Running for Office in Virginia? Petition Signatures, Explained
Every cycle, candidates ask the same question close to the deadline: how many petition signatures do I need? Here's the plain-English answer, and why you never want to be the candidate asking it late.
If you're only now wondering how many signatures you need, you're already behind. Deadlines don't sneak up, and a good consultant flags them months out. The good news: the requirements aren't complicated once you know them.
What petition signatures are
Petition signatures get you onto the ballot in Virginia. They are not votes. They're simply confirmation from registered voters in your district that you should be allowed to run. You, your team, or your volunteers can collect them by going door-to-door, working community events and fairs, and showing up where voters gather. Start at political events, the people there are the most likely to sign.
How many you need, by office
Virginia's thresholds are set in state law and have held steady:
- Statewide office (Governor, Lieutenant Governor, Attorney General, and U.S. Senate): 10,000 valid signatures, including at least 400 from each of Virginia's congressional districts.
- House of Delegates: 125 valid signatures from registered voters in your district.
- Local and constitutional offices (school board, sheriff, commissioner of revenue, and similar): typically 125 valid signatures from voters in your locality. Smaller localities can differ, so confirm with the Virginia Department of Elections.
Collect at least 20% more than the minimum
Always over-collect. Some signatures will be invalid: wrong district, unregistered voter, duplicate, or missing information. You need a cushion. If you need 125, gather 150 to 160. If you need 10,000, gather 12,000. Turning in exactly the minimum is how serious candidates end up off the ballot.
Mind the deadlines, they change each cycle
Signature counts are stable, but the calendar is not. Filing windows and deadlines shift every election year, and they differ for primary candidates versus independent or convention candidates. Don't rely on last cycle's dates. Pull the current "Candidate Bulletins" from the Virginia Department of Elections, confirm your specific office and path to the ballot, and back-plan your signature collection from the due date. Bookmark them, read them, use them.
Don't want to be scrambling at the deadline?
We build campaign plans that keep you ahead of every filing date, on message, and ready to win. Let's map your race.
Start a Campaign →Adapted from Andrew Loposser's newsletter, The Political Playbook (March 2025). Signature thresholds verified against Virginia Code current as of 2026; always confirm current-cycle deadlines with the Virginia Department of Elections.