Logan County voters to receive mail ballots starting June 8
Mail ballots start going out June 8, and Logan County voters who miss the June 22 registration deadline may not get one by mail.

Logan County voters need to check their registration before ballots start landing in mailboxes June 8, because the June 30 primary will be run entirely by mail for active, registered, eligible voters and there are no precinct polling places.
The county says ballots will be mailed Monday, June 8, through Friday, June 12, and ballot drop-off locations will open June 8 as well. Anyone who has moved, changed a name or is unsure whether a ballot will reach the right address should update registration through the state’s online voter registration system before the mailing begins.

That timing matters because Monday, June 22, is the deadline to register by mail, through a voter registration agency, at a local driver’s license facility or online and still receive a ballot by mail. After that, voters who need help will have to use the Logan County Voter Service and Polling Location at the Logan County Courthouse, 315 Main Street, Suite 3, in Sterling.
The courthouse site will be open June 22 through June 29, from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday, with extended hours Saturday, June 27, from 8 a.m. to noon. The office is the county’s backstop for registration problems, ballot replacement and in-person voting questions, which makes it especially important for residents who travel, work irregular hours or simply want a guaranteed in-county option before Election Day.
Logan County is also offering free BallotTrax notifications by phone, email or text so voters can track whether a ballot was sent and received. That tracking matters because completed ballots must be in the hands of the county clerk by 7 p.m. Tuesday, June 30. Postmarks do not count, so a late mailing is the same as a missed ballot.
The 2026 primary ballot will include Democratic, Republican, Libertarian and Unity Party options, reflecting the official statewide candidate list certified to counties May 1 by the Colorado Secretary of State. Logan County followed the same courthouse vote-center and ballot-drop model in 2024, when 5,242 cards were cast in the June election, a reminder that the county’s turnout system depends less on precinct lines than on deadlines, delivery and follow-through.
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