Plan Your Vote for the 2022 Primary

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Everything you need to know about the voting rules, voter registration, mail-in voting, changes since 2020, and lots of links to the Pima County Recorder.

  1. Governor
  2. Secretary of State
  3. Attorney General
  4. Treasurer
  5. Superintendent of Public Instruction
  6. Corporation Commission
  7. Mine Inspector
  8. U.S. Senator
  9. U.S. House of Representatives

Registering to vote in Arizona

Visit www.recorder.pima.gov/RegisteringToVote.

Voting by mail in Arizona
Friday, July 22 is the deadline to request a mail-in ballot.
  • Can I vote by mail in my state for any reason? Yes. Voters do not need a reason to vote by mail.
  • Can I vote by mail without a notary or witness? Yes.
  • Can I drop off my mail-in ballot in person? Yes. At a local election office, polling site, or using a drop box.
Wednesday, July 6 is the first day you can vote early in person.
  • Can I vote early (before Election Day) in person? Yes. Early voting is available.
  • When is the first day I can vote early in person? Wednesday, July 6.
  • When is the last day I can vote early in person? Friday, July 29.
  • Is there an ID requirement? Yes. The same ID requirements that apply to Election Day voting apply to voting early in person.
  • Can I register and cast my ballot on the same day? No.
  • Is there an ID requirement? If so, what is an acceptable form of ID? Yes. One form of photo ID, or two forms of nonphoto ID, are required. Voters who do not present valid ID are allowed to cast a provisional ballot, but must provide valid ID at a later date for their ballot to be counted. Valid forms of ID and more information are listed here.
  • In 2020 the state sent absentee-ballot applications to all active voters. Arizona will not send those applications to all voters in 2022.
  • The deadline to register to vote was pushed back 10 days in 2020 to provide additional flexibility to voters. In 2022, the voter registration deadline has returned to the earlier, pre-pandemic date.
  • For voters who vote by mail, election officials are now required to make a reasonable effort to notify the voter if they failed to sign their ballot. Voters have until the close of polls on Election Day to correct their unsigned ballot so it will count.
  • Arizona’s Permanent Early Voting List has been renamed the Active Early Voting List to reflect a key change. Until 2022, voters who signed up for the PEVL would automatically receive a mail ballot for each election in which they were eligible to vote. Now, the state can remove voters from this list if voters do not use the early ballot mailed to them at least once in two straight two-year election cycles.

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