Mail registration — A qualified elector may register by mail by submitting a completed registration form to the county auditor at any time, except during the 30 days immediately before any statewide special, primary, or general election.
Motor vehicle and public-assistance interactions — Except during the 30-day pre‑election blackout, a person may register (or be allowed to register) when:
- applying for or renewing a driver’s license or nondriver ID;
- submitting a change-of-name or change-of-address on a driver’s license/ID; or
- applying for or receiving public assistance.
In-person county registration — A qualified elector may register in person at the county auditor’s office by completing a registration form at any time up to the day before a statewide special, primary, or general election.
Absentee/mail ballot registration — If an elector applies for an absentee or mail ballot, the elector may request a registration form and may complete and submit it with the ballot provided the registration form is mailed and received within 30 days of the election.
Same‑day registration at polls — An individual may register on election day by completing the prescribed form and providing required information at the correct polling place.
County auditor duties — Upon receipt of a properly completed and signed registration form, the county auditor or authorized election officer must register the individual in the central voter file.
Secretary of State duties — The Secretary of State shall prescribe the registration forms to be used; forms must include name, address, date of birth, last place of registration, and any other information necessary to ensure accurate registration.
DOT cooperation — The Department of Transportation must cooperate with the Secretary of State to develop voter registration forms for use with driver’s license/ID applications, renewals, and change-of-address/name requests.
No party designation on form — Political party affiliation may not be indicated on the registration form.
Central file operations and permanence — The Secretary of State must adopt rules and prescribe forms for transfers within and deletions from the central voter file. Subject to those rules, registration is permanent.