Everything you need to register, verify, and vote in Oklahoma. This is a directory β we point you to the right places. You make the choices.
Verify your current registration status, party affiliation, and polling place through the Oklahoma State Election Board.
Not yet registered? Register online through the Oklahoma State Election Board. Takes about five minutes.
Find out what forms of ID are accepted at the polls, and what to bring with you on Election Day or to early voting.
See exactly what's on your ballot β every race and state question β and look up your assigned polling place and early voting sites. All in one place through the OK Voter Portal (free, takes 2 minutes).
From governor to county commissioner β a plain-language guide to what each elected office actually does, where you'll run into it in daily life, and how often it's up. Tap any office to learn more.
Sometimes your ballot has a yes-or-no measure on it. Here's what State Questions are, how they reach your ballot, and how to vote on one β including the measure on the upcoming ballot.
Voting in person on Election Day? Here's everything you need to know β what to bring, what to expect, what's allowed, and what's not.
Can't make Election Day? Every Oklahoma county offers in-person early voting. No excuse required. Find dates, times, and locations near you.
Any registered voter can request an absentee ballot β no excuse needed. Standard absentee ballots must be notarized. Request deadline: 15 days before each election.
Note for Independent voters: Independent voters will not receive a party primary ballot in 2026. However, every registered voter β including Independents β can still vote on:
If you only see nonpartisan races or state questions on your ballot, you can still show up and make those choices count.