Palladium-based materials are widely recognized for their adaptability in electrocatalytic applications, offering finely tunable electronic properties, surface structures, and strong resistance to intermediate poisoning. Their unique ability to stabilize key reaction intermediates enables outstanding catalytic activity and selectivity across a range of electrochemical processes central to sustainable energy technologies and resource utilization. This review comprehensively explores the advancements in Pd-based catalysts, emphasizing strategies to optimize their performance through alloying, nanostructuring, phase engineering, and surface modifications. A wide range of synthesis techniques, including wet chemical methods, electrodeposition, and templating approaches, has enabled precise control over Pd morphology, composition, and electronic properties, leading to breakthroughs in catalytic efficiency, durability, and cost-effectiveness. Pd-based catalysts have demonstrated outstanding performance across a range of electrocatalytic reactions, including hydrogen evolution (HER), oxygen evolution (OER), oxygen reduction (ORR), hydrogen oxidation (HOR), and formic acid oxidation (FAO) in water-splitting and fuel cell systems, as well as CO