Skip to main content

Inform yourself on Michigan elections

Michigan elections are secure, accurate, and fair.

Our elections are secure, accurate and fair. Thousands of Republican, Democratic and independent election clerks, staff and volunteers make sure this is true every election. They follow the law and adhere to strict security protocols to make Michigan’s elections system among the strongest and most secure in the nation. The people who say otherwise want to convince you not to vote, or not to believe in any election they or their preferred candidate doesn’t win. Don’t be fooled into giving up your constitutional right to vote and have your vote count. Inform yourself about Michigan elections so you know the truth.

The words "FACT CHECKS" on a dark blue and green background

Michigan elections are among the strongest and most secure in the nation. False information about elections is dangerous to our democracy. Fact Checks provide factual information so all Michiganders can have faith in our elections.

Fact check
The words "REPORT MISINFORMATION" on a dark blue and green background

Follow the Report misinformation link to email your report. Include as much information as possible in the report. (Date, time, example, proof document attachments). Our office will investigate your report and follow up when necessary.

Report misinformation

Before Election Day

  • Michigan's elections are decentralized, meaning they are carried out by local Republican, Democratic, and nonpartisan election clerks in the state's 1,521 cities and townships.

    This bolsters election security by making it difficult for hackers to attack the decentralized system, and for statewide fraud to occur without coordination among hundreds of sworn, locally elected officials.

  • Michigan has one of the best voter registration rates in the country, thanks in large part to its pioneering work registering voters when they conduct vehicle and ID transactions at Secretary of State offices (now a national best practice). Additionally, in 2018, Michigan voters enshrined the right to automatic voter registration in our state constitution. Now, unless they opt out, all eligible citizens are registered to voter when conducting many transactions with the Secretary of State. The process also helps maintain the voter registration list by checking to confirm eligibility of all registered voters when they renew their IDs and driver's licenses with the Secretary of State.

  • All registered voters in Michigan have the right to vote using an absentee ballot. Voters may complete an application for an absentee ballot with their local clerk online at Michigan.gov/Vote or submit a printed and signed request to their clerk by email, mail or in person.

    Voters can vote by absentee ballot through the mail, without leaving their home. They can also go to their city or township clerk's office or drop box to return their absentee ballot, which is recommended when returning a ballot within two weeks of Election Day in order to avoid possible postal delays.

    Absentee voting is a time-tested secure system in Michigan. Clerks check signatures on both absentee ballot requests and ballot envelopes against the signatures they have on file to verify the identity of every voter.

    Michigan.gov/Vote

  • Many other states allow clerks to pre-process, and in some cases count, absentee ballots before Election Day in order to ensure timely unofficial results on election night and prevent misinformation and conspiracy theories from undermining voters' faith in elections. The recommended best practice is to allow seven days for pre-processing before Election Day. In Michigan, clerks were allowed ten hours of pre-processing time prior to the November 2020 general election. Currently, if the clerk of a city or township with a population of at least 10,000 provides written notice to the Secretary of State 20 days or more before Election Day, that clerk or their designee may perform some absent voter ballot pre-processing activities between the hours of 7 a.m. and 8 p.m. on the Sunday and Monday before Election Day.

Election Day

  • Because Michigan uses all paper ballots and prints paper tallies of the counts, there is always a physical record of all votes. Additionally, the physical record ensures reporting errors are caught and corrected before or at the county canvass. This paper trail provides Michigan with yet another layer of security.

  • Michigan has 83 counties, 280 cities, and 1,240 townships. During an election, each of these units of government requires a staff of paid workers to assist voters and help process ballots. Election workers, precinct inspectors and election inspectors are people who are paid to assist voters and count ballots on Election Day. Their participation is crucial to the election process and they are witnesses to its integrity.

  • Election challengers may be appointed by political parties and qualified interest groups to observe the election process. To maintain the security of the election and voter privacy, challengers are prohibited from using a video camera or recording device inside the polling place or clerk's office. Personal smart phones, tablets, laptops or other electronic devices are also prohibited in the absent voter counting board. Furthermore, challengers may not handle or touch the pollbook or e-pollbook or election materials and may not approach and question voters. A challenger cannot challenge a voter's right to vote unless the challenger has "good reason to believe" that the voter is not eligible to vote in the precinct.

