Tribal Council

Tribal Council both refers to the elimination ceremony that usually happens every third (or second dependent) night of each cycle; and the location where such event occurs.

All events throughout the whole episode will come into play. At the end of each Tribal Council, the tribe votes a player out from the game, sending a castaway home.

Tribal Council Set
Usually situated in equal distance between all tribe camps, the Tribal Council area is somewhat designed to strike fear into the contestants, adding up to the tension of voting. Intricately designed by the Survivor Art Department, the Tribal Council can either look like a makeshift hut, a temple or a enormous tree house, based on the motif of the season.

Session
Tribal Council usually starts at sundown. If the Tribal Council was the tribe's first (except for merged tribes), the involved contestants must take a torch and dip it in the fire. The host will remind the castaways that: "This is part of the ritual of Tribal Council because fire represents life. As long as you have fire, you are still in this game. When your fire's gone, so are you." - a metaphor used commonly within the show's theme. The castaways will have a short chat with the host before they vote. While the Tribal Council clips shown on television are shortened on purpose, highlighting only the most important parts of the meeting, it was said that Tribal Council can last about thirty minutes or two hours.

Tribal Council is where all of the drama and other happenings during the entire episode comes into play. This is also where a player is accountable for his/her actions, which can either benefit or hurt him in the future. The host interrogates the tribe about everything that has happened throughout the episode (about the previous challenges, camp life, work ethic, recent conflicts and the most important topic of all, strategy). During the conversation, the host may potentially throw a castaway off-guard after a hard, embarrassing or strategy-breaking question, leaving him/her potentially vulnerable. After the short conversation with the host, the tribe members will vote one by one. The contestants will go to a distant voting booth where they will write the name of the castaway they want to vote out and must state the reason why he/she wanted to vote for that player. Occasionally, these confessionals were shown on TV, but to increase suspense, not all voting confessionals are aired (these confessionals can be viewed in full through CBS's YouTube account and the show's DVD releases). The host then tallies the votes to himself and reveals the results to the players. When the votes are read, the order that the votes are pulled has also usually been manipulated by production to extract the most suspense from the players during the tally. All votes are final and cannot be further altered; though in theory, there could have been an exemption during Panama and Cook Islands, where if the player involved draws out a Hidden Immunity Idol to nullify all votes cast against him/her, thus sending the person who has the next highest amount of votes home. Once the vote tally has exceeded the plurality needed, the host will stop tallying, pronouncing that player eliminated from the game, keeping the remaining votes in secret to the players themselves, though it appears to be imperative to the remaining contestants that the unread votes are also for the eliminated contestant. Whoever gets the highest number of votes will be eliminated from the game, where the eliminated player's torch will be extinguished (dubbed as "snuffing"). Upon their elimination, eliminated players will walk away from the Tribal Council grounds into a small confessional booth, where they can air out their grievances and reflections.

Jury Phase
See main article: Jury

During the Jury phase of the game, the flow of Tribal Council will still be the same, though the most recently eliminated players (the Jury) will also watch over the proceedings. These eliminated players are not to interact with the remaining players nor to join in with the conversation with the host (except in rare occasions such as when Paschal English fell unconscious immediately after his elimination in Marquesas, where fellow Jury member John Caroll revealed the lowdown of his condition) and James Clement (in Micronesia) who joked about Erik Reichenbach's elimination). The Jury members are only meant to watch the proceedings, while listening in to potentially vital information that will help them decide of which among the finalists will be the winner of the game. The final Tribal Council will be the culmination of a season. This is when the finalists will have to sell themselves to the jury and convince them to vote for them. In this special occasion, the winner will be voted for.

Final Tribal Council
For more information, see Final Tribal Council.

Contestants' Area
An area where stools are placed. This is where the tribe sits while at Tribal Council. Behind them are their torches, mounted on slots at the floor.

Fire Pit
Common at every Tribal Council set is a fire pit. This is where the tribe got the fire on their torches during their first Tribal Council. Also, if a fake immunity idol be play, the host will throw it into the fire pit.

