Our ballot instructions for the October–November 2022 election

What’s on the ballot?

This is a general election, so you’ll see some races you remember from the primary election as the primary winners now face each other in the general. There are also some races that don’t have primaries. You can vote on, among other things:

  • Governor and Lieutenant Governor

  • Secretary of State (in charge of statewide administration of elections, among other things)

  • U.S. Senator, twice (Padilla is the incumbent and is running both to finish the current term and to remain our senator in the next term)

  • Representative in the House

  • State Assemblymember

  • State Supreme Court Justices! Underappreciated (and endorsements are hard to come by) but actually very important.

  • BART Director, if you’re in District 8

  • Supervisor, if you’re in an even-numbered district (2, 4, 6, 8, 10)

  • District Attorney

  • Propositions, including one we endorse

Your sample ballot and your voter information guides will have more information on everything that’s on your ballot.

Note that your districts may have changed!

2022 is the first year since new district lines were drawn following the 2020 Census. This happens every ten years.

  • San Francisco has changed from Congressional districts 12 and 14 to districts 11 and 15. The actual district borders (in our case) aren’t much different, but they did shift along the City’s southern border, so some folks in 14 (Speier) are now in 11 (where Pelosi is running) and some folks in 12 (Pelosi) are now in 15 (an open seat, as Speier is retiring).

  • Supervisor districts have changed. You may have a different Supervisor on your ballot than you expected—or none at all, if you’re in an odd-numbered district. (This year’s election is for the even-numbered districts.)

  • BART districts have changed. Within the City, only district 8 (Li) is up for re-election.

The San Francisco Department of Elections has a District Lookup Tool that will tell you all of your old and new districts. You should find that your old districts match what you remember (if you haven’t moved recently), while your new districts match what’s on your ballot.

How do I vote in the October–November 2022 election?

The short version

  1. If you’re already registered to vote, you should get a ballot in your mail in early October. Now is an excellent time to check your voter registration. If you need to register to vote (including to update your registration), you have to do that by Monday, October 24 in order to get a ballot mailed to you—otherwise, you’ll have to vote in person.

  2. Your ballot packet includes your ballot, a return envelope, and an instruction sheet with your “I Voted!” sticker. Mark your selection(s) on your ballot with a black ballpoint pen, then fold it back up, tear off the stub, and put it in the return envelope.

  3. SIGN THE RETURN ENVELOPE. Also write your name and address on the appropriate blanks in the lower-left corner. If someone else will return your ballot for you, have them fill out the blanks in the upper-right corner.

  4. Return your ballot as early as possible! You can do this by mail, by using any official drop box, by going to City Hall, or (as the end of the election draws closer) by going to any voting center or (on the very last day) any polling place in the City.

  5. Track your ballot using the voter portal or the state’s “Where’s My Ballot?” system!

First: Your ballot

If you’re already registered to vote in San Francisco, your ballot should have arrived in your mail in an envelope like this:


(If, by mid-October, that envelope hasn’t arrived yet, check your voter registration! You have until Monday, October 24 to register to vote and get a ballot mailed to you. Otherwise, you’ll have to vote in person.)

That envelope contains three things:

  • Your ballot, consisting of five ballot cards

  • Another, slightly smaller envelope, called the return envelope (note that the outer envelope is blue, where the return envelope—shown below—is purple)

  • An instruction sheet with your “I Voted!” sticker on it

Start early and take your time. You’ve got five cards to fill out. If you start now, you can take your time and piece the work out over a few days if you need to. You have this whole month to work on it. If you put it off until the last minute, you risk forgetting, misplacing your ballot, or otherwise missing the Tuesday, November 8 deadline.

Filling out your ballot

You’ll need a ballpoint pen with black ink. (The ballot’s instructions say “a pencil or pen with dark ink,” but we don’t recommend using a pencil.)

There are questions on both sides of each ballot card, so make sure you vote on everything you want to.

Once you have completed your ballot, tear off the voter stub from the top of the ballot. Fold it back and forth along the perforation to ensure it comes off cleanly. The stub is, essentially, your receipt; you can throw it out once the Voter Portal (or the state’s “Where’s My Ballot?” service) confirms that your ballot has been counted.

Then, fold up each of your ballot cards, gather them into a stack, and put the stack in the return envelope. (Remember, the return envelope is the purple one, not the blue one. It says “Ballot Return Envelope” on the front.)

