Image of the Dare County Administration Building: the location of the Dare County Board of Elections.

2024 ELECTION DATES:

November 5, 2024: Statewide General Election Day

October 17, 2024 to November 2, 2024: Early Voting period for the statewide General Election

Click here to view the UOCAVA 2024 General Election Notice.

Current Election Status: Photo ID Required
Click here to learn more about the photo identification requirement.

Absentee ballots to voters who have requested ballots by mail, including those who use the Visually Impaired Portal (VIP) will begin to be mailed out on Tuesday, September 24, 2024, under a new schedule released by the NC State Board of Elections..

Absentee ballots to eligible military and overseas citizens who requested them for the 2024 general election will go out on Friday, September 20, 2024, under a new schedule released by the NC State Board of Elections.

 

 

ELECTIONS CALENDAR

Meetings may be livestreamed through the Dare County YouTube Channel on any device.

Board of Elections - Sample Audit Meeting

SAMPLE AUDIT

The sample audit count is a test to ensure voting equipment read the voter’s choices accurately. It compares the machine counts with hand-to-eye counts conducted by elections officials in randomly selected voting sites. The sample audit count is open to the public and is completed before canvass. The hand-to-eye counts required for this process are not recounts, although they are similar processes. The day after the election, the State Board of Elections informs each county of their assigned contest and the two randomly selected samples (Election Day precinct, one-stop site, or absentee by mail ballots) to audit. For a presidential election, the contest audited is always the presidential contest. Selected ballots are hand-counted by a bipartisan team of trained volunteers. The hand-counted results are compared to the tabulated results and any variances are noted. Permitted variances include the following situations:

    1. The write-in oval was not filled in, but a candidate’s name was written in, or

    2. The machine did not count a choice that was represented by check marks or Xs or that was poorly shaded.The county sends the machine counts and hand counts to the state along with an explanation of any discrepancies.

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