For St. Johns County candidates · 2026 cycle

How to run for office in St. Johns County, Florida.

A plain-language walk-through of qualifying for a St. Johns County race in 2026: the dates, the filing-fee math, the petition alternative, and how to reach your Supervisor of Elections.

The short version.

Running for office in Florida is more administrative than most first-time candidates expect, and most of it is settled before you ever knock on a door. Florida sets a statewide window for filing your paperwork, a fixed formula for the filing fee, and a petition-signature alternative for candidates who'd rather collect signatures than write a check. Your county Supervisor of Elections runs the local side of all of it.

This page covers all of that for St. Johns County and points you at your SOE for anything county-specific. It is not legal advice — for the official rules, your SOE's office and the Florida Division of Elections are the sources of truth.

Key 2026 dates for St. Johns County candidates.

  • Apr 13–17, 2026 First qualifying period (judicial and certain local offices). Noon Mon to Noon Fri.
  • May 11, 2026 Petition signature deadline for the second qualifying period — noon, 28 days before qualifying opens (F.S. 99.095).
  • Jun 8–12, 2026 Second qualifying period (federal, state, county, special district). Noon Mon to Noon Fri. This is the window for most St. Johns County races.
  • Jul 20, 2026 Book closing for the primary — last day to register or change party affiliation to vote in the August primary.
  • Tue Aug 18, 2026 Florida primary election.
  • Oct 24–31, 2026 Mandatory early voting window for the general election (counties may add additional days).
  • Tue Nov 3, 2026 Florida general election.

Some dates — especially local municipal elections — differ from the state cycle. Confirm specifics with St. Johns County SOE before relying on any deadline.

Offices typically on the ballot in St. Johns County.

Florida's constitutional county offices are on a four-year cycle and all up for election in 2026. In St. Johns County that means:

  • Sheriff
  • Property Appraiser
  • Tax Collector
  • Clerk of the Circuit Court & Comptroller
  • Supervisor of Elections

Plus, with staggered terms:

  • County Commission — several seats up; which districts are on the ballot depends on the county's commission map and which seats were last elected in 2022.
  • School Board — several seats up on a similar four-year stagger. School Board races are nonpartisan.
  • Circuit and County Judges — on the ballot when seats are up. Judicial races are nonpartisan and qualify in the first April window.

Federal and state-legislative seats representing parts of St. Johns County (U.S. House, FL Senate, FL House) are also on the 2026 ballot. Those are separate races covered statewide, not by your county SOE.

For the official, district-by-district list of St. Johns County seats up for election in 2026, check the SOE's candidate page.

The two ways to qualify.

Florida gives every candidate the same choice: pay a qualifying fee, or collect petition signatures. You don't have to pick early — you can prepare for both and use whichever works out.

Option 1 — Pay the qualifying fee.

Under F.S. 99.092 the fee is a percentage of the office's annual salary, set by law:

  • Partisan offices: 6% of annual salary. (3% filing fee + 1% election assessment + 2% party assessment.)
  • Nonpartisan offices: 4% of annual salary. (3% filing fee + 1% election assessment; no party assessment.)
  • Special-district offices with no salary: $25 flat filing fee.

"Annual salary" is whatever the office is paid as of July 1, 2026 — the year you qualify. Your SOE will quote you the exact dollar amount when you file.

Confirm the exact filing fee with St. Johns County SOE before writing a check — salaries are set annually and the office tracks the official number.

Option 2 — Submit petition signatures.

Under F.S. 99.095, you can avoid the qualifying fee and the party assessment entirely by collecting signatures from registered voters in the district you want to represent. The math:

  • Most offices: signatures equal to 1% of registered voters in the geographic area the office represents, as of the last general election.
  • Special-district offices: a flat 25 signatures.
  • Deadline: petitions must be submitted to your SOE by noon, 28 days before the qualifying period opens for that office. For the June 8 qualifying window, that means May 11, 2026.
  • Verification: the SOE checks each signature against the voter file. Aim to collect more than 1% — rejected signatures (wrong address, not registered, duplicate) are normal.

The petition route is real work — it usually takes a small team of canvassers a couple of months to gather signatures cleanly. Candidates who do it well usually treat it as a head-start on the field operation: every signature gatherer is a future volunteer, and every signer is a contact you already know is a registered voter.

Your county Supervisor of Elections.

The SOE's office is where you actually file. They are also the source of truth for St. Johns-County-specific dates, district maps, candidate handbooks, and any local-cycle differences from the state calendar.

Vicky Oakes
Supervisor of Elections · St. Johns County
Office
4455 Avenue A, Ste 101, St. Augustine, FL 32095
Phone
(904) 823-2238
Public records
elections@votesjc.gov
View St. Johns County SOE on Florida Division of Elections →

Contact details verified 2026-05-09. If a field is wrong or out of date, the Florida Division of Elections page above is the canonical source.

After you qualify: building a field operation.

The administrative side of running ends the day you turn in your qualifying paperwork. What starts then is the actual campaign — knocking on doors, recruiting volunteers, and identifying voters who'll show up for you in August and November.

That's the part Motion51 was built for. The full Florida voter file is already loaded — you don't have to chase down a CSV or pay a vendor. You scope your district, recruit volunteers, cut turf, and start knocking. The app works offline so volunteers can canvass in neighborhoods with bad cell coverage, and every door knocked is logged with a timestamp for your records.

If you're at the stage where qualifying is settled and you're thinking about the field operation, our For Candidates page walks through the next steps.

Motion51 is coming to St. Johns County

We're not live in St. Johns County yet — but we add counties based on where candidates are asking. Leave your email and we'll notify you the moment the St. Johns County voter file is ready.