16 seats were contested in the election, all from the rural areas of the council, with the Conservatives the party defending in 13 seats and the Liberal Democrats in 3.[3] 2 incumbent councillors stood down at the election, Nick Wilson from Newby ward and Chris Lewis from Ouseburn ward.[4] The Conservatives contested all 16 seats, the Liberal Democrats 15, British National Party 6, Labour 5, United Kingdom Independence Party 3 and 1 independent.[3]
The results saw the Conservatives gain 2 seats from the Liberal Democrats to hold 27 seats, exactly half of the council.[6] The Conservatives gained Boroughbridge and Ouseburn wards, by 161 and 731 votes respectively, to reduce the Liberal Democrats to 21 seats.[7] The only seat held by the Liberal Democrats was in Pateley Bridge by 77 votes, but they came 34 votes short of taking Lower Nidderdale and 37 votes from taking Claro.[8] No other party won any seats in the election, while 6 independent councillors remained on the council, after none of them had been defending seats in the election.[6] Overall turnout in the election was 48%, the highest in a decade apart from the all postal votingelection in 2004.[6]