Everyone who represents you, on one permanent page.
Enter your address and see the faithful recreation of your actual ballot — president to city hall: who holds each seat, and when each seat is next up for a vote. No account, no ads, no tracking.
How it works
Enter your address
We send it to the US Census Geocoder to find your voting districts, then discard it. Nothing about you is stored or logged — your address never touches our database.
See your full ballot
Every office you vote for — federal, state, county, and municipal — stacked in ballot order on one page. Who holds each seat now, their party, and when the seat is next on the ballot.
Honest about the gaps
Where there's no data source yet for an office, the row is still shown — as an honest empty slot, not hidden. Your ballot is the complete one from the booth, not just the parts we've filled in.
Permanent and shareable
Every office and officeholder has a permalink you can bookmark, share, and find again. No feed, no ranking, no engagement metrics. A civic reference that stays put.
What this isn't
No account. There is nothing to sign up for. You never create a profile, never set a password, never identify yourself. BallotCard is a reference you read, not a service you join.
No stored addresses. Your address is resolved to voting districts by the US Census Geocoder and immediately discarded. It is never written to our database and never logged. localStorage holds district IDs only — facts about a place, never about you.
No ads, ever. BallotCard is not monetized. Operating costs are covered by the maintainer. No ads, no lead-gen, no enterprise contracts, no selling your data. Nothing here is for sale.
No algorithm. No feed, no ranking, no trending, no engagement optimization. Content is organized by district and office — by where you live and what you vote for — not by what a platform decided you should see next.
No user-generated content. No posts, no comments, no forums. Every fact comes from a cited public data source — government rosters, the Census, official records — and links back to it. Wikipedia's epistemic honesty, not a comment section.
On your card today
- —President and Vice President.
- —US Senate and US House — sourced from the unitedstates/congress-legislators project.
- —Governors and statewide executives — attorney general, secretary of state, treasurer, and more.
- —State legislatures — every state senate and house seat, via Open States.
Coming, shown as honest empty rows
- —Elected state judges and retention elections.
- —Sheriffs, district attorneys, and county offices.
- —Mayors, city councils, and school boards, beyond the largest cities.
- —An activity record for each official — votes, floor statements, and hearings.
See your ballot.
No account, no ads, no tracking. Enter your address and see everyone who represents you, federal to local.