Voters in Coy, Lonoke County, Arkansas, receive election services through the Lonoke County Clerk's Office, located at 301 Depot Street, Suite 6, Lonoke, AR 72086, phone (501) 676-2662, website www.lonokecountyclerk.com. The County Clerk handles voter registration, maintains voter rolls, conducts early voting, certifies election results, and provides polling place information and absentee voting services for all areas of Lonoke County.
Arkansas residents, including those in the community, can register to vote online at www.sos.arkansas.gov/elections/voter-information/voter-registration through the Arkansas Secretary of State's website. Registration requires U.S. Citizenship, Arkansas residency, and being at least 18 years old by election day. The deadline falls 30 days before any election. Acceptable identification includes an Arkansas driver's license, U.S. Passport, state-issued ID card, concealed carry permit, or military ID. Arkansas law requires photo ID at polling places; voters without acceptable identification may cast a provisional ballot. Residents participate in county, state, and federal elections only. Lonoke County holds elections for constitutional offices including County Judge, Sheriff, County Clerk, Circuit Clerk, Assessor, Treasurer, Coroner, and Justices of the Peace representing specific districts. These county elections occur in even-numbered years during the general election cycle. Local voters can locate their assigned polling place using the Arkansas Voter View tool at www.voterview.ar-nova.org, operated by the Arkansas Secretary of State. By entering name and date of birth, voters verify registration status, view polling locations, see sample ballots, and confirm voter history. The county typically assigns polling locations based on geographic districts; residents vote at a precinct location in or near Lonoke. Under Arkansas law (Ark. Code Ann. § 7-1-101 et seq.), certain election records are public, including voter registration lists (with some personal information redacted), candidate filings, campaign finance reports, precinct-level election results, and ballot measures. These records are available through the Lonoke County Clerk or the Arkansas Secretary of State's elections division at www.sos.arkansas.gov/elections. In the November 2024 presidential election, Lonoke County reported approximately 65-70% voter turnout among registered voters, with strong support for Republican candidates consistent with Lonoke County's conservative voting pattern. Specific precinct data for the area showed similar trends. The November 3, 2026 general election will feature several significant races for local voters. At the federal level, Arkansas will elect a U.S. Senator (Class II seat currently held by John Boozman, up for re-election in 2026), and all four U.S. House seats, with the area falling in Arkansas's 2nd Congressional District. At the state level, voters will elect constitutional officers including Governor, Lieutenant Governor, Attorney General, Secretary of State, and members of the Arkansas General Assembly for both state Senate and House districts. Lonoke County offices up for election in 2026 include County Judge (chief executive), Sheriff, County Clerk, Circuit Clerk, Assessor, Treasurer, and Coroner, all four-year terms. Local school board positions and special district offices may also appear on the ballot depending on the district. Arkansas offers absentee voting for voters who will be unavoidably absent on election day, are ill or physically disabled, or meet other statutory criteria (Ark. Code Ann. § 7-5-402). Applications for absentee ballots must be submitted to the Lonoke County Clerk's Office in writing, and completed ballots must be returned by the close of polls on election day. Early voting is available at the Lonoke County Clerk's office and designated early voting centers beginning 15 days before election day, running through the day before the election, Monday through Friday from 8:00 a.m. To 6:00 p.m, and on Saturday from 10:00 a.m. To 4:00 p.m, with extended hours the final week. No excuse is needed for early in-person voting in Arkansas.