General election counts and results for Norfolkpublished at 22:48 Greenwich Mean Time 12 December 2019
Only two of the county's nine seats did not return a Conservative MP in 2017.
Read MoreLive coverage from the nine counts from around Norfolk
Tories take North Norfolk from Lib Dems
Labour's Clive Lewis re-elected to Norwich South
Conservatives hold the other seven seats
Norfolk returned seven Conservatives, one Labour and one Liberal Democrat in 2017
Only two of the county's nine seats did not return a Conservative MP in 2017.
Read MoreTim Addicott
BBC Radio Norfolk
The count is soon to get under way for the Norwich South seat, currently held by Labour's Clive Lewis.
Reports from across Norfolk suggest a high turn-out, with queues reported at polling stations in Norwich South and Norwich North, which was won by the Conservatives with a majority of just 507 in 2017. It is being heavily targeted by Labour.
The Norwich North seat is being counted at Norfolk Showground (pictured below).
We've got reporters at the counts.
Robby West
BBC Norfolk political reporter
Norwich North is Norfolk's most marginal seat, with Conservative Chloe Smith's majority whittled down from almost 4,500 to just over 500 at the last election.
Labour, buoyed by their success in June 2017, made the seat, which includes areas such as Thorpe St Andrew, Hellesdon, Mile Cross, Catton, Drayton and Sprowston, one of their key targets.
Their candidate, Norwich city councillor Karen Davis, was selected just months after the last general election.
Ms Smith (pictured above) has held the seat since 2009, when she took it from Labour for the Tories, after Ian Gibson (pictured below) quit following the MP expenses scandal.
From April until last month, Ms Smith has had to juggle her maternity leave with being an MP, but the election has seen high-profile backing with visits from Boris Johnson, Sajid Javid and Michael Gove.
This will be close contest. Labour has had hundreds of people out on the street, meeting voters, posting leaflets and will have a big operation getting the vote out on the day.
Bookies and polls say it will go to the Conservatives, but Labour believes if there is anywhere they can win, it’s here.
Andrew Sinclair
BBC Look East political correspondent
Before today's election, the Conservatives held most of the seats in the East and the expectation is that they will continue to do so.
But could the party be on the verge of holding nearly EVERY seat in the region?
If its Brexit message has gone down well in this largely leave supporting region, it should take North Norfolk and Ipswich (pictured) and hold its existing seats with increased majorities.
For Labour, it will be a tense night. It currently holds Ipswich, Peterborough and Bedford with majorities of under a thousand - they've been putting a lot of effort into taking Norwich North.
Success in these seats will show the party still has notable support in this region - failure would be a bitter blow.
Nic Rigby
BBC News
The Broadland seat in Norfolk is usually quite a sedate constituency, hardly ever troubling the news agenda.
Since its creation in 2010, it has been represented by Conservative Keith Simpson, who had a safe majority of 15,816 in 2017.
But it found itself thrust in to the limelight when it chose its replacement to Mr Simpson in November.
The local Conservative Party chose BBC Radio Norfolk presenter Mr Conrad (pictured above), 34.
It faced immediate criticism over Mr Conrad's comments from 2014, when he said women should "keep their knickers on" in an on-air discussion on rape.
Labour said the comments showed he was not fit to be an MP, while Prime Minister Boris Johnson said the remarks were "completely unacceptable".
Mr Conrad then stood down and was replaced by Jerome Mayhew (pictured below), who runs an adventure company and is the son of former Northern Ireland secretary Lord Mayhew.
Robby West
BBC Norfolk political reporter
In the General Election 2019, two of the nine seats in Norfolkhave been closely contested.
Previously held by the Conservatives, Labour is the main challenger in Norwich North.
Opinions on Brexit and the NHS have dominated the conversation between people who live in this seat but rows over the council closing children’s centres and a rise in rough sleepers are local issues that could sway voters.
North Norfolk voted to leave the EU but in 2017 returned Liberal Democrat MP Norman Lamb (pictured).
The popular former health minister has decided not to stand this time and the Conservatives are pushing their Brexit messaging heavily here.
The BBC is reporting from all of the nine election counts in Norfolk.
The county returned seven Conservative MPs at the last general election in 2017.
The exceptions were Norwich South, which went to Labour's Clive Lewis, and Norfolk North, which was held by the Liberal Democrats' Norman Lamb, although he isn't standing as his party's candidate this time.
Check who's standing on the BBC's Find a constituency page.