July 30, 2024
Maricopa County Posts Initial Unofficial Results for the 2024 Primary
July 30, 2024 - Initial, unofficial results are now posted for the July Primary Election.
These results represent 552,056 ballots, which represents about 22.82 percent of total eligible voters. These 8 p.m. results include ballots that have been received through Friday, July 26.
In-person Election Day results will be posted as they are returned from each of the 222 Vote Centers throughout the night. Approximately 75,000 voters cast a ballot in-person today.
Follow us on social media (X, Instagram, and Facebook at @MaricopaVote) for updates throughout the night.
An estimate of early ballots dropped off on Election Day will be available early Wednesday morning. These early ballots must first be signature verified and processed, before they are counted. The County must also complete the tallying of write-in candidates, research provisional ballots, and cure questionable signatures prior to finalizing the counts.
Unofficial results will be posted daily by 8 p.m. until all ballots are counted. A daily update of the estimated ballots left to count will be included in the information.
Find Maricopa County's election results at Results.Maricopa.Vote.
To understand how Maricopa County counts ballots, visit CountingBallots.Maricopa.Vote
Maricopa County Elections cannot complete counting until after the August 4 statutory deadline for:
- Conditional Provisional Ballots – If a voter did not provide sufficient ID when voting in-person, they still have 5 days to prove identity and have their ballot counted. Find out more at ProvisionalStatus.Maricopa.Vote.
- Questionable Signatures — Voters whose early ballot signature was questioned to cure the signature issue. Voters can track their early ballot status online at BeBallotReady.Vote.
Due to Arizona law, the County is also preparing for the increased chance of an automatic recount after final results are canvassed. 2022 Legislation increased the automatic recount threshold from a tenth of one percent to half of one percent. If a statewide contest triggers the new threshold, Arizona counties must count all the ballots on the machines a second time after the Statewide canvass.
About Maricopa County Elections, A Department of the Board of Supervisors:
Maricopa County Elections, A Department of the Board of Supervisors serves more than 2.4 million registered voters. They are responsible for candidate filings, in-person voting and vote centers, hiring thousands of elections workers for each election, as well as the tabulation of ballots. The work supports elections in Maricopa County cities, towns, school districts and special districts.