Stay ahead of the curve as a political insider with deep policy analysis, daily briefings and policy-shaping tools.
Request a Demo- Nearly 4 in 10 of Georgia’s active voters have cast ballots
- Small counties outpace metro areas in voter turnout percentage
- Early voting ends Friday, Nov. 1
CLAYTON, GA — Georgians this week continued their brisk pace to the polls with nearly 4 in 10 of the state’s active voters having cast ballots in person or by mail by late afternoon Friday.
All told, over 2.6 million Georgians — or 36.2% — have cast ballots since early voting began Oct. 15, according to the secretary of state. Less than 3% of those — 160,900 — are mail-in ballots.
In addition to monitoring statewide voting, state election officials averted a midweek cyberattack bent on crashing the website that voters use to request absentee ballots.
Here’s where early voting stood at 6:30 p.m. Friday, the close of the second week of statewide early voting:
- Women continued to outpace men this week, 55.7% to 44.1%.
- Voters aged 60 to 69 cast nearly 573,732 votes, making them the largest age group participating in the election.
- Over 295 centenarians — those 100 and older — have cast ballots, including former President Jimmy Carter.
- Those between the ages of 18 and 29 accounted for almost 255,544 voters by 6:30 p.m. Friday.
- White and Black people accounted for the bulk of early voters. Over 1.5 million white people and nearly 659,00 Black people had cast ballots.
- Voters in small counties appeared to outpace their peers in metro areas. Nearly 6 in 10 voters — 58% — in Towns County in the northwest Georgia mountains, for example, had voted by mail or in person. Neighboring Rabun County saw 52.5% turnout.
- Many of the state’s 159 counties have seen, on average, around 20% voter turnout.
- Fulton County dominated in the sheer number of voters, with over 289,211 early voters.
- Oct. 15, the first day of early voting, remains the highest voter turnout of the 10 days of early voting so far with 313,412 Georgians voting in person.
Early voting ends Friday, Nov. 1.
Keep track of early voting in Georgia here and here.
IMPORTANT DATES TO REMEMBER
- Oct. 15-Nov. 1: Early voting
- Nov. 5: General election and deadline for mail-in (absentee) ballots to be returned
- Dec. 3: General election runoff
Have questions? Contact Tammy Joyner on X @lvjoyner or at [email protected].
Read these related stories:
A primer on the Nov. 5 ballot measures: What you need to know
Party on: Lt. Gov. Burt Jones rallies Republicans in the final stretch
Gen Z candidates aren’t being ‘extra’ — they’re strategically targeting seats in the Gold Dome
An early primer: 8 things you need to know before the Nov. 5 election
Know the most important news affecting Georgia
Get our free weekly newsletter that covers government, policy and politics that impact your everyday life—in 5 minutes or less.
Party on: Lt. Gov. Burt Jones rallies Republicans in the final stretch
You’ll have to forgive Burt Jones if he’s a bit tired. The state’s second-in-command has been keeping late hours in the final weeks leading to the Nov. 5 general election. The lieutenant governor spent most of Wednesday squiring Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump to a town hall in Zebulon and a gathering in Duluth that …
Madeline Ryan Smith keeps it local as she aims to unseat incumbent in Georgia House District 158
Editor’s note: State Affairs spoke with the four Gen Z candidates running for the state Legislature in November as part of our “On the CampaignTrail” series. They discussed their campaigns and what they plan to do if elected. This profile looks at Georgia House District 158 candidate Madeline Ryan Smith. To read the main story …
A primer on the Nov. 5 ballot measures: What you need to know
In addition to voting for president and down-ballot candidates in the Nov. 5 election, Georgians will decide on a couple of tax measures and whether to create a statewide tax court. Three questions call for a statewide vote, all of which appear at the end of the ballot. The first time most voters see these …
From TikTok to door knocks: Gabriel Sanchez rallies young voters in House District 42 showdown
Editor’s note: State Affairs spoke with the four Gen Z candidates running for the state Legislature in November as part of our “On the CampaignTrail” series. They discussed their campaigns and what they plan to do if elected. This profile looks at Georgia House District 42 candidate Gabriel Sanchez. To read the main story for …