Upload your voter list, draw neighborhoods on a map, and hand canvassers a walk-ready list. Built for school board, city council, and state house races — without the enterprise contract.
No party affiliation, no enterprise contract, no vendor onboarding call.
Drop in a CSV or Excel file from your county clerk or state. We handle column mapping, geocoding, and dedup automatically.
Lasso a neighborhood, name it, and assign it to a supporter. Pick the highest-propensity voters with vote-history filters.
Print a checkbox-style canvassing sheet, export a CSV, or text a direct link to your volunteers. Sorted in walk order.
Markers snap to actual building footprints — not street centerlines — so you can see exactly which house to knock on.
Target voters who actually show up. Sort lists by recent-election turnout to focus your team on the most reliable knocks.
Print a checkbox sheet, download a CSV, or share a turf link. Sorted in walking order, formatted for clipboards.
Lasso a neighborhood, assign a supporter, color-code it. Click any turf on the map to see its voters in seconds.
Pay only for the voters you map. No monthly subscription, no per-seat fees, no minimum commitment.
D, R, independent, nonpartisan school board — anyone running locally can sign up. No state-party gating, no political litmus test.
500 voters free. Then a per-voter rate that scales with your race size. No subscription.
We deduplicate by address — you only pay once per unique voter, even if you re-upload your list every cycle.
Just an active-voter list from your county clerk or state board of elections. We accept CSV or Excel and handle column mapping, address parsing, and geocoding for you. Most counties release this list for free or a nominal fee.
Voter rolls are public records in most states, but rules vary. You're responsible for ensuring you have lawful access for your state and intended use. We never resell voter data — you bring your own list, and we provide the mapping software. Some states (CA, AZ, PA, SD) have stricter restrictions on commercial display, so check your state's policy.
We use the US Census Geocoder for address-to-coordinate matching, then snap each marker to the nearest mapped building footprint from OpenStreetMap and Microsoft's open building dataset. In our test runs in Cass County, ND, about 90% of addresses match cleanly and 84% land directly on the building.
For our beta launch, MapMyVotes is single-account: you draw turfs, then export or print walk lists for canvassers. Multi-user collaboration (where canvassers log in to see only their assigned turf) is on our roadmap for v2.
We deduplicate by address. If you re-upload your list with new and existing voters, you only pay for the new addresses we haven't seen before in your account.
We're building toward a beta launch in the next quarter. Waitlist members get first access and a free credit boost.
Those are excellent enterprise tools, but they require a state-party affiliation, a long onboarding, or a $99+/mo subscription. MapMyVotes is self-serve, party-neutral, and pay-as-you-go — a fit for the local race that doesn't have a six-figure software budget.
We'll email you when MapMyVotes opens for beta. Tell us a bit about your race so we can build the right thing first.