Nearly half of the states have concluded their 2026 legislative sessions, and with the midterm elections only a little over five months away, a picture of how state election laws will differ from 2024 is taking shape. Between January 1 and May 1, 2026:
- At least 9 states1 enacted 12 restrictive voting laws.2 Of those laws, 9 are slated to be in effect when voters go to the polls in November. Most notably, South Dakota and Utah now require all citizens to show documents like a passport or a birth certificate to register to vote and Florida, Kentucky, and Mississippi will require those documents from some voters. Overall, lawmakers in at least 41 states have considered no fewer than 302 restrictive voting bills in 2026.
- At least 6 states3 enacted 16 expansive voting laws, 14 of which are slated to be in effect when voters go to the polls in November.4 Overall, lawmakers in at least 42 states have considered no fewer than 558 expansive voting bills in 2026. Virginia has led the tally this year, enacting 6 expansive laws so far, with at least 2 more awaiting the governor’s signature.
- So far this year, no state has enacted an election interference law.5 Overall, lawmakers in at least 25 states have considered no fewer than 65 interference bills in 2026.
With the 32 restrictive laws enacted in 2025, that means states have already enacted 44 restrictive laws during the two-year election cycle beginning January 2025, surpassing the previous high of 43 restrictive laws enacted in the 2021 through 2022 cycle. The explosion of restrictive voting legislation that began after the 2020 election has turned into a regular feature of the election landscape, with well over a hundred such laws enacted in the past five years. Many of the laws come from the same core group of states: Arizona, Arkansas, Idaho, Indiana, Kansas, Louisiana, Montana, Texas, and Wyoming have each enacted at least 5 restrictive laws since 2021.
Multiple states are pushing back against such myths. At the federal level, a renewed effort to pass the SAVE Act — which demands that Americans show a passport or birth certificate to register to vote — failed in the Senate amid widespread public opposition. And multiple states are pushing back against the threat of federal interference by refusing to hand over their voters’ data, enacting laws designed to guard against such interference, and strengthening existing election security measures. These laws provide meaningful protections for voting rights, although they do not actively expand voting access.
First, we discuss a series of bills designed to limit the presence of federal law enforcement officers at polling places on Election Day without a valid reason. Federal law and many existing state laws offer protections against the unnecessary deployment of state or federal officials to polling places; several states have enacted or proposed legislation that would further protect voters from interference or intimidation. Many of these proposals focus specifically on curbing the activity of federal immigration enforcement in the vicinity of voting locations.
Additionally, at least 7 states6 have enacted legislation to bolster election security laws and safeguard the electoral process from interference. These laws improve ballot security, regulate postelection audits, proscribe AI-generated misinformation, and prevent voter intimidation. States proactively improving and protecting their elections is a significant trend with important implications for the voting rights of citizens of those states that we’ll continue to watch.
Finally, we provide an update on federal efforts to acquire state voter rolls, a topic we last covered in the October 2025 roundup. Election officials in at least 15 states have complied with federal requests for unredacted voter information. While we do not always count legislation related to these efforts as restrictive or interference, several states have considered bills that would compel officials to hand over voters’ sensitive information to federal agencies. This legislation could enable the federal government to force states to wrongly remove eligible voters from the rolls. President Trump’s recently issued executive order on elections, which illegally seeks to use the U.S. Postal Service to determine who gets to vote by mail, provides additional reason for caution about sharing voter rolls with federal agencies.7
Endnotes
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1
Florida, Kansas, Kentucky, Mississippi, Nebraska, New Hampshire, South Dakota, Utah, and West Virginia. -
2
Legislation is categorized as restrictive if it contains one or more provisions that would make it harder for eligible Americans to register, stay on the voter rolls, or vote compared to existing state law. -
3
Maryland, Nebraska, New Hampshire, New Jersey, Virginia, and Washington. -
4
Legislation is categorized as expansive if it contains one or more provisions that would make it easier for eligible Americans to register, stay on the voter rolls, or vote compared to existing state law. -
5
Legislation is categorized as election interference if it either threatens the people and processes that make elections work or increases opportunities for partisan interference in election results or administration. -
6
Maine, Oregon, South Dakota, Tennessee, Utah, Vermont, Wyoming. -
7
The Brennan Center and other groups are challenging the executive order in court.