In the years since the
2000 presidential election, many states have implemented innovative policies that streamline the process of voter registration, promote voter list accuracy, and create options for eligible citizens to register or to update their registration. Such innovations include online voter registration, automatic voter registration, and same-day voter registration. A September 2024 study by the
Center for Election Innovation & Research found that the implementation of at least one of these three voter registration methods increased from seven states in 2000 to 46 states in 2024. To underscore this point: during the 2000 general election, fewer than 6 percent of voting-age citizens lived in states with one of these registration methods. As of this study, nearly 90 percent of voting-age citizens live in states that will have at least one of these methods in place for the
2024 presidential election, and roughly one-third of voting-age citizens now live in states that have implemented all three methods. The maps below show the innovative registration methods available in each state and Washington, D.C., in 2024.
Online voter registration As of September 2024, online voter registration is available in 43 states and the District of Columbia.
Automatic voter registration As of September 2023, 24 states and the District of Columbia had automatic registration of citizens who interact with state agencies such as the
DMV, along with 3 other states that have passed legislation or committed administratively to create automatic registration systems, but not yet implemented it. By April 2016 three more states – California, West Virginia, and Vermont – adopted the system, and in May 2016 Connecticut announced plans to implement it administratively rather than by legislation. Alaskan voters approved Measure 1 on November 8, 2016, to allow residents to register to vote when applying annually for the state's
Permanent Dividend Fund. Voter approval of Measure 1 made Alaska the first state to implement automatic (opt-in) voter registration via ballot initiative. New York passed automatic voter registration on December 22, 2020, with implementation to commence in 2023. Several more states have considered legislation for automatic registration. On August 28, 2017, Illinois set July 1, 2018, for implementation of automatic voter registration at motor vehicle agencies, and a year later at other state agencies. In 2023, the
Center for Election Innovation & Research conducted a study of the impact of automatic voter registration in Georgia, which has operated through the state's Department of Driver Services (DDS) since 2016. Among the key findings: • Active voter registration increased from 78 to 98 percent of eligible citizens in the first four years of AVR’s implementation • The registered voter population became more representative of the state’s population in terms of age and gender • The majority of new voter registrations in Georgia are now through DDS transactions.
Same-day voter registration Most states require voters to register two to four weeks before an
election, with cutoff dates varying from 15 to 30 days. An increasing number of states allow same-day voter registration (SDR), which enables eligible citizens to
register to vote or update their registration on the same day they vote. Same-day registration allows eligible citizens to register or update their registration at the polls or their local election office by showing valid
identification to a
poll worker or election official, who checks the identification, consults the registration list and, if they are not registered or the registration is out of date, registers them on the spot. Twenty-five states and the District of Columbia offered same-day voter registration for the 2024 general election, which allowed any qualified resident of the state to register to vote and cast a ballot the same day.
Voter turnout is much higher in states using same-day registration than in states that do not. A 2013 report analyzing turnout in the
2012 United States presidential election had SDR states averaging at a turnout of 71%, well above the average voter turn-out rate of 59% for non-SDR states. According to official turnout data report in the 2014 edition of America Goes to the Polls, voter turnout in SDR states has averaged 10–14 percent higher than states that lack that option. A 2021 study found that same-day registration disproportionately increases turnout among young voters; young voters move more frequently, which disproportionately burdens them under traditional voter registration laws.
Voter re-registration In many jurisdictions in the United States, registered voter must re-register to vote upon changing residential addresses (even within the same
county), or
changing names. Some jurisdictions have automatic voter re-registration whereby existing registrants are automatically re-registered after changing home addresses. A 2022 study found that automatic voter re-registration would increase voter turnout in the US by 5.8 percentage points. ==Permanent and portable registration==