By law, every polling station must display a large print copy of the ballot paper for reference. They must also provide a reference copy for you to take into the booth with you. You can use the large print copy to read all the information on the ballot form, but you must still cast your vote on a standard print ballot paper.
Voting and elections: what you need to know
All voters have a right to vote independently and in secret, and local authorities have to ensure that polling stations are accessible to people with sight loss.
On this page
After weeks of campaigning on accessible voting, we now want to give you the opportunity to tell us what voting was actually like for you.
Your experiences form the basis for our “Turned Out” reports which we share with the UK Government and the Electoral Commission to keep the pressure up for improvements in the accessibility of voting.
This evidence is hugely important if we are to bring about change. Our past reports have contributed to improved Electoral Commission guidance and an increase in the provision of audio solutions in some polling stations
So, please answer a short survey about your experience of voting (or why you didn’t vote).
Voter ID
As a result of the Elections Act 2022, voters will now be required to bring photo ID to polling stations in order to vote for some elections. This includes the General Election on 4 July. where photo ID is required.
There is a list of accepted forms of photo ID on the Electoral Commission’s website.
For voters who don’t have any photo ID, there are currently three options. You can either apply for a free voter ID certificate, known as the Voter Authority Certificate; you can apply for a postal vote (where photo ID is not a requirement) , or you can apply for a proxy vote (where again photo ID is not a requirement).
You can apply for a Voter Authority Certificate at any time: they are not specific to a particular election, and do not technically expire.
The deadline to apply for a Voter Authority Certificate is 5pm Wednesday 26 June.
How to request a reasonable adjustment
You have a right to request a reasonable adjustment to vote in the General Election. We would encourage you to write to your local Returning Officer or local electoral services as soon as possible, to notify them that you require reasonable adjustments in order to vote independently.
Step 1
Find your local Returning Officer contact information, on the Electoral Commission’s postcode look up tool
Step 2
Use our template notification letter to request an audio or audio - tactile device.
- Template to request an audio device to vote at the polling station (Word)
- Template to request an audio-tactile device to vote at the polling station (Word)
Important information for blind and partially sighted voters in Wales.
- Information for blind and partially sighted voters in Wales (Word)
- Information for blind and partially sighted voters in Wales - Welsh language (Word)
- Template to request an audio device to vote at the polling station - Welsh language (Word)
- Template to request an audio tactile device to vote at the polling station - Welsh Language (Word)
What you can request
Audio Accord
An audio device can be used at the polling station, allowing the voter to review the ballot paper by listening to a recording of the candidates in the same order they appear on the ballot paper. The Audio Accord is just one version of such a device. It can be used in conjunction with a Tactile Voting Device (TVD) or a similar template that fits over the ballot paper to locate the voting boxes.
McGonagle Reader (MGR)
This is an audio-tactile device, with an integrated audio player. It consists of a plastic template that fits on to the ballot paper to enable blind and partially sighted people to locate the voting boxes.
Guidance has also been issued to polling station staff to make it clear that mobile phone apps (such as “Seeing AI” which can use Artificial Intelligence to read out printed text), or video magnifying devices, can be used by blind and partially sighted people to vote as a reasonable adjustment.
Accessibility on election day
Following the Elections Act 2022, Returning Officers – officials who oversee elections – are now required to make provisions for disabled people to enable an independent and secret vote. Returning Officers must follow Electoral Commission accessibility guidance.
To support blind and partially sighted voters, all polling stations are required to have:
- A tactile voting device.
- A large print copy of the ballot paper for reference.
- Magnifiers.
- Additional lighting.
- Assistance from polling station staff to be guided to the voting booth and to mark your vote if needed.
Returning Officers are also required to anticipate what is needed in their area and can provide additional equipment, such as audio devices to enable someone to vote independently and in secret.
Requesting party manifestos in alternative formats
If you would like an alternative version of party manifestos, the information for each party is below.
Conservative
Alternative formats are available on the Conservative Party website: Conservative Party Manifesto
RNIB will be printing and dispatching hardcopy braille versions of the manifesto. If you like to receive a hardcopy braille version, please email [email protected].
Greens
Please email [email protected] or call 020 3691 9400 to request the Green Party manifesto in alternative formats.
Labour
Alternative formats are available on the Labour Party website: Manifesto accessibility – The Labour Party.
RNIB will be printing and dispatching hardcopy braille versions of the manifesto. If you like to receive a hardcopy braille version, please email [email protected].
Liberal Democrats
Alternative formats are available on the Liberal Democrats website: For a Fair Deal - Liberal Democrats Manifesto 2024 - Liberal Democrats (libdems.org.uk).
The Liberal Democrats have requested that any hardcopy braille requests are sent to [email protected] or call 020 7022 0988.
Plaid Cymru
Alternative formats are on the Plaid Cymru website: https://www.partyof.wales/manifesto
Reform
Please email [email protected] or call 0800 414 8525 to request the Reform party manifesto in alternative formats.
SNP
Manifesto launch June 19. Alternative formats request contact information to follow launch date.
More about accessible voting
If you have difficulty completing the standard print ballot paper, you can use a tactile voting device to help mark your vote in the correct place. Under the Electoral Commission guidance, each polling station is required to provide a tactile device for people with sight loss.
The tactile voting device has a sticky backing, which attaches on top of your ballot paper. It has numbered lift up flaps (the numbers are raised and in braille) directly over the boxes where you mark your vote.
You will need to use the large print ballot form or ask someone (a companion or polling station staff) to read out the list of candidates to you. The candidates are in alphabetical order. You will need to remember the number of the candidate you wish to vote for, then lift the flap with the same number and mark your cross (X) in the box.
You can then detach the tactile device and fold your ballot paper in half before posting it in the ballot box.
To know the order of the candidates on the ballot paper you can send a request to your local Returning Officer for audio provision. They may be able to provide a device that can read out the order of the candidates as listed on the ballot paper, or share an audio file ahead of the elections with the list of candidates, in the order they appear on the ballot paper.
If you have difficulty using both the large print ballot paper and the tactile voting device, you can also request somebody to help you at the polling station. They can help guide you between the entrance, desk, polling booth and ballot box. They can also vote on your behalf if that is your preference.
The person helping you could be one of the polling stations staff or your own companion. Following changes introduced in the Elections Act, your companion can be anyone over 18. Your companion will be required to make a written declaration that you have asked for assistance.
If you are registered to vote but will be unable to get to a polling station to vote, you can appoint someone you trust to go to your polling station to vote on your behalf. This is called voting by proxy.
Unlike postal voting, you do need to give a reason for your proxy vote. Explaining you find it difficult to get to the polling station because of your sight loss or another disability should suffice.
You'll need to register to vote by proxy at least six working days before the election by completing an application form (there are different application forms depending on your reason for requesting a proxy vote) and sending it back to your local electoral registration office. Unless you are registered as blind you will need someone to support your application (such as a GP or social worker).
You can call your local authority's election services to get one of these forms.
You can apply to vote by post rather than going to a polling station.
If you have registered to vote by post you will be sent your ballot paper. You can cast your vote in your own home using your own magnifiers or equipment, rather than going to your polling station.
You can also request assistance at home, including a tactile voting device, a large print ballot form for reference, and help with returning your completed ballot form.