Texas · Voter Guide

How to vote in Texas

Registration, polling places, and mail ballots — the official Texas links in one place, plus nonpartisan research on everyone who will be on your ballot.

Next election: Tuesday, November 3, 2026 (Texas U.S. Senate Race 2026)

Links verified against official state sources · reviewed June 12, 2026

Official Texas voting links

Deadlines and ballot rules are set by the state and can change — these portals are the authoritative source, so we send you there rather than restating rules that might go stale.

Register / check registration (official)

Texas's own portal — registration status, deadlines, and same-day rules.

Polling place lookup (official)

Where to vote for your registered address, straight from the state.

Texas election authority

Mail/absentee ballot rules, early voting, and the official election calendar.

Research your ballot before you go

Check your registration

Our 50-state registration check, with links to fix anything that looks wrong.

See your ballot

Enter your ZIP to load every race and candidate you can vote on.

Browse every Texas race

Source-backed profiles for every seat, from Congress to local offices.

Frequently asked questions

The basics of registering and voting in Texas.

How do I register to vote in Texas?

Register through Texas's official election authority — the link on this page goes straight to the state's own portal. Deadlines and same-day registration rules are set by the state, so confirm them there. You can check your registration status through Texas's official lookup, linked on this page, or use our registration check.

When is the next election in Texas?

The next election we're tracking in Texas is Tuesday, November 3, 2026 (Texas U.S. Senate Race 2026). The nationwide general election is Tuesday, November 3, 2026.

Where do I vote in Texas?

Your polling place depends on your registered address. Use Texas's official polling-place lookup, linked on this page, or our polling place finder. Many states also offer early voting locations or vote centers that differ from election-day sites.

Can I vote by mail in Texas?

Mail and absentee rules differ by state — some mail every voter a ballot automatically, others require a request, and a few require an excuse. Texas's election authority (linked on this page) is the authoritative source for how it works where you live, including request deadlines.

What will be on my Texas ballot?

Your exact ballot depends on your address. Enter your ZIP code on our My Ballot page to see your specific races and candidates, or browse every Texas contest on our Texas hub — every profile is built from public records with a source link on each claim.

Registered? Now decode your ballot.

Knowing where to vote is half the job. Knowing every name on the ballot — what they have done, who funds them, where they stand — is the other half.