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Where can I vote in SLO County? Drop off ballot? What to know for special election

As the statewide special election draws near, San Luis Obispo County residents may be wondering how to vote on Proposition 50.

California voters will have only one question to answer on the ballot: Should California temporarily redraw its congressional district lines without a citizens’ commission to add five Democratic seats to Congress, counterbalancing Texas’ own redistricting in favor of Republicans?

SLO County’s district boundaries would not be directly impacted if Prop 50 passes or fails, but the proposition could have major consequences for California as a whole.

Registered California voters have until 8 p.m. on Tuesday, Nov. 4, to turn in their ballots.

You can submit your ballot at drop boxes across the county or vote in person at dozens of polling places.

Here’s how and where to vote in SLO County:

San Luis Obispo County residents can vote in person or drop off their ballots at dozens of locations.
San Luis Obispo County residents can vote in person or drop off their ballots at dozens of locations. Chloe Shrager cshrager@thetribunenews.com

Is it too late to mail my ballot?

Voters who live more than 50 miles from a postal hub cannot count on their mail-in ballots being postmarked the day they mail it, according to the U.S. Postal Service.

As a result, the Postal Service advised all voters voting by mail to do so a week before the election, or by Oct. 28.

This applies to every SLO County resident.

The closest mail hub is in Goleta, more than 50 miles away from the county line.

“If you want to see your vote included in Election Night totals, remember that mail ballots received before Election Day will be processed and tabulated and included in the first set of unofficial results released at 8 p.m.,” SLO County Clerk-Recorder Elaina Cano said in a news release.

Ballots received at the polls or by mail in the week after Election Day — as long as they are postmarked by Tuesday, Nov. 4 — will be counted after Election Day, during the official canvass, Cano said.

A sign welcomes voters to the Ludwick Community Center gym in San Luis Obispo on Tuesday, Nov. 3, 2020.
A sign welcomes voters to the Ludwick Community Center gym in San Luis Obispo on Tuesday, Nov. 3, 2020. Laura Dickinson ldickinson@thetribunenews.com

Where can I drop off my ballot in SLO County?

If you haven’t mailed your ballot yet, you can drop it off in person at any of the county’s drop box locations.

Here’s where to go in the North County:

  • Atascadero Library, 6555 Capistrano Ave., Atascadero
  • Paso Robles City Library, 1000 Spring St., Paso Robles
  • San Miguel Community Services District, 1765 Bonita Place, San Miguel
  • Santa Margarita Library, 9630 Murphy Ave., Santa Margarita
  • Shandon Library, 195 North Second St., Shandon
  • Templeton Community Services District, 420 Crocker St., Templeton

In the South County:

  • Arroyo Grande City Hall, 300 East Branch St., Arroyo Grande
  • Grover Beach City Hall, 154 South Eighth St., Arroyo Grande
  • Nipomo Library, 918 West Tefft St., Nipomo
  • Oceano Library, 1511 19th St., Nipomo
  • Pismo Beach City Hall, 760 Mattie Road, Pismo Beach

On the North Coast:

  • Cambria Library, 1043 Main St., Cambria
  • Cayucos Library, 310 B St., Cayucos
  • Los Osos Library, 2075 Palisades, Los Osos
  • Morro Bay Library, 625 Harbor St., Morro Bay

In San Luis Obispo:

  • Cal Poly, University Union, Second Floor, 1 Grand Ave., San Luis Obispo
  • San Luis Obispo County Department of Social Services, 3433 South Higuera St., San Luis Obispo
  • San Luis Obispo County Clerk-Recorder’s Office, 1055 Monterey St., San Luis Obispo
Pete Schwartz stops to drop off his ballot at the Katcho Achadjian Government Center in San Luis Obispo while bicycling to the Cal Poly Physics Department in 2024. The San Luis Obispo County Clerk-Recorder’s Office is one of the ballot drop-off locations for the 2025 special election.
Pete Schwartz stops to drop off his ballot at the Katcho Achadjian Government Center in San Luis Obispo while bicycling to the Cal Poly Physics Department in 2024. The San Luis Obispo County Clerk-Recorder’s Office is one of the ballot drop-off locations for the 2025 special election. David Middlecamp dmiddlecamp@thetribunenews.com

How to vote in person on Election Day

On Election Day — Tuesday, Nov. 4 — there will be a total of 45 polling locations in San Luis Obispo County, compared with about 70 polling places for the general election in November.

Since there is only one question on the ballot, there were fewer jurisdictional boundaries to consider when assigning voters to precincts and polling locations this year, the SLO County elections office previously told The Tribune.

SLO County residents who prefer to vote in person on Election Day should head to their assigned polling locations.

Otherwise, they will be required to vote using provisional ballots, according to Erin Clausen, public information specialist for the SLO County Clerk-Recorder’s Office.

You can find your polling place and any last-minute voting site adjustments at slovote.com.

Voters can speed up the process by bringing their vote-by-mail ballots to polling places, the elections office said.

Any voter who brings their mail-in ballot to their assigned polling location can exchange it for a poll ballot to vote in person.

Voters who don’t bring their mail ballots can still vote. They’ll just experience a wait while a poll worker calls the elections office to confirm that their mail ballot has not already been returned.

When are SLO County polling locations open on Election Day?

All 45 polling locations in San Luis Obispo County will be open from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. on Tuesday, Nov. 4, for Election Day.

The SLO County Clerk-Recorder’s Office, 1055 Monterey St. in San Luis Obispo, and the Atascadero Elections Office, 6565 Capistrano Ave. in Atascadero, will also be open 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. on Election Day, according to Clausen.

Where can I vote in SLO County on Election Day?

