The short version.
Wake County, North Carolina has 754,385 active registered voters — 20.9% Republican, 32.9% Democratic, and 45.6% with no party affiliation, as of June 2026. Here's what it takes to get on the ballot here.
North Carolina gives every candidate the same choice: pay a filing fee, or collect petition signatures instead. You file a Notice of Candidacy with your county Board of Elections (for N.C. House/Senate and county and local offices) or with the State Board of Elections (for U.S. Senate, U.S. House, judicial offices, and District Attorney).
This page covers how that works for Wake County, including the actual number of signatures you'd need here. It is not legal advice — for the official rules, your county Board of Elections and the North Carolina State Board of Elections are the sources of truth.
Wake County by the numbers.
- 754,385 active registered voters across 216 precincts (official North Carolina voter file, June 2026).
- Party registration: Democratic 32.9% · Republican 20.9% · unaffiliated 45.6% · other parties 0.6%.
- 418,846 supervoters (55.52% — voted in at least 3 of the last 4 November generals). These are the doors reliable-voter campaigns knock first.
- In 2024, Wake County cast 650,796 votes for president: 61.9% Democratic, 36.4% Republican.
Full statistics, registration breakdown, and the most reliable-voting precincts: Wake County voter data.
The two ways to qualify.
Every North Carolina candidate gets the same choice: pay the filing fee, or petition to get on the ballot for free. You don't have to decide early — you can prepare for either.
Option 1 — Pay the filing fee.
Under N.C. Gen. Stat. §163-107 the fee is 1% of the annual salary of the office you're seeking — the same 1% for every office, from Governor to county commissioner. The salary used is the office's starting salary. Your board of elections will quote you the exact dollar amount when you file.
Option 2 — Petition in lieu of the fee.
Under N.C. Gen. Stat. §163-107.1, you can skip the fee by collecting signatures instead:
- County, local, and district partisan offices: signatures from 5% of the registered voters in the area who are affiliated with your party, or 200 voters, whichever is greater.
- Statewide and appellate offices (U.S. Senate, Governor, Supreme Court, Court of Appeals): a flat 10,000 registered voters of your party.
- Nonpartisan offices (most judicial, school board, many municipal): 5% of all registered voters in the area — any registered voter may sign.
The board checks every signature against the voter rolls, so collect a cushion. Candidates who petition well treat it as a head start on the field operation: every signer is a confirmed registered voter, and every gatherer is a future volunteer.
Signatures you'd need in Wake County.
If you take the petition route for a Wake County office, here's the real math from the county's current registration:
- Democratic primary (partisan office): 5% of 247,918 registered Democrats = 12,396, or 200, whichever is greater → about 12,396 signatures.
- Republican primary (partisan office): 5% of 157,417 registered Republicans = 7,871, or 200, whichever is greater → about 7,871 signatures.
- Nonpartisan county office: 5% of all 754,385 registered voters → about 37,720 signatures.
- Statewide office (e.g., U.S. Senate): a flat 10,000 registered voters of your party.
Figures use Wake County's current registration as the basis — confirm the exact number for your specific office with Wake County Board of Elections, which issues official petition forms and signature requirements.
Key North Carolina dates (2026 reference).
- Dec 1–19, 2025Candidate filing window (noon Mon Dec 1 to noon Fri Dec 19) — pay the fee or file your petition.
- Tue Mar 3, 2026North Carolina primary election.
- Tue Nov 3, 2026North Carolina general election.
These are the 2026 dates, shown for reference — the 2026 filing window has already closed. North Carolina sets each cycle's filing dates in advance; for the next cycle's deadlines see the NC State Board of Elections filing page. Petition deadlines fall before the filing deadline, so plan early.
Offices on the ballot.
Up in 2026 (primary March 3, general November 3):
- U.S. Senate — open seat (Sen. Thom Tillis is retiring)
- U.S. House — all 14 North Carolina seats
- N.C. Senate — all 50 seats
- N.C. House — all 120 seats
- Judicial — Supreme Court, Court of Appeals, and Superior & District Court seats; District Attorneys
- County & local — commissioners, sheriff, register of deeds, clerk of court, school board (varies by county)
The Council of State (Governor and other statewide executives) is not on the 2026 ballot — those are elected in 2028. For the official list of Wake County seats up this cycle, check your county Board of Elections.
Your county Board of Elections.
North Carolina runs elections through 100 county Boards of Elections. Wake County's board is where you file for county, local, and N.C. legislative offices, and the source of truth for local dates, district maps, and petition forms.
- Office
- 1200 N. New Hope Road, Raleigh, NC 27610
- Phone
- (919) 404-4040
- Website
- https://www.wake.gov/departments-government/board-elections
Contact details verified 2026-06-18. If a field is wrong or out of date, the NC State Board of Elections county-board directory above is the canonical source.
After you qualify: building a field operation.
The paperwork ends the day you file. What starts then is the actual campaign — knocking on doors, recruiting volunteers, and identifying the voters who'll show up for you in March and November.
That's what Motion51 is built for. The Wake County voter file is already loaded — no chasing a CSV or paying a vendor. You scope your district, recruit volunteers, cut turf, and start knocking. The app works offline for neighborhoods with bad cell coverage, and every door is logged with a timestamp.
If qualifying is settled and you're thinking about the field operation, our For Candidates page walks through the next steps.