New Mexico · 2026 Primary
A nonpartisan guide to every name on your New Mexico ballot — who they are, what they have done, and where they stand. Sourced from public records, not spin.
Voter guide reviewed June 4, 2026
Enter your ZIP to load every race and candidate you can vote on.
Confirm you are registered — or register — before primary day.
Look up your polling location and hours by address.
Governor and Congress down to local seats, with source-backed profiles.
Primary rules vary by state — including whether you must be registered with a party to vote in one. Rather than guess, we point you to the two things that settle it: your registration status and your actual ballot.
Check your registration, then load your ballot to see exactly which races and candidates you can vote on this year.
Federal and statewide offices, state legislative seats, plus county and local races and any ballot measures. Your exact ballot depends on where you live.
See every New Mexico raceThe basics of voting in the New Mexico 2026 primary.
New Mexico's exact 2026 primary date is set at the state level; confirm it with your county or state elections office. Either way, the general election is Tuesday, November 3, 2026.
Primary rules vary by state — including whether you must be registered with a party to vote in it. The fastest way to know exactly what you can vote on is to check your registration and load your ballot below.
Confirm your status with our voter registration check, or register through your state's official portal. Many states also offer same-day or grace-period registration — your county elections office can confirm the deadlines that apply to you.
Your exact ballot depends on your address. Enter your ZIP code on our My Ballot page to see your specific races, or browse every New Mexico seat and candidate on our New Mexico hub.
Yes. Every candidate profile is built from public records — voting history, campaign finance filings, and official documents — with a source link on every claim. We do not endorse candidates or rank them by ideology.
Walk into the New Mexico primary knowing every name — what they have done, who funds them, and where they stand — instead of guessing in the booth.