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Voting policies in the United States

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Election Information
2026 election and voting dates
Voter registration
Early voting
Absentee/mail-in voting
All-mail voting
Voter ID laws
State poll opening and closing times
Time off work for voting

Ballotpedia's Election Administration Legislation Tracker

Select a state from the menu below to learn more about its voting policies.

Election and voting policies are enacted and enforced primarily at the state level. These rules dictate the manner in which elections are administered, as well as the conditions under which American citizens cast ballots in each individual state.[1]

This page provides an overview of notable election policies and directs to Ballotpedia's coverage of these issues in all 50 states. Also on this page are links to arguments supporting and opposing various election policies.

  • Election administration and voting policies by state
    Each state's election and voting policies.
  • Policies
    An overview of key election policies.
  • Arguments for and against election policies
    Arguments on key election policies.
  • State legislation
    Current election legislation in the states.


Election administration and voting policies by state

Election administration policies are the rules and laws under which elections officials conduct elections in a given state. These include early and absentee voting provisions, voter identification requirements, voter registration and list maintenance methods, and more. Voting policies, while similar and sometimes overlapping with election administration policies, are the rules and laws under which a voter casts their ballot in a given state, and include election dates and deadlines, registration requirements, and more.

Each state's election administration and voting policies dictate who can vote and under what conditions.

Use the table below to read more about election administration and voting policies in each state.

Election administration and voting policies by state
Election administration Voting policies
Election administration in Alabama Voting in Alabama
Election administration in Alaska Voting in Alaska
Election administration in Arizona Voting in Arizona
Election administration in Arkansas Voting in Arkansas
Election administration in California Voting in California
Election administration in Colorado Voting in Colorado
Election administration in Connecticut Voting in Connecticut
Election administration in Delaware Voting in Delaware
Election administration in Florida Voting in Florida
Election administration in Georgia Voting in Georgia
Election administration in Hawaii Voting in Hawaii
Election administration in Idaho Voting in Idaho
Election administration in Illinois Voting in Illinois
Election administration in Indiana Voting in Indiana
Election administration in Iowa Voting in Iowa
Election administration in Kansas Voting in Kansas
Election administration in Kentucky Voting in Kentucky
Election administration in Louisiana Voting in Louisiana
Election administration in Maine Voting in Maine
Election administration in Maryland Voting in Maryland
Election administration in Massachusetts Voting in Massachusetts
Election administration in Michigan Voting in Michigan
Election administration in Minnesota Voting in Minnesota
Election administration in Mississippi Voting in Mississippi
Election administration in Missouri Voting in Missouri
Election administration in Montana Voting in Montana
Election administration in Nebraska Voting in Nebraska
Election administration in Nevada Voting in Nevada
Election administration in New Hampshire Voting in New Hampshire
Election administration in New Jersey Voting in New Jersey
Election administration in New Mexico Voting in New Mexico
Election administration in New York Voting in New York
Election administration in North Carolina Voting in North Carolina
Election administration in North Dakota Voting in North Dakota
Election administration in Ohio Voting in Ohio
Election administration in Oklahoma Voting in Oklahoma
Election administration in Oregon Voting in Oregon
Election administration in Pennsylvania Voting in Pennsylvania
Election administration in Rhode Island Voting in Rhode Island
Election administration in South Carolina Voting in South Carolina
Election administration in South Dakota Voting in South Dakota
Election administration in Tennessee Voting in Tennessee
Election administration in Texas Voting in Texas
Election administration in Utah Voting in Utah
Election administration in Vermont Voting in Vermont
Election administration in Virginia Voting in Virginia
Election administration in Washington Voting in Washington
Election administration in West Virginia Voting in West Virginia
Election administration in Wisconsin Voting in Wisconsin
Election administration in Wyoming Voting in Wyoming

Policies

See also: Absentee voting

Absentee/mail-in voting is voting that does not happen in person on Election Day but instead occurs another way (generally by mail). All states allow for some form of absentee/mail-in voting. Fourteen states require voters to provide a valid excuse to vote absentee/by mail. Twenty-eight states allow any eligible voter to cast an absentee/mail-in ballot. Eight states have automatic mail-in ballot systems, also known as all-mail voting systems.[2][3]

HIGHLIGHTS
  • Absentee/mail-in voting procedures can be divided into two categories: automatic mail-in ballot systems and request-required mail-in ballot systems.
  • Automatic mail-in ballot systems mandate that all eligible voters receive a mailed ballot by default. These are sometimes referred to as all-mail voting systems.
  • Request-required mail-in ballot systems require that eligible voters initiate the process for receiving, and casting, mail-in ballots. These have traditionally been described as absentee voting systems.
  • Arguments for and against election policies

    See the following pages for an in-depth look at the arguments for and against the following election administration policy topics:

    Method of how ballots were cast by state

    See also: Voting policies in the United States

    The following table shows how many ballots were cast by specific methods (by mail, early in-person voting, etc.) according to the Election Assistance Commission's 2024 report on U.S. election administration, which can be found here.