Jury Bench
When the Jury starts to form and continue to expand, they would sit opposite to the contestants' area. In some double Tribal Councils, a tribe that has won a food reward will sit here and eat while they listen to the other tribe's Tribal Council. In the case of "the observer" from Samoa, or Bruce's case when he was going to join the tribe, they will watch from the Jury Bench as well.

Voting Booth
When the host instructs the Survivors to vote, they will walk across the room of Tribal Council and cross a small walkway/bridge to a separate, small booth which contains parchments, a paperweight and a black marker pen. They will vote for a player to be eliminated here and present their parchment to the camera and voice their reasons as to why, afterwich the vote is folded in half and placed in a small urn either to the left or right of the contestant.

After all contestants have voted, the host collects the votes upon completion and determines who is eliminated. In the event of a tie or a possible "null" vote (where all votes have been negated due to multiple Hidden Immunity Idols), he will order a re-vote and instruct one Survivor to take the urn back to the booth and begin again.

Extinguished Torch Area
Though its location varies every season, a special area would be designated as the final resting place of the eliminated castaways' torches. They are propped according to boot order.

Tiebreaker Challenge Area
A special booth only used during a deadlock tie vote typically placed adjacent to where the Jury sit. In case of a deadlock tie at the final four, the tie-involved players will compete in a fire-starting challenge.

Notable Objects at Tribal Council

 * Torches: Each contestant will possess a torch and must bring it every Tribal Council. The torch's fire represents each castaway's life in the game. If the torch gets snuffed by the host, they are out of the game for good. This has changed in the advent of Redemption Island, where after a contestant's torch is snuffed, they are sent to Redemption Island and are still in the game.
 * Voting Urn: This is where the votes were placed.
 * "Snuffer:" The host's "weapon of choice". He uses it to extinguish the castoff's torch.

Double Tribal Councils
In recent seasons, double boot twists occur, wherein both competing tribes will go to separate Tribal Council sessions to eliminate one of their own. This is to quickly decimate the number of remaining castaways, if the season has more than 16 castaways (since having an expanded cast breaks the conventional 3-day cycle). The first double Tribal Council happened in Pearl Islands, to give way for the returning Outcasts.

In Samoa, a double elimination was supposed to be slated in Day 15, but was postponed when Russell Swan suffered severe exhaustion during the Reward Challenge. The said challenge was called off with neither tribe winning the reward, instead they just instructed to proceed to Tribal Council, and wait until further notice. But the castaways were relieved when Jeff Probst announced that Russell's condition was getting well and the planned double elimination was canceled.

Tie votes
Please see Tiebreaker.

Tribal Council-related twists
In Cook Islands, a special twist caused the Rarotonga tribe to vote another player out immediately after they had already eliminated a tribemate. After their Tribal Council, Rarotonga eliminated two tribe members in two separate voting rounds. This also occured in Survivor: Redemption Island and Survivor: South Pacific. But unlike Cook Islands, Redemption Island and South Pacific both had an impromptu Immunity Challenge between the votes, and was after the two tribes had merged

Trivia

 * Tribal Council sets may or may not have a roof, so in some seasons, castaways might suffer getting wet while at Tribal Council.
 * The castaways have a sitting order at Tribal Council, for lighting purposes.
 * In Survivor: Guatemala, the Tribal Council set is an authentic Maya temple.
 * Survivor: Tocantins' Tribal Council set was renovated several times, since its roof was constantly on fire during noontime.
 * In Nicaragua, three Tribal Councils breached beyond the 3-day cycle. The gap between Tribal Councils of What Goes Around, Comes Around and Company Will Be Arriving Soon, You Started, You're Finishing and Not Sure Where I Stand, and Not Sure Where I Stand and This is Going to Hurt was four days, the longest gap between Tribal Councils in consecutive episodes in the history of the series.
 * The Tribal Council meeting shown on television is heavily watered down as some meetings take two to three hours at a time whilst on location.
 * The Survivor: Thailand is one of the very few Tribal Councils to leave evidence behind.
 * The pier that the Tribal Council still sits to this day for vistors to the area.