Around 2,600 elected city positions will be on the ballot in 2022. This “big year” includes the mayor for all cities except 15 (unless a special election is necessary) and almost all city legislative body seats. Current and potential elected city officials need to understand recently passed changes to the filing deadlines to ensure they make the ballot.
For the dozens of cities that have primary elections for city races, the legislature moved the candidate filing deadline to January 7, 2022. Senate Bill 60 (2019) moved the deadline from the last Tuesday of the month (January 25) to the first Friday following the first Monday in January. The change applies to all partisan offices and elected positions in nonpartisan cities that have not waived the primary. If the appropriate filings are not submitted to the county clerk by 4:00 p.m. local time on January 7, the candidate will not appear on the primary or general election ballot.
For all other city races, House Bill 381 (2018) adjusted the candidate filing deadline for the general election. The new deadline is the first Tuesday after the first Monday in June, which is more than two months earlier than the previous deadline in August. In the cities that have waived the primary, candidates will not appear on the general election ballot unless they submit the appropriate filings to the county clerk by 4:00 p.m. local time on June 2.
The deadline to file as a write-in candidate is unchanged. It is still the fourth Friday of October (October 28, 2022). Only individuals who file with the county clerk their intent to run as a write-in candidate are eligible to receive votes in the general election.
Search for your city to see if it waives the primary.
Get the candidate filing forms and learn more about becoming a candidate.