    Method of how ballots were cast by state, 2024
    State Mail ballots counted In-person Election Day votes In-person early votes Provisional voters
    Alabama 126,018 N/A[22] N/A[22] N/A[22]
    Alaska 48,744 175,541 92,281 14,786
    Arizona 2,816,885 496,753 349,129 15,699
    Arkansas 24,552 294,235 810,714 1,389
    California 13,062,318 1,836,518 878,489 289,935
    Colorado 2,957,550 141,556 109,209 205
    Connecticut 127,354 N/A 715,275 36
    Delaware 33,659 268,718 210,295 14
    D.C. 168,111 82,396 72,914 93
    Florida 2,947,371 2,596,761 5,364,821 6,168
    Georgia 268,751 1,239,125 3,768,395 3,718
    Hawaii 483,078 0 39,158 0
    Idaho 179,777 508,734 225,973 N/A[22]
    Illinois 1,022,256 2,666,185 2,001,203 8,316
    Indiana 1,603,815 1,372,508 1,397,345 1,939
    Iowa 220,041 N/A[22] N/A[22] 749
    Kansas 149,350 604,319 557,906 27,441
    Kentucky 116,324 1,267,653 687,057 194
    Louisiana 119,706 1,047,445 849,784 535
    Maine 215,242 463,500 157,116 N/A
    Maryland 744,244 1,145,134 974,945 145,763
    Massachusetts 1,173,112 1,713,191 600,225 1,797
    Michigan 2,017,704 2,453,252 1,214,409 10
    Minnesota 446,576 1,960,360 850,705 N/A[22]
    Mississippi N/A 1,010,752 N/A[22] 14,685
    Missouri 178,526 2,067,247 867,936 5,534
    Montana 430,159 N/A[22] N/A[22] N/A[22]
    Nebraska 307,135 564,660 80,304 10,651
    Nevada 656,140 247,291 543,461 28,242
    New Hampshire 92,945 730,273 0 0
    New Jersey 828,200 N/A[22] N/A[22] 116,528
    New Mexico 111,527 252,629 556,395 1,597
    New York 836,987 4,320,467 2,986,704 194,588
    North Carolina 298,269 1,175,905 4,224,909 24,989
    North Dakota 89,429 181,998 99,007 N/A[22]
    Ohio 1,058,400 3,130,240 1,536,604 104,848
    Oklahoma 98,548 1,174,876 294,037 1,598
    Oregon 2,253,114 N/A[22] N/A[22] 52
    Pennsylvania 1,933,102 5,043,808 N/A[22] 69,506
    Rhode Island 51,995 290,699 173,547 2,514
    South Carolina 98,782 977,341 1,476,843 4,517
    South Dakota 151,762 273,648 0 201
    Tennessee 86,904 856,491 2,132,535 3,139
    Texas 384,221 2,329,171 8,703,181 20,511
    Utah 1,239,070 104,350 36,381 41,114
    Vermont 240,375 122,386 2,631 0
    Virginia 474,332 2,053,905 1,840,239 111,390
    Washington 3,890,945 N/A[22] 171 12
    West Virginia 22,377 431,925 310,305 2,905
    Wisconsin 572,434 1,870,285 977,648 57
    Wyoming 38,217 154,579 76,943 63
    Total 47,496,433 51,698,810 48,847,129 1,278,028

    State legislation

    The table below includes bills related to elections that have been introduced during (or carried over to) the current legislative session. The following information is included for each bill:

    • State
    • Bill number
    • Official bill name or caption
    • Most recent action date
    • Legislative status
    • Sponsor party
    • Topics dealt with by the bill

    Bills are organized by most recent action. The table displays up to 100 results. To view more bills, use the arrows in the upper-right corner. Clicking on a bill will open its page on Ballotpedia's Election Administration Legislation Tracker, which includes bill details and a summary.

