How to vote in the 2025 Canadian general election

How to vote in the 2025 Canadian general election

  1. We'll walk you through things, step-by-step. Make sure to fill out everything you can!
  2. Then, we'll draw up your full plan to vote. You can print it, save it as a PDF, or have us send you a reminder text!
Ready to go?
Get started
Your notes and box-ticking stay on your device.
Not in Saint-Laurent? Change district.

Can you vote?

Check all the boxes that apply to you:

You can vote in the Saint-Laurent election!
Next

Are you registered to vote?

If you're not registered, don't remember registering, or are registered at an old address, you can still register at the polls.

When and where will you vote?

There are 5 ways left to vote this election. Which will you choose?

At advance polls

Fri, Apr 18 (9am-9pm)
/
Sat, Apr 19 (9am-9pm)
/
Sun, Apr 20 (9am-9pm)
/
Mon, Apr 21 (9am-9pm)
Show details about advance polls
You can vote on any of these days:
Fri, Apr 18, 9am - 9pm
Choose
Sat, Apr 19, 9am - 9pm
Choose
Sun, Apr 20, 9am - 9pm
Choose
Mon, Apr 21, 9am - 9pm
Choose
Plan a time to vote:

Where?

When you vote in advance for a federal election, you must vote at your designated advance polling place.
Step 1: Use Elections Canada's Voter Information Service to find your advance polling place:
Go to the Voter Information Service  
Step 2: Come back here and make a note of your polling place:
Raymond-Bourque Arena
2345 Thimens Boulevard, Saint-Laurent
Centre des loisirs de Saint-Laurent (A-136)
1375 Grenet Street, Saint-Laurent
St Sixte Ch. (Gabriel-Groulx Hall) via parking
1899 de l'Église Street, Saint-Laurent
Painter Park Shelter
260 Marcotte Street, Saint-Laurent

By mail

Apply by 6pm on April 22
Choose

On request, Elections Canada can mail you a ballot. When you receive your ballot, you can fill it out at home, then mail it back to Elections Canada.

Please note: Once Elections Canada has mailed you a ballot, you cannot change your mind and vote using a different method.


You must apply to vote by mail before Apr 22 at 6:00pm.

On election day, Apr 28

At your designated polling place
Choose
When: Monday, April 28
Step 1: Use Elections Canada's Voter Information Service to find your election day polling place:
Go to the Voter Information Service  
Step 2: Come back here and make a note of your polling place:
Beau-Séjour School ? North Bldg (l'Heureux St., schoolyard)
3600 Beauséjour Street, Saint-Laurent
École Bois-Franc Aquarelle (Aquarelle Bldg, "Livraison")
2080 de Londres Street, Saint-Laurent
Édouard-Laurin School (gymnasium)
1085 Tassé Street, Saint-Laurent
Katimavik School (Katimavik Building, door 9)
1700 Decelles Street, Saint-Laurent
Cedarcrest School (gymnasium)
1505 Muir Street, Saint-Laurent
Des Grands-Êtres School (gymnasium)
1150 Deguire Street, Saint-Laurent
Gardenview School (gymnasium)
700 Brunet Street, Saint-Laurent
LaurenHill Academy, Junior Campus (Abbott St.)
2355 Decelles Street, Saint-Laurent
Henri-Beaulieu School (via "Service de garde")
235 Bleignier Street, Saint-Laurent
Melkite Cultural Centre of Montreal
10025 de l'Acadie Boulevard, Montréal
Au Trésor-du-Boisé School (gymnasium)
3925 Claude-Henri-Grignon Street, Saint-Laurent
Enfants-du-Monde School (gymnasium)
2915 Marcel Street, Saint-Laurent
Du Boisé Library (common room)
2727 Thimens Boulevard, Saint-Laurent
St Sixte Ch. (Gabriel-Groulx Hall) via parking
1899 de l'Église Street, Saint-Laurent
Tekeyan Cultural Association
825 Manoogian Street, Saint-Laurent
Cardinal-Léger School (door 10, Gratton St.)
2000 Decelles Street, Saint-Laurent
Le Challenger conf. & reception (Vivaldi Hall)
2525 des Nations Street, Saint-Laurent
Centre des loisirs de Saint-Laurent (A-136/A-137)
1375 Grenet Street, Saint-Laurent
Laurentide School (side entrance on Cardinal St.)
465 Cardinal Street, Saint-Laurent
Melkite Center of Montreal (Basement Hall)
10025-A de l'Acadie Boulevard, Montréal
Painter Park Shelter
260 Marcotte Street, Saint-Laurent
Manoir I
750 Montpellier Boulevard, Saint-Laurent
Le Crystal
5285 Henri-Bourassa Boulevard West, Saint-Laurent
Multipurpose Sports Complex (3rd-floor gym)
2385 Thimens Boulevard, Saint-Laurent
LaurenHill Academy, Senior Campus (Cafeteria)
2505 de la Côte-Vertu Boulevard, Saint-Laurent
Aimé-Caron Park Shelter
700 Muir Street, Saint-Laurent
Résidences Soleil - Manoir Saint-Laurent
115 Deguire Boulevard, Saint-Laurent
Manoir de Casson
775 Muir Street, Saint-Laurent
L'Alto Residence
1700 Saint-Louis Street, Saint-Laurent
Plan a time to vote:

On campus

April 13 - April 16 on participating campuses
Choose

Anyone can vote on a participating campus from April 13 to 16. See the list of campuses here.