    Challenger instructions

  • The electronic pollbook is a downloaded list from the Qualified Voter File of all the registered voters in a given precinct that is loaded onto a laptop prior to each election. This allows election inspectors to look up a voter's registration record, confirm they are in the correct polling place and assign a ballot to that voter. Once a ballot has been issued to a voter, the e-pollbook record will reflect that fact, preventing double voting. Additionally, the e-pollbook will alert the election inspector if a voter appearing to vote at the polls has already cast an absentee ballot, which also prevents double voting.

  • In Michigan, the counting of absentee ballots cannot begin until the polls open at 7 a.m. on Election Day. Review pre-processing absentee ballots, under Before Election Day, for more information.

After polls close

  • Because only limited pre-processing of absentee ballots is currently allowed in Michigan (review pre-processing absentee ballots listed under Before Election Day), when large numbers of voters vote absentee, completion of the counting process can take many hours, if not days, after the close of polls.

  • Because Michigan uses all paper ballots, and tabulation machines print the vote counts, there is always a paper record that can be reviewed if a reporting error occurs. When 1,520 jurisdictions are reporting results from several thousand precincts, it is not uncommon for isolated reporting errors to occur, when election workers record or transmit unofficial numbers incorrectly. However, the bipartisan county boards of canvassers compare the physical tabulation records to the unofficial results and correct any errors before certifying the election and making results official.

  • Michigan law provides a mechanism for counting ballots again in certain circumstances:

    • Automatic - A recount of all precincts in the state is automatically conducted if the difference between the number of votes received by a candidate nominated or elected to a statewide office and the number of votes received by the second-place candidate is 2,000 votes or less. The provision does not extend to the following offices: State Board of Education, University of Michigan Regent, Michigan State University Trustee or Wayne State University Governor. A recount of all precincts in the state is similarly conducted if the difference between the "Yes" vote and the "No" vote cast on a statewide ballot proposal is 2,000 votes or less.
    • By petition - A candidate for a federal, state, county, city, township, village, or school office who believes that the canvass of the votes cast for the office is incorrect because of fraud or error in the precinct returns may petition for a recount of the votes cast in the precincts involved. Candidates seeking a precinct delegate position do not have the right to petition for a recount. In addition, a registered elector who voted at an election at which a question appeared on the ballot, who believes that the canvass of the votes cast on the question is incorrect because of fraud or error in the precinct returns may petition for a recount of the votes cast in the precincts involved.
  • Post-election audits are important for the transparency of elections, and for clerks to review past practices and identify opportunities for future improvement. Michigan conducts several types of post-election audits. They include the following:

    • Procedural audits, which thoroughly review procedures performed before, during, and after the conduct of an election.
    • Risk-limiting audits, which draw and hand-tally a random sample of ballots to affirm the accuracy of vote-counting machines.
    • Absentee counting board audits, which review the specific processes for tabulating absentee ballots.
  • A bipartisan county or state board canvasses primaries and elections by reviewing the procedures used to carry out the election as well as unofficial results, and correcting any clerical errors in the unofficial results. This is done before results are certified.

  • A bipartisan county or state board certifies a primary by declaring the final vote totals obtained at the primary, the names of the nominees for the offices involved and the outcome of any questions on the ballot. A board certifies an election by declaring the final vote totals obtained at the election, the names of the candidates elected to the offices involved and the outcome of any questions on the ballot.

Security and modernization

Michigan has set a standard for election security by adopting many national best practices to strengthen our system and ensure elections are accurate and secure:

  Upgraded voting technology

  Improved Qualified Voter File system

  Joined the Electronic Registration Information Center (ERIC)

  Expanded risk-limiting post-election audits

  Hired the state’s first full-time election security specialist

  Improved cooperation among local, state, and federal governments

  Continued other long-standing accuracy and integrity practices