Early voting totals in Georgia ticked past 1.4 million in the past 24 hours for the upcoming general election, according to numbers compiled Thursday by the Secretary of State’s Office. Here are the counts, plus what you need to know about heading to the polls before Election Day.

GENERAL STATEWIDE TURNOUT

Number of ballots cast: 1,475,272

Number of ballots voted in person: 1,296,811

Number of mail-in ballots returned: 178,461

Number of mail-in ballots outstanding: 87,093

TOP 5 COUNTIES WITH HIGHEST TURNOUT

DeKalb: 125,740

Fulton: 122,817

Cobb: 85,561

Gwinnett: 76,959

Henry: 50,571

VOTE EARLY

Any voter registered in Georgia can vote early. Personalized polling locations and times can be found via the Georgia secretary of state’s website (www.sos.ga.gov/mvp). Most counties or municipalities have several early-voting sites open. Early voting wraps up Friday at day’s end. Voting then resumes as normal Tuesday on Election Day.

WHAT TO BRING WITH YOU

Georgia requires voters to show photo identification when they vote in person. Approved forms of identification include a Georgia driver’s license, even if it’s expired; a valid U.S. passport; and a valid U.S. military photo ID. The state also offers a free voter ID card, which can be issued at any county registrar’s office or through the state Department of Driver Services.

BY COMPARISON

More than 2 million people cast ballots before Election Day 2008, a nearly 400 percent increase over the 2004 presidential election.

TELL US WHY YOU VOTED

Are you an early voter? Tell us why you participated in the Nov. 6 election. Take a photo of yourself featuring your answer, then send it one of these ways:

1. Email your photo to share@ajc.com with “Why I Voted” in the subject field

2. Tweet your photo to @ajc with the hashtag #whyivoted

3. Upload your photo or video from your computer at share.ajc.com

About the Author

Keep Reading

President Donald Trump signs executive orders in the Oval Office of the White House shortly after his inauguration on Monday, Jan. 20, 2025. Even more than in his first term, Trump has mounted a fundamental challenge to the norms and expectations of what a president can and should do. (Doug Mills/New York Times)

Credit: NYT

Featured

Former District Attorney Jackie Johnson smiles at a supporter who took her hand Monday after Senior Judge John R. Turner dismissed one of the two charges she faced.

Credit: Terry Dickson/ The Brunswick News