin West, with 7,731 first preference votes, while Fine Gael's Emer Currie, the daugher of former minister Austin Currie, was voted in after the third count.
Sinn Fein's Pearse Doherty topped the poll in Donegal, securing 19,898 first preference votes - the highest number of the election so far.
The quota for the five-seater constituency was 12,771.
His party colleague Eoin Ó Broin was elected on the first count in Dublin Mid-West. The outgoing TD received 9,892 first preference votes, 21% of the total.
Independent Michael Healy-Rae won the first seat in the five-seater Kerry constituency.
He topped the poll with 18,597 first preference votes, where the quota was 13,083.
Independent candidate Verona Murphy was elected in Wexford having exceeded the quota on the first count.
She topped the poll with a total of 11,340 first preference votes, followed by James Brown of Fianna Fáil with 8,596 first preference votes and Sinn Féin's Johnny Mythen on 7,633. The Wexford quota was 10,502.
Sinn Féin's David Cullinane was re-elected to the Dáil, taking the first of four seats in the Waterford constituency.
He surpassed the quota of 10,731 with 11,936 first preference votes.
Fine Gael's Peter Burke retained his seat in Longford-Westmeath after the first count. He topped the poll with 10,864 votes, surpassing the quota of 10,315.
Independent candidate Carol Nolan was the first TD to be elected in Offaly and retained her seat.
She was elected on Count 5 with 9,594 votes, but her surplus was deemed too low to make a difference to the other candidates and will not be distributed in Count 6.
Earlier, Fine Gael's Jennifer Carroll MacNeill was the first TD elected in the 2024 General Election after she crossed the line with 11,685 first preference votes in Dún Laoghaire. The quota there was 11,134.
Richard Boyd Barrett of People before Profit Solidarity, Fianna Fáil's Cormac Devlin and Fine Gael's Barry Ward were elected at the last count in the four-seater.
Patrick O'Donovan was the second Fine Gael TD elected, exceeding the quota of 11,385 with 11,563 first preference votes in Limerick County.
Independent Ireland's Richard O'Donoghue won the second seat in Limerick County.
Nearby, Fianna Fáil's Willie O'Dea was elected in Limerick City after the sixth count with 8,523 votes.
He is now one of the longest serving TDs and this marks his 13th election since he first stood in 1981 and was elected in 1982.
Sinn Féin's Louise O'Reilly was elected in Dublin Fingal West after the third count in the three-seater constituency.
Dublin Fingal West was the first constituency to complete a first count in the General Election earlier today and the first to adjourn until tomorrow morning.
Meanwhile, Fine Gael's Neale Richmond topped the poll in Dublin Rathdown, and has been elected after the first count. He had 10,044 first preference votes with the quota in the constituency standing at 9,752.
Michael Fitzmaurice, from Independent Ireland, was elected in Roscommon-Galway on the first count.
He had been elected as an Independent in 2020 and surpassed the quota of 10,283 with 12,002 first preference votes in the three seater constituency.
Fine Gael's Willie Aird was elected in the new three-seater Laois constituency with the first-time candidate passing the quota of 9,570 on the fifth count.
2020's poll topper Brian Stanley is currently in third place and counting will resume tomorrow.
Independent Michael Lowry was elected on the first count in Tipperary North, exceeding the quota of 11,442 with 12,538 votes.
The count will resume tomorrow morning when Michael Lowry's surplus will be distributed.
Fine Gael's Helen McEntee was elected in Meath East on the third count. She had been just one vote under the quota of 9,997 after the first count there.
Independent Sean Canney was elected in Galway East, topping the poll with 11,204 first preference votes and surpassing the quota of 10,84.
In Donegal, Sinn Féin's Padraig MacLochlainn was elected with transfers from party colleague Pearse Doherty. The count is now adjourned until 10am.
Michael Collins of Independent Ireland was the first candidate elected in Cork South-West.
On the final count in Offaly, Fine Gael's John Clendennen and Fianna Fáil's Tony McCormack were elected, finishing ahead of Sinn Féin's Aoife Masterson. Both are first time TDs.
In Limerick County, Fianna Fáil's Niall Collins took the last seat in the three-seat constituency.
In the three-seat constituency of Cork North-West, Fianna Fáil's Aindrias Moynihan, Fianna Fáil's Michael Moynihan and Fine Gael's John Paul O'Shea were all elected.
Social Democrats leader Holly Cairns was elected in Cork South-West on the 10th count, while Fianna Fáil's Christopher O'Sullivan was elected in the same constituency on the final count.
Television coverage of General Election 2024 continues on RTÉ One across the weekend and into Monday.
Our interactive map will give live results detailing constituency breakdowns and the countrywide overview as the 34th Dáil takes shape.