Jasmine Birtles
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For the first time ever, UK voters will be required to show photographic ID before they can vote in Parliamentary elections, which include the local elections on 2nd May 2024. While most people will have some form of accepted photo ID, there will still be many who won’t – or they can’t afford to pay for the relevant ID document. This quick-look guide tells you everything you need to know about photo ID for voting in the UK.
What Photo ID Can I Use to Vote?
How to Get Free Photo ID to Vote
Photographic ID has been introduced to combat voting fraud, although in the last election, there were only 33 cases of suspected in-person voting fraud – out of 58 million votes.. This is a controversial move by the Government, as it will put lower income people at a disadvantage. For example, a valid UK passport is accepted ID but these come at a cost of over £100. Even the Government’s own research concluded that voter ID requirements would negatively impact the ability for people to vote if they are from lower socio-economic backgrounds without qualifications, those who are unemployed, and people with severe disabilities, especially as many of them won’t have any form of photographic ID.
Regardless of your opinion on whether voting ID is a good or bad idea, you will need one for voting in person at a polling station. Your ID must match your registered name, i.e., the one on your polling card, and the photo must be a similar enough likeness that it is clearly you. So, try not to use a driving license with that 15-year-old photo you snuck in on your last licence renewal in case you get turned away!
For England, Scotland, and Wales, there are a number of types of photo ID that are accepted by polling stations for in-person voting.
In Northern Ireland, you can use:
Your address does not have to match between these documents and your current address – the ID is for your identity check and not an address check. You only need photo ID if you are voting in person – it is not required for postal votes or voting by proxy (which is when you get someone else to go to the polling station for you, usually due to a medical emergency or disability, or if your employment prevents you from getting to a polling station during opening hours).
Your photo ID does not need to be in date, you just have to look like your photograph on it.
If you don’t have any of those forms of ID, or you don’t look like the photo on your accepted ID anymore, don’t panic – but you must act NOW to be able to vote at the local elections on 2nd May 2024.
Apply for a Photo ID Authority Voter Certificate before 24th April 2024 to get yours in time for voting.
If you live in Northern Ireland, you must apply for an Electoral Identity Card.