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Voter ID required: Get ready to show photo proof before you vote in NC

The simplest way for voters to comply is to show a valid North Carolina driver's license.
Posted 2024-01-24T23:28:31+00:00 - Updated 2024-03-04T09:47:40+00:00
FILE — A voter at a polling place in the Bronx on the first day of early voting, June 18, 2022. A segment of swing voters decided to back Democratic candidates in many critical races in the 2022 midterm elections. (Caitlin Ochs/The New York Times)

North Carolina voters will be required to show photo identification at the polls this year.

Primary Election Day is Tuesday, March 5.

The state’s 2018 voter ID law applied during the 2023 municipal elections, but many more people will first encounter that requirement in 2024, when races for president and governor are on the ballot.

What ID to I need to vote in North Carolina?

The simplest way for voters to comply is to show a valid North Carolina driver's license.

For people with expired licenses, or for those who don’t have one at all, the rules can become more complicated.

The North Carolina State Board of Elections has published a list of dozens of acceptable forms of ID, including many school and college IDs, military or veterans photo ID or tribal enrollment cards with photo.

For those without an identification card, the North Carolina Department of Motor Vehicles offers them free to non-drivers who can provide:

  • One document verifying age and identity
  • A Social Security card or one document proving they have a Social Security number
  • For U.S. citizens, one document proving residency

People who want to get an ID can also go to their home county’s board of elections office, which will take their photo and verify their name, birth date and Social Security number to create an ID that can be used in this election and future elections. That option will be available during early voting in all future election cycles.

Vote in North Carolina without photo ID

People who want to vote but don’t have any qualifying ID won’t be turned away. They’ll be allowed to cast what’s known as a “provisional ballot” — which officials won’t count unless the voter either comes back later to show their ID, or if the voter fills out an impediment form explaining that they don't have an ID.

Similarly, people who aren’t registered to vote but wish to cast a ballot can sign up to vote during early voting at a polling place.

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