How to vote in the 2024 Nova Scotia general election
How to vote in the 2024 Nova Scotia general election
- We'll walk you through things, step-by-step. Make sure to fill out everything you can!
- Then, we'll draw up your full plan to vote. You can print it, save it as a PDF, or have us send you a reminder text!
Can you vote?
Check all the boxes that apply to you:
When and where will you vote?
On election day, Nov 26
Annapolis Royal Volunteer Fire Dept.
West Dalhousie Community Hall
Port Lorne Fire Hall
Bridgetown Volunteer Fire Dept.
Granville Centre Community Hall
Three Rivers Community Assoc.
Lawrencetown & District Fire Dept
Brickton Community Hall
Royal Cdn Legion Br
Paradise Community Hall
Springfield & District Fire Department
Parker's Cove United Baptist Church
Margaretsville Fire Hall
Granville Ferry Community Hall
Hampton Community Hall
Lower Granville Hall
Melvern Square Community Hall
Middleton Volunteer Fire Dept.
Middleton Baptist Church
Round Hill Community Hall
Port George Regional Recreation Centre
Nictaux Volunteer Fire Dept
Wilmot Community Centre
Other options for voting
Returning offices: You can vote at any returning office in the province before election day, or at the returning office in your own electoral district on election day. You can find your returning office here.
Community polls: You can vote at any community poll anywhere in the province. You can find community polls here.
Who are you voting for?
Step 1: Compare the party platforms
Step 2: Review the candidate profiles
Step 3: Come back here and choose your pick
Need another look at your options?
Green
PC
NDP
Liberal
Your pick for MLA
Are your friends voting?
Help spread a little democracy! Do one of the following:
Why we're asking you to spread the word
If we want to keep our democracy, we have to use it. And all most people need to go out and vote is a little push from a friend!
Your plan to vote
How
When
Where
What to bring
If you're already registered, you don't need ID to vote.
- If you're not sure if you're registered, bring ID anyways.
- If you were registered under an old name or address (usually because you've moved or updated your name since), you will need ID.
Otherwise, you'll need to bring one of the following:
Your Nova Scotia Driver's License with your current address.
Your Nova Scotia Identification Card with your current address.
Your Certificate of Indian Status Card.
Two documents, both with your name and at least one with your current address.
If you don't have ID, you can take an oath instead.
- Voter Information Card
- Letter of Confirmation
- University/college/school Student Card, admissions letter, or statement of tuition fees
- Health card
- Canadian passport
- Canadian citizenship card
- Canadian Forces ID
- Birth certificate
- Social Insurance card
- Old Age Security card
- Vehicle or residence insurance policy
- Vehicle registration
- Personalized cheque printed by bank
- Credit card
- Library card
- Hospital bracelet (worn by patient in hospital)
- Statement of account (telephone, power bill, credit card)
- Statement of benefits (Canadian Pension, Old Age Security, Employment Insurance)
Your pick for MLA
Sara Adams | Green Party of Nova Scotia |
David Bowlby | Progressive Conservative Association of Nova Scotia |
Cheryl Burbidge | Nova Scotia New Democratic Party |
Carman Kerr | Nova Scotia Liberal Party |
Keep a copy of your plan
Get a reminder text
Update your reminder text
Your reminder text is scheduled. Would you like to update it?VoteMate is made by one person
My name's Laef Kucheran! I'm a 23-year-old web developer from Vancouver.
I worked over 100 hours running VoteMate for this election. I volunteer all that time and pay for the site's expenses out of my own pocket because I believe it can help people vote. That matters to me.
Did VoteMate help you? Help me make it better!