Office of Elections Alert:
On election day, you may return your absentee ballot using any Fairfax County drop-off box before 7 p.m.
Within 40 feet of the entrance to the polling location and within the room where voting is taking place, these activities are unlawful.
Your voter information card lists the name and address of your voting location (polling place). Can't find your voter information card, or still not sure where to vote on Election Day? Visit the Citizen Portal on the Virginia Department of Elections website or contact the Fairfax County Office of Elections at 703-222-0776 (TTY 711) or voting@fairfaxcounty.gov.
If you turn 18 on or before the date of the general election in November (the first Tuesday in November), you may vote in the general election, and you may vote in a primary election for federal offices held that year before that election.
No, you do not need a photo ID to vote in person, but you do need an ID to check in normally. Click here to see what IDs are acceptable.
If you don’t have an acceptable ID, you may complete an ID Confirmation Statement, which serves as an acceptable ID and will allow you to check in and vote routinely. Alternately, you may vote a provisional ballot and provide a copy of your ID to the Office of Elections before noon on the Friday after the election.
However, first-time voters in a federal election who registered by mail are required by federal law to present an ID. Virginia Code § 24.2-701.1.
On the Department of Elections Citizen Portal, click “Find your polling place.” On election day, you must vote at the polling place where you are registered to vote.
You need to go to the voting location where you are registered to vote. Look up your voter information on the Virginia Department of Elections Citizen Portal.
Ask the election officer for a voter registration application to update your address. You may complete it there and leave it with the chief election officer to turn in.
Yes. However:
All polling locations (early voting and election day) offer:
If you require assistance at the polling place, someone may help you with your ballot after you both complete and sign the Request for Assistance form, available at the polling location. If you do not have an assistant with you, you may ask an election officer to serve as your assistant.
Yes. They will be required to complete a Request for Assistance form before they may assist you.
Virginia Code § 24.2-649
You don’t need to vote for someone in every contest or mark every issue on the ballot. Your ballot will be accepted, and only the votes you marked will be tallied.
Write “Spoiled” across your ballot and take it to an election officer to exchange for a new one.
Yes, if they are aged 15 or younger. Older children are allowed in the voting room but must sign a Request for Assistance form to accompany a voter into the voting booth or provide assistance.
Yes, but you may not include any other voter in the photograph without their permission.
Not necessarily. Anyone in line or inside the polling place [building] making their way to the voting room at 7 p.m. is permitted to vote.
Fairfax County has about 750,000 active voters in 264 precincts. We are the largest jurisdiction in the state. You may see registration statistics here.