Here’s where you can vote in person in San Luis Obispo County for the California special election.

Polling locations are in alphabetical order by town:

  • South County Regional Center — 800 W. Branch St., Arroyo Grande
  • St. Barnabas’ Episcopal Church — 301 Trinity Ave., Arroyo Grande
  • Cypress Ridge Pavilion — 1050 Cypress Ridge Pkwy., Arroyo Grande
  • Atascadero Elks Lodge — 1516 El Camino Real, Atascadero
  • Atascadero Gospel Chapel — 8205 Curbaril Ave., Atascadero
  • Community Church Atascadero — 5850 Rosario Ave., Atascadero
  • Atascadero United Methodist Church — 11605 El Camino Real, Atascadero
  • Pavilion on the Lake — 9315 Pismo Ave., Atascadero
  • Avila Beach Community Center — 191 San Miguel St., Avila Beach
  • Cambria Veterans’ Memorial Hall — 1000 Main St., Cambria
  • Creston Community Center — 5110 Swayze St., Creston
  • Ramona Garden Park Center — 993 Ramona Ave., Grover Beach
  • Grover Beach Community Center — 1230 Trouville Ave., Grover Beach
  • Baywood Inn — 1370 2nd St., Los Osos
  • Trinity United Methodist Church — 490 Los Osos Valley Road, Los Osos
  • Morro Bay Veterans Memorial Building — 209 Surf St., Morro Bay
  • Estero Bay United Methodist — 3000 Hemlock Ave., Morro Bay
  • Monarch Activity Center — 1645 Trilogy Pkwy., Nipomo
  • Nipomo Library — 918 N. Thompson Ave., Nipomo
  • Nipomo Senior Center — 200 E. Dana St., Nipomo
  • Nipomo Community Services District Office — 148 S. Wilson St., Nipomo
  • The Edwards Barn — 1095 Pomeroy Road, Nipomo
  • Oceano Community Services District Office — 1655 Front St., Oceano
  • Plymouth Congregational Church — 1301 Oak St., Paso Robles
  • Grace Baptist Church — 535 Creston Road, Paso Robles
  • Centennial Park — 600 Nickerson Drive, Paso Robles
  • Highlands Church — 215 Oak Hill Road, Paso Robles
  • North SLO County Association of Realtors — 1101-A Riverside Ave., Paso Robles
  • Cypress Mountain Masonic Lodge — 320 Sherwood Road, Paso Robles
  • Heritage Village Senior Center — 4882 Heritage Road, Paso Robles
  • Pismo Beach Veterans’ Memorial Hall — 780 Bello St., Pismo Beach
  • Performing Arts Center San Luis Obispo — One Grand Ave., San Luis Obispo
  • Zion Lutheran Church — 1010 E. Foothill Blvd., San Luis Obispo
  • United Church of Christ Congregational — 11245 Los Osos Valley Road, San Luis Obispo
  • San Luis Obispo Grange Hall — 2880 Broad St., San Luis Obispo
  • SLO County Farm Bureau — 4875 Morabito Place, San Luis Obispo
  • SLONaz Church — 3396 Johnson Ave., San Luis Obispo
  • Unitarian Universalists San Luis Obispo — 2201 Lawton Ave., San Luis Obispo
  • ACI-Jet — 4751 Aviadores Way, San Luis Obispo
  • Ludwick Community Center — 864 Santa Rosa St., San Luis Obispo
  • San Miguel Community Center — 256 13th St., San Miguel
  • Santa Margarita Community Hall — 22501 I St., Santa Margarita
  • Shandon Clubhouse — 101 W. Centre St., Shandon
  • Shell Beach Veterans’ Memorial Hall — 230 Leeward Ave., Shell Beach
  • Templeton Hills Seventh Day Adventist Church — 930 Templeton Hills Road, Templeton
Tracy Nelson fills out his ballot at a voting station in the lobby in front of the San Luis Obispo Clerk-Recorder’s Office at the Katcho Achadjian Government Center in 2024.
Tracy Nelson fills out his ballot at a voting station in the lobby in front of the San Luis Obispo Clerk-Recorder’s Office at the Katcho Achadjian Government Center in 2024. David Middlecamp dmiddlecamp@thetribunenews.com

Can I register to vote on Election Day?

The deadline to register to vote has expired, but the conditional voting registration period lasts through 8 p.m. on Election Day, when polls close.

During the conditional voting period, anyone who still needs to register must do that in person either at the elections office in SLO or at the satellite North County office in Atascadero, according to SLO County’s elections office.

You can also register to vote at every polling location on Election Day, but these ballots will be confirmed and counted last.

The first round of results will drop at 8 p.m., close of the last polls, on Election Night, Tuesday, Nov. 4.

How do I track my California ballot?

You can track when your vote is mailed, received and counted by signing up for Where’s My Ballot?, according to the California Secretary of State’s Office.

You can sign up at WheresMyBallot.sos.ca.gov to get automatic notifications through email, text or voice call about your ballot’s location.

The tool is available for voters in every county across the state.

This story was originally published November 3, 2025 at 11:39 AM.

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Hannah Poukish
The Tribune
Hannah Poukish covers San Luis Obispo County as The Tribune’s government reporter. She previously reported and produced stories for The Sacramento Bee, CNN, Spectrum News and The Mercury News in San Jose. She graduated from Stanford University with a master’s degree in journalism. 
Chloe Shrager
The Tribune
Chloe Shrager is the courts and crimes reporter for The Tribune. She grew up in Palo Alto, California, and graduated from Stanford with a B.A. in Political Science. When not writing, she enjoys surfing, backpacking, skiing and hanging out with her cat, Billy Goat.
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