Leonel Power (died June 5, 1445, Canterbury, Kent, England) was one of the leading English composers of the 15th century. He was associated with Christ Church Priory, Canterbury, from 1423, probably as a composer and organist.
As a composer, Power was closely in touch with musical developments in France, the centre of the musical style that dominated the mid-15th century. In his masses and motets he frequently used the chanson style, in which the melody is set in the topmost voice part instead of in an inner voice, as was then usual. An example is his mass based on the plainsong-derived hymn “Alma redemptoris mater.” His writing reflects the richer sonorities of English music that influenced continental European works of the early Renaissance.