    Explore election legislation with Ballotpedia

    • Try Ballotpedia's Election Administration Legislation Tracker
      Try Ballotpedia's Election Administration Legislation Tracker
      Ballotpedia's Election Administration Legislation Tracker provides daily updates on legislative activity related to election policy in all 50 states.

      Our election policy experts translate complex bill text into easy-to-understand summaries. And because it's from Ballotpedia, our legislation tracker is guaranteed to be neutral, unbiased, and nonpartisan.
    • Read Ballotpedia's State of Election Administration Legislation Reports
      Read Ballotpedia's State of Election Administration Legislation Reports
      Ballotpedia publishes regular analysis of election administration legislation, including three full reports per year, providing ongoing coverage of legislative activity affecting election policy in each state.

      These reports deliver insights into partisan priorities, dive deep into notable trends, and highlight activity in key states.
    • Subscribe to The Ballot Bulletin

      Subscribe to The Ballot Bulletin
      The Ballot Bulletin is a weekly email that delivers the latest updates on election policy.

      The newsletter tracks developments in election policy around the country, including legislative activity, big-picture trends, and recent news. Each email contains in-depth data from our Election Administration Legislation Tracker.


    Ballotpedia's election coverage

    Click the tiles below to navigate to 2025 election coverage:


    See also

    External links

    Footnotes

    1. Election Assistance Commission, "Voter FAQs," accessed November 10, 2025
    2. 2.0 2.1 National Conference of State Legislatures, "Absentee and Early Voting," August 1, 2025 Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "ncslabsentee" defined multiple times with different content
    3. We use the term "absentee/mail-in voting" to describe systems in which requests or applications are required. We use the term "all-mail voting" to denote systems where the ballots themselves are sent automatically to all voters. We use the hyphenate term for absentee voting because some states use “mail voting” (or a similar alternative) to describe what has traditionally been called "absentee voting."
    4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 National Conference of State Legislatures, "Automatic Voter Registration," accessed November 24, 2025 Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "ncsl" defined multiple times with different content Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "ncsl" defined multiple times with different content
    5. Brennan Center for Justice, "Automatic Voter Registration," accessed November 24, 2025
    6. State of Delaware, "Automatic Voter Registration at DMV," June 20, 2023
    7. Minnesota State Legislature, "House File 3," accessed June 6, 2023
    8. NBC, "Pennsylvania rolls out automatic voter registration," September 19, 2023
    9. Alabama Secretary of State, "SB1 - Preventing Ballot Harvesting and Protecting Alabama's Absentee Election Process," accessed December 1, 2025
    10. Oklahoma State Election Board, "Absentee Ballot Harvesting," accessed December 1, 2025
    11. 11.0 11.1 National Conference of State Legislatures, "Online Voter Registration," accessed November 10, 2025 Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "onlineregistration" defined multiple times with different content
    12. 12.0 12.1 National Conference of State Legislatures, "Post-Election Audits," accessed July 2, 2025
    13. Election Assistance Commission, "Election Audits Across the United States," accessed July 2, 2025
    14. Ballotpedia research conducted in October 2024, researching and analyzing various state websites and codes.
    15. Department of the Secretary of State; Bureau of Corporations, , "Ranked-choice Voting (RCV)," accessed December 11, 2025. In Maine, all statewide primaries and federal elections use ranked-choice voting. Other statewide elections such as for governor or the legislature do not. This is because of a 2017 ruling by the Maine Supreme Judicial Court concluding that "the Maine Constitution requires the winners of those offices in a general election to be decided by a plurality. Primary elections in Maine and elections for federal offices are governed by statute and not by the Maine Constitution."
    16. State of Alaska, Division of Elections, "Election Information," accessed December 11, 2025. In Alaska, all statewide general elections, except retention elections for state supreme court, use ranked-choice voting.
    17. State of Hawaii, Office of Elections, "Voting in Hawaii," accessed December 11, 2025
    18. Congress, "H.R.3295 - Help America Vote Act of 2002," accessed September 30, 2025
    19. 19.0 19.1 National Conference of State Legislatures, "Voter List Accuracy," October 21, 2025
    20. American Civil Liberties Union, "State Criminal Re-enfranchisement Laws," accessed March 20, 2023
    21. Brennan Center for Justice, "Restoring the Right to Vote by State," accessed March 20, 2023
    22. 22.00 22.01 22.02 22.03 22.04 22.05 22.06 22.07 22.08 22.09 22.10 22.11 22.12 22.13 22.14 22.15 22.16 22.17 Information not provided in the report.