
Frisco residents who want a say in the City of Frisco's general election on May 2 need to be on the voter rolls by April 2. The stakes: the mayor's office and City Council Places 5 and 6 are all on the ballot, and the clock is ticking as candidates file and early-voting windows get locked in across the city.
Key Dates And What’s On The Ballot
April 2 is the last day to register to vote for the May 2 election. Early voting opens April 20 and runs through April 28, with Election Day set for May 2. Voters will decide the mayor and City Council Places 5 and 6, and that full schedule is posted on the city's elections page, according to the City of Frisco.
How To Register And Check Your Status
Registration forms and how-to guides are available at VoteTexas.gov, which links to county voter registrars and sample-ballot tools. For questions that are specific to Denton County, including registration and mail-ballot procedures, the county elections pages list local rules and contact numbers for voters, according to Denton County Elections.
Which County You Live In Matters
Frisco spans both Collin and Denton counties, and the city’s election will be run through the county election offices. Local reporting notes that the City Council adopted an ordinance ordering the May 2 election to be administered by county election administrators. Collin County operates vote centers that allow registered county voters to use many early-voting sites, while Denton County and nearby municipalities remind residents to confirm their assigned precinct for Election Day. Voters are urged to check their county site for the precise rules that apply to them, according to local reporting at Citizen Portal.
Who’s On The Ballot
The City of Frisco lists Sreekanth Reddy, Vijay Karthik and Laura Rummel for City Council Place 5; Brittany Colberg, Sai Krishnarajanagar, Matt Chalmers and Jerry Spencer for Place 6; and John Keating, Shona Sowell, Rod Vilhauer and Mark Hill for mayor, according to the City of Frisco. Sample ballots and candidate filings are available on the city's elections page and through county election offices.
Need Help Or More Information
Voters who are unsure about their registration status or polling place, or who want to review a sample ballot, can check Collin County Elections or their county's election website and contact the county registrar for confirmation. Local voter-education groups and the VoteTexas portal also publish step-by-step guides for registration, mail ballots and early-voting schedules.









