Where to Register
If you are eligible to vote in Michigan, you must register where you maintain your principal residence in the state. As a college student, you can register from your campus address or the address where you previously resided before moving to campus (provided that you still view your previous address as your “principal” residence in the state).
The Bottom Line
MI will only keep one registration address so you have to choose whether home or school is going to be your "principal residence."
The 30 Day Rule
Always keep in mind that almost any change you make to your voter registration status will take 30 days to get through the system. Give your clerk enough time to get you onto the voter file before an election, or plan to vote at home if you change your address the day before the election. If you don't get your new registration in 30 days before an election, you aren't going to vote.
How to register
You can register by visiting any Secretary of State branch office or your local city or township clerk’s office. You can also register to vote by mail. Michigan’s mail-in voter registration application form can be downloaded here.
If you register to vote by mail, you must appear in person to vote in the first election in which you wish to participate. Therefore, if you anticipate that you will need an absent voter ballot for the first election in which you participate after registering, registering through a Secretary of State branch office or your local clerk’s office is recommended. (Additional information on the absent voter ballot application process appears below.)
The Bottom Line
If you plan to register by mail, plan to show up on election day. If you haven't already voted and want to vote absentee, plan to drop in on the clerk to register.
Other things you need to know
The law requires Michigan residents to use the same residential address for both voter registration and driver license purposes. Therefore, if the address you submit on a voter registration application does not match the address on your driver license, the Department of State will mail you an address update sticker for your driver license. (The address update sticker will be handed to you if you register to vote in a Secretary of State branch office.)
Regardless of the address you use for voter registration and driver license purposes, you can maintain a separate “mailing address” if you wish to receive mail pertaining to your voter registration and driver license at a different address.
You are free to change your voter registration/driver license address as frequently as needed. No fees are assessed for address changes.
The Bottom Line
Since MI only keeps one "principal address" on record for your driver's license and your voter registration, if you change one, you'll change them both. You can tell where you're expected to vote if your driver's license is current.
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