Is Georgia voting now
Executive summary
Georgia is not experiencing a single, statewide election “now”; the 2026 statewide calendar places major contests (primaries in May and the general election in November) ahead, but local and special elections — including at least one special election scheduled for January 20, 2026 in some counties — mean voting is taking place in parts of the state right now (or on specific local dates) rather than a universal, state‑wide vote [1] [2] [3].
1. What “voting now” usually means — and why that matters for Georgia
As a practical matter, “voting now” can mean a statewide primary or general election, or it can mean localized special elections and routine early‑voting windows; Georgia’s official 2026 calendar confirms the statewide primary and general election cycle is concentrated later in the year — the primary is May 19, 2026 with a primary runoff June 16, and the general election is November 3, 2026 with a possible runoff December 1 — which indicates there is not a single statewide election underway at this moment [1] [4]. At the same time, county and municipal election offices publish local calendars and notices showing discrete special elections and early voting schedules that create pockets of active voting even outside the statewide cycle [3] [5].
2. Evidence that parts of Georgia are voting on specific local dates
Public county notices show concrete examples: Crawford County posted an advanced voting schedule and an election‑day notice for a Special Election on January 20, 2026 with polls open 7 a.m.–7 p.m. and advance voting dates listed, demonstrating that voting was scheduled in at least some jurisdictions on that date [2]. The Federal Election Commission and local election calendars also list a Special General Election for Georgia’s 14th Congressional District on March 10, 2026 (with a possible runoff April 7), further underscoring that special and off‑cycle contests are scattered through the calendar [6].
3. Georgia’s statewide schedule: when the state will be widely voting
For voters wondering whether a statewide contest is underway, the authoritative statewide schedule points to concentrated voting later in 2026: statewide primaries and runoffs occur in May and June, and the statewide general election is scheduled for November 3, 2026 with a runoff if needed December 1, 2026 — those are the moments when the majority of Georgians vote in synchronized statewide contests [1] [4] [7]. The Georgia Secretary of State’s election calendar and summary documents lay out the 2026 election cycle and related deadlines, showing early processing, logic and accuracy testing and other preparatory dates tied to those larger contests [8] [3] [9].
4. How to interpret mixed reporting and local notices
Local county election pages and state calendars serve different purposes: county pages list early voting periods and precinct details for specific contests, while the Secretary of State and national election trackers compile statewide schedules and deadlines; together they explain why some communities may be voting while the state as a whole is not holding a single coordinated election [5] [10] [8]. Reporting that highlights “Georgia voting” without distinguishing between a local special election and the statewide cycle risks creating the impression that the entire state is voting simultaneously; the sources above show that both phenomena are occurring — statewide contests are scheduled later in 2026, but local special elections are active now in parts of the state [2] [1].
5. Constraints and open questions
The public record compiled here verifies scheduled local special elections (for example, the January 20 special in Crawford County) and shows the statewide 2026 timeline, but it does not provide live, real‑time turnout data or confirm every county’s day‑to‑day voting operations right now; local election office websites and the Secretary of State’s “Election Calendar and Events” remain the best sources for current polling places and hours in each county [2] [8]. Any claim that “all of Georgia is voting now” is not supported by these calendars; instead, the evidence supports a mixed reality: targeted local voting is occurring in places and on dates listed by county offices while the statewide voting calendar is still forthcoming [6] [1].