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Texas Bill SB 51: Update Voter Registration When You Move
Policy

Texas Bill SB 51: Update Voter Registration When You Move

Texas Legislature

Who Decides
SB 51 is a Texas law that updates voting rules for people who move within their county. If your address changes but you stay in the same county, you can still vote at your old polling location. You must sign a statement saying you meet the requirements. Your voter registration will then update to your new address within 30 days. This makes voting easier for people who move.

SB 51 is a Texas state law that makes voting easier for people who move within their county. Sponsored by Representative Mayes Middleton, this bill changes how voter registration works when someone relocates but stays in the same county.

Under this law, if you move to a new address within your county, you can still vote at your current polling location without having to update your address first. Before voting, you must complete and sign a statement confirming that you meet the voting requirements for your area and that you still live in the county where you are registered. This statement includes your new address and the date you submitted it.

After you vote, your voter registration automatically updates to your new address. The registration change becomes official within 30 days of when you submitted the statement. This gives election officials time to process the update while letting you cast your ballot right away.

The bill also repeals a previous rule that made this process more complicated. SB 51 applies only to address changes submitted after the law takes effect. The law takes effect immediately if it receives approval from two-thirds of both houses of the Texas Legislature, or 91 days after the legislative session ends if it does not receive that special vote.

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