Early Voting Availability
Almost all states offer some form of early voting, but the length of the early voting period varies by state. Hours and locations may vary by county. Our scoring includes states that offer “in-person absentee voting,” which is a process by which a voter completes an absentee ballot at a polling place. States that offer in-person absentee voting but require an “excuse” to vote absentee have been scored 0. Hours and locations may vary by county. These laws are applicable to general elections only.
State early voting period is more than 22 days
(14 states)
State early voting period is 15 to 21 days
(8 states)
State early voting period is 7 to 14 days
(22 states + D.C.)
State early voting period is less than 7 days
(3 states)
State does not offer early voting or excuse is required
(3 states)
Recommended citation: Movement Advancement Project. “Early Voting Availability.” https://www.mapresearch.org/democracy-maps/early_voting_period. Accessed March 18, 2026.
Breakdown by Population
*Note: These percentages reflect the voting-eligible population, as reported by the United States Election Project.
33% of population lives in states whose early voting period is more than 22 days
16% of population lives in states whose early voting period is 15 to 21 days
45% of population lives in states whose early voting period is 7 to 14 days
3% of population lives in states whose early voting period is less than 7 days
3% of population lives in states that does not offer early voting or excuse is required