A stack of ballot cards ready for mailing. Each card is folded alone before being added to the stack, so the cards can be removed from the stack by elections workers without having to un-nest them.

Your ballot should look like this after you’ve removed your stub and folded it back up. Notice that the cards are now stacked rather than nested. Your ballot will still count whichever way you fold it, but this way makes it easier for the elections staff.

The return envelope

The front of the ballot return envelope, which says “Ballot Return Envelope” in white on a purple field and is addressed to the Department of Elections under the “Official Election Mail” insignia.
The back of the same return envelope. In the lower-left is the signature field and other fields for the voter to fill out; in the upper-right are fields for someone returning the ballot on the voter's behalf.

After you place the ballot in the return envelope, fill out the form in the lower-left corner of the back side:

  1. Sign the return envelope. We’ll say it again: Sign the return envelope! Not doing this is one of the most common mistakes voters make, and will delay your ballot being counted.

  2. Fill out your name, the date, and your address (the one where you’re registered to vote).

  3. Write a phone number, email address, or both where you can be contacted if the Department of Elections needs to contact you about your ballot. This is optional, but it’s the best way you have a chance to fix a mistake (for example,  if you forgot to sign the return envelope) and ensure your vote counts.

If you’ve asked someone to return your ballot for you, and they’ve accepted that responsibility, that person should fill out the form on the upper-right of the envelope, giving their name, relationship to you, and signature.

One thing you don’t need to do: You don’t need to add a stamp. Ballot return envelopes in California are postage paid—you can mail your return envelope from anywhere in the United States for free.

⚠️ WAIT! BEFORE YOU SEAL THE RETURN ENVELOPE:

  1. Did you mark your choices on your ballot? (Remember that there are races on both sides, and there are multiple cards!)

  2. Did you put the ballot—all five cards—in the return envelope?

  3. Did you sign and date the return envelope, and write your name and address (where you are registered to vote) on it?

  4. Do you have a plan for when and how you will cast this ballot?

  5. If you’re authorizing someone else to return your ballot for you, is the authorization form in the upper-right corner filled out?

If all of these checks pass, go ahead and seal up the return envelope. It’s now ready to be returned!

Returning the return envelope

You have several options for how you (or the person you authorized) can return your ballot to the Department of Elections:

  • Mail it from any USPS Post Office or collection box, preferably by Tuesday, November 1 (you could do it on Halloween!), and no later than Monday, November 7 (but really the sooner the better).

  • Drop it off at any official ballot drop box. There are 34 of these all over the City, including one at Polk and Grove near City Hall.

  • Drop it off at any voting center.

  • Drop it off at any polling place.

You can probably guess that we’re suggesting you mail your ballot by November 1 to account for mail delays (thanks, Postmaster General DeJoy), but why are we advising you to mail ballots no later than Monday, November 7, rather than Tuesday, November 8?

The answer is postmarks.

The deadline for mailed ballots under state law is that they must be postmarked by “Election Day” (which this time is November 8), and they must arrive no later than seven days after “Election Day.”

But postmarks can be tricky. An item is postmarked on the day the USPS collects it from the drop slot or collection box you put it into. This isn’t necessarily the same day you put it in! Every USPS drop slot and collection box has a schedule of collection times published on it. On a collection box, it’s immediately in front of the door you have to pull open to put items inside.

The collection times sticker on a mailbox on La Playa. Collection times are listed as 10:30 AM Monday through Friday and Saturdays.

Image credit: Peter Hosey, used under CC-BY-NC 2.0 license. Source.

If you were to put your ballot in this collection box at, say, 3 PM on Tuesday, November 8, it would be collected no earlier than the next day, Wednesday, November 9. That’s too late!

Mailing your ballot on Election Day after the box’s last mail collection time means it will be postmarked late and therefore won’t be counted.

The last collection time is different for every post office and collection box, so there’s no singular right answer. So, if you have to mail it on “Election Day” (e.g., because of your work schedule), use the USPS’s locator to find a collection box or Post Office that hasn’t had its last collection yet, and that you can get to in time.

The best option for “Election Day” voting is to go to a polling place, a voting center, or City Hall and drop off your ballot yourself.

Help! I need a new ballot!

Spoiled your ballot? Lost the packet? Lost or spoiled the return envelope?

Here, too, you have several options.

Tracking your ballot

You have two options for tracking your ballot:

Note that it can take a few days for your ballot to show up in the Voter Portal’s tracking system after you drop it off. Don’t panic if your ballot doesn’t immediately show as received.