Elections > Voters > Registration
Register to vote with the quick links below or scroll down for more detailed information regarding voter registration and applicable Vermont statutes.
The My Voter Page is your primary online resource for all election information unique to you. You login to the page using your personal information and once there you may update your registration information, request and track the status of an absentee ballot, locate your polling place, view a sample ballot and listing of candidates for upcoming elections, and more.
Beginning January 1, 2017, eligible persons may register to vote on any day up to and including the day of the election.
Registration is available during all normal business hours of your town or city clerk's office on days preceding the election and during polling hours on Election Day. 17 V.S.A. § 2144
You may also register to vote online.
The Elections Division will forward applications (and early or absentee ballot requests) to the appropriate town or city clerk for action, but we recommend submitting applications directly to your town or city clerk.
For contact information for your town clerk, view our Guide to Vermont’s Town Clerks, Treasurers & County Clerks.
If you are registering to vote in Vermont for the first time by mail or online, you must include a photocopy of an acceptable form of ID. Acceptable forms of ID are:
First time Registrants in VT must take the voter’s oath. The oath may be self-administered. You must be 18 to take the oath:
VOTER'S OATH: “You solemnly swear or affirm that whenever you give your vote or suffrage, touching any matter that concerns the State of Vermont, you will do it so as in your conscience you shall judge will most conduce to the best good of the same, as established by the Constitution, without fear or favor of any person.” - Vermont Constitution, Chapter II, Section 42
If you have previously voted in Vermont, you do not need to take the voter’s oath again. The oath can be administered by a commissioned military officer or by any other person qualified to administer oaths, any person over the age of 18, or by yourself. You may also take the voter’s oath as an affirmation. You must take the oath before voting by early or absentee ballot.
If you are registering for the first time in Vermont using the Federal Voting Assistance Program’s (FVAP) Federal Postcard Application or another form not specific to Vermont, you must take the voter’s oath. The Vermont voter registration form and the FVAP instructions contain the voter’s oath that must be taken.
To register to vote and request an absentee ballot use the My Voter Page
For more voting information for military and/or overseas voters, please visit the Federal Voting Assistance Program.
If you are a military or overseas voter your voter registration application must include the town and the legal address, or a location description of the last place you resided in Vermont immediately before joining the military or moving overseas. If you did not reside in Vermont immediately before joining the military or moving overseas, you cannot register to vote in Vermont. You must register to vote in the state and county or town in which you resided immediately before joining the military or moving overseas.
Remember, if you are registering to vote for the first time in Vermont by mail or online, you must include a photocopy of an acceptable form of ID. Acceptable forms of ID are:
Step 1: Be Prepared!
To organize your voter registration drive:
Step 2: Get the Word Out!
There are many ways to get the word out. You may contact us, and we can send you a voter registration poster or you may design your own. Many local radio stations will run free public service announcements, and you can ask governmental, civic, and religious organizations to announce the drive in their bulletins and at their meetings. Also, be sure to set up in a prominent location. If you are a student, ask teachers to make an announcement to their classes and set up in a prominent location in your school!
Step 3: Have Fun!
You are helping the citizens of Vermont fulfill one of their most important civic responsibilities—feel good about what you are doing!
Step 4: After the Drive
Return completed registration forms to the town clerk where the applicant lives prior to the election. View contact information for all town clerks.
There are currently 508,630 registered voters in Vermont.
Please click here to view voter registration statistics from 2008 through the present.
Elections Division
128 State Street
Montpelier, VT 05633
Office Hours:
7:45 to 4:30, Monday - Friday
(Except Holidays)
802-828-2363
Contact the Elections Division