Voting on campus is available:

  • Sunday, April 13, from 12pm to 6pm
  • Monday, April 14, from 9am to 9pm
  • Tuesday, April 15, from 9am to 9pm
  • Wednesday, April 16, from 9am to 9pm

When you vote on campus, you'll be voting by special ballot, meaning you'll have to write in the name of the candidate in your electoral district who you wish to vote for.

At an Elections Canada office

At any Elections Canada office until April 22 at 6pm
Choose

You can vote at any Elections Canada office across the country during their open hours, before April 22 at 6pm. Find the nearest Elections Canada office here.

Offices are open:

  • Monday to Friday from 9am to 9pm
  • Saturday from 9am to 6pm
  • Sunday from 12pm to 4pm

When you vote at an Elections Canada office, you'll be voting by special ballot, meaning you'll have to write in the name of the candidate in your electoral district who you wish to vote for.

Who are you voting for?

We'll help you decide with 2 easy steps!

Step 1: Review the candidate profiles

Step 2: Come back here and choose your pick

Need another look at your options?

Ryan Byrne
NDP
Richard Chambers
Green
Manon Chevalier
PPC
Fernand Deschamps
MLPC
Marielle Gendron
Bloc
Emmanuella Lambropoulos
Liberal
Richard Serour
Conservative

Your pick for MP

Add a candidate from the list above. Your pick stays on your device.
Your choice

Are your friends voting?

Help spread a little democracy! Do one of the following:

Why we're asking you to spread the word

If we want to keep our democracy, we have to use it. And all most people need to go out and vote is a little push from a friend!

Your plan to vote

How

When

Where

What to bring

One photo ID card issued by a Canadian government (federal, provincial, territorial, or local) with your photo, name, and current address.

2 pieces of ID, both with your name, proving who you are and where you live:

  • At least 1 piece must have your residential address
  • Both pieces must have your name

Valid pieces of ID include documents, bills, ID cards, and ID bracelets from various government and non-government sources. See the "Examples of acceptable ID" section below for examples.

Someone who knows you and is assigned to your polling station who can vouch for you. They must be able to prove their identity and address.

A person can vouch for only one other person, except in long-term care facilities.

Be on the safe side: Bring extra ID if you can.
Examples of acceptable ID
Show examples of acceptable ID
  • From a government or government agency:
    • band membership card
    • birth certificate
    • Canadian citizenship card or certificate
    • Canadian Forces identity card
    • Canadian passport (accepted only as proof of identity)
    • card issued by an Inuit local authority
    • firearms licence
    • government cheque or cheque stub
    • government statement of benefits
    • health card
    • income tax assessment
    • Indian status card or temporary confirmation of registration
    • library card
    • licence or card issued for fishing, trapping or hunting
    • liquor identity card
    • Métis card
    • old age security card
    • parolee card
    • property tax assessment or evaluation
    • public transportation card
    • social insurance number card
    • vehicle ownership
    • Veterans Affairs health care identification card
  • From Elections Canada:
    • targeted revision form to residents of long-term care facilities
    • voter information card
  • From an educational institution:
    • correspondence issued by a school, college or university
    • student identity card
  • From a health care facility or organization:
    • blood donor card
    • CNIB card
    • hospital card
    • label on a prescription container
    • identity bracelet issued by a hospital or long-term care facility
    • medical clinic card
  • From a financial institution:
    • bank statement
    • credit card
    • credit card statement
    • credit union statement
    • debit card
    • insurance certificate, policy or statement
    • mortgage contract or statement
    • pension plan statement
    • personal cheque
  • From a private organization:
    • employee card
    • residential lease or sub-lease
    • utility bill (e.g.: electricity; water; telecommunications services, including telephone, cable or satellite)
  • Letters of confirmation:
    • letter from a public curator, public guardian or public trustee
    • letter of confirmation of residence from a First Nations band or reserve or an Inuit local authority
    • letter of confirmation of residence from an Alberta Metis Settlement authority
    • letter of confirmation of residence, letter of stay, admission form, or statement of benefits from a designated student residence, seniors' residence, long-term care facility, shelter, soup kitchen or community-based residential facility

Your pick for MLA

Ryan Byrne New Democratic Party
Richard Chambers Green Party of Canada
Manon Chevalier People's Party of Canada
Fernand Deschamps Marxist-Leninist Party of Canada
Marielle Gendron Bloc Québécois
Emmanuella Lambropoulos Liberal Party of Canada
Richard Serour Conservative Party of Canada

Keep a copy of your plan

Get a reminder text

Update your reminder text

Your reminder text is scheduled. Would you like to update it?
Your voting date, polling place, and phone number will be sent to and stored on both VoteMate's servers and systems operated by our SMS provider, Twilio.
We've sent you a text to confirm. What's the number in it?
Your reminder is all set up!

VoteMate is made by one person

My name's Laef Kucheran! I'm a 23-year-old web developer from Vancouver.

I worked over 500 hours running VoteMate for this election. I volunteer all that time and pay for the site's expenses out of my own pocket because I believe it can help people vote. That matters to me.

Did VoteMate help you? Help me make it better!

Want to help out? Buy Me A Coffee Patreon logo Support me on Patreon Patreon
Lending your phone to a friend so they can fill out the guide? Reset your box-ticking and shortlist.