Thrupp Electors - If you applied for a postal vote before 30 January 2024, by law you were required to reapply by 31 January 2026. If you did not reapply, your postal vote has been cancelled.
You can still:
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Vote in person at your polling station on Thursday 5 March - see your poll card for details or use our polling station postcode finder, or
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Reapply for a postal vote by 5pm on Wednesday 18 February 2026 at .
If you prefer to apply using a paper application form or we can post one out to you. Please send request for paper forms to: elections@stroud.gov.uk or call us on 01453 766321
The Elections Act 2022 introduced a number of changes which include the requirement for electors to reapply for their postal vote every three years.
Electors who made their current application to vote by post on or before 30 January 2024 were required to reapply for their postal vote by 31 January 2026. If a new application was not received by this date, the Electoral Registration Officer was required by law to cancel the postal vote, and electors would have to vote in a polling station until a new postal vote application is received or if a proxy is appointed.
Electors who applied after the 31 January 2024 will be contacted at the relevant time when their postal votes are coming up to their expiry date. These dates are based on fixed national cut-off dates and not from your application received date.
We contacted all those affected by this change in October 2025 and explained how to reapply.
Where we held an email address for an elector, they received an email from us sent through Gov.notify, the Governments secure notification platform. The email was not a scam and was from elections.stroud.district.council@notifications.service.gov.uk.
All other postal voters who needed to renew where we didn't hold an email received a letter which contained information on what to do next.
The quickest and easiest way to reapply for a postal vote is to reapply online at www.gov.uk/apply-postal-vote
Easy Read Guide
As part of your application, you will be required to provide your:
- date of birth
- National Insurance Number
- upload a photo or scanned copy of your handwritten signature in black ink on plain white paper
After you have submitted your new application your identity will be verified against records held by the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP). If this identity check fails, you must provide evidence of your identity
Once the identity check has been undertaken and your postal vote accepted, your postal vote will be valid for a maximum period of three years and a new application must be made at the end of that time.
If you choose not to reapply for your postal vote, electors must present an acceptable form of photo ID when voting in person where no absent voting method is in place. Electors should ensure they have the correct accepted ID.