The National Conference of State Legislatures has many tables showing rules about postal voting in every state. As a result, in 1997, Texas amended its election statutes to permit voting from outer space. The process extends traditional postal voting: the ballot is postal-mailed to a designated mailbox maintained by
NASA, which sends it by encrypted electronic mail to the astronaut. After the astronaut completes the ballot, it is sent to the applicable Texas county clerk, who transcribes it to a paper ballot.
All vote-by-mail As of 2022, California, Colorado, Hawaii, Nevada, Oregon, Utah, Vermont, and Washington allow all elections to be conducted by mail. In many other states there are counties or certain small elections where everyone votes by mail. California mailed every voter a ballot before the November 2020 election; California voters still kept the option to vote in-person.
California In 2016, California passed SB 450, which authorizes a roll-out of vote by mail across the state, at county discretion. The state publishes postal voting rates, rising from 3% in 1962 to 72% in 2020. For the 2018 elections, 14 counties were authorized to vote by mail and five ultimately did so: Madera, Napa, Nevada, Sacramento, and San Mateo. In each of those five counties, voter turnout was higher than the average turnout for the state. For 2020, all counties will be authorized to do so, and as of April 8, 2020 the following ten additional counties have opted in: Amador, Butte, Calaveras, El Dorado, Fresno, Los Angeles, Mariposa, Orange, Santa Clara, and Tuolumne. As of 2022, California mails every registered voter a ballot before the elections, but there is still the option to vote in-person.
Colorado In 2013,
Colorado began holding all elections by mail. A Pantheon Analytics study of the 2014 election showed a significant uptick in voter participation from what would have normally been "low propensity" voters. A PEW Charitable Trust study of the same election showed significant cost savings.
Kansas Kansas conducted its
Democratic primary in May 2020 entirely by mail.
Nevada Nevada Governor
Steve Sisolak (D) signed legislation authorizing mail-in-voting for every registered voter in the state on August 3, 2020. (Donald Trump threatened to sue, although Trump endorsed mail-in-voting in Republican-controlled Florida.) That law was only temporary, applying only to the 2020 election. On June 2, 2021, Governor Sisolak signed a law making all vote-by-mail permanent, although voters can opt out of getting ballots by mail.
New Jersey New Jersey conducted a primarily vote by mail election for the
primary in July 2020 albeit with a limited number of polling stations open for those who would vote provisionally as well as voters with disabilities.
Oregon In 1998, voters in
Oregon passed an
initiative requiring that all elections be conducted by mail. Voters may also drop their ballots off at a
county designated official drop site. Oregon has since reduced the cost of elections, and the time available to tally votes has increased. Initially, Oregon required receipt of votes by 8:00pm local time on election day. But starting with the general election in 2020, ballots needed to be postmarked by Election Day. Also starting then, pre-paid postage envelopes were included with the ballots. Voter turnout in Oregon is among the highest in the United States.
Utah In 2014,
Utah started allowing each county to make their own decision regarding whether to go to all mailed-out ballots. In the 2016 general election, 21 of 29 counties did so. That rose to 27 of 29 counties in 2018, covering over 98% of their electorate, with all counties doing so in 2020. Vermont Governor
Phil Scott signed that bill on June 7, 2021, and asked the legislature to expand all vote-by-mail to primary elections too.
Washington In 2011, the
Washington legislature passed a law requiring all counties to conduct vote-by-mail elections. Local governments in Washington had the option to do so since 1987, and statewide elections had permitted it since 1993. By 2009, 38 of the state's 39 counties (all except
Pierce County) had conducted all elections by mail. Pierce County joined the rest of the state in all-mail balloting by 2014. In Washington, ballots must be
postmarked by election day, which helps to ensure all voters' votes are counted; ballot counting takes several days after election day to receive and process ballots.
Local jurisdictions Various local jurisdictions now have all vote-by-mail, or run pilot programs. 31 of 53 counties in North Dakota now vote by mail, as do over 1000 precincts in Minnesota (those with fewer than 400 registered voters). In 2018, pilot programs in Anchorage, Alaska exceeded previous turnout records and Garden County, Nebraska saw higher turnout versus the state average. Rockville, Maryland piloted vote-by-mail in 2019. In 2018, Connecticut's Governor issued Executive Order 64, directing a study of a possible move to vote by mail.
No-excuse postal voting A study by the Center for Election Innovation & Research documented a steady increase in no-excuse postal voting (i.e., voters may vote by mail without an eligible reason) since the 2000 general election: • In 2000, 21 states allowed no-excuse postal voting for the general election • In 2004, 24 states • In 2008, 28 states • In 2012, 30 states and Washington, DC • In 2016, 31 states and Washington, DC • In 2020, 45 states and Washington, DC (sudden increase due in part to emergency measures during the COVID-19 pandemic) • In 2024, 36 states and Washington, DC As of September 2024, 14 states allow postal voting but require an eligible reason. In 2018, Michigan passed
Proposal 3, a state constitutional amendment legalizing "no-excuse" postal voting and other election reforms. In 2020 three more states joined the majority of states which already allowed "no excuse" postal voting: Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, and Virginia. In June 2023, the Connecticut legislature sent a ballot measure to the voters which, if passed in 2024, would amend the state constitution to allow no-excuse postal voting. In September 2023, the New York Legislature passed a bill legalizing no-excuse absentee early voting up to nine days before an election or primary, which was signed into law by Governor
Kathy Hochul. ==Table: No-excuse postal voting==