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New Voter Data Exposes Massive Registration Gap Among American Teens

A 40-percentage-point chasm separates 18-year-old voter registration rates from those of citizens 45 and older, according to new data from The Civics Center and More Perfect. While nationwide youth registration languishes below 30 percent, states with early pre-registration laws demonstrate that these low numbers are a policy choice, not a generational trend.

New Voter Data Exposes Massive Registration Gap Among American Teens

The analysis, covering 30 states as of May 2026, reveals a geographic divide that dictates democratic participation. States like Oregon, Michigan, Colorado, Maryland, and Nevada—which allow voter pre-registration as early as age 15 or 16—consistently lead the nation. Conversely, states including Pennsylvania, Ohio, and Alabama report the lowest registration rates, largely because their systems mandate that individuals must be 18 before they can even begin the process.

Laura Brill, CEO of The Civics Center, argues that the disparity is not a lack of interest among teens, but a failure of institutional design. "Teen voters in Michigan and Oregon aren't more politically engaged by birth," Brill stated. "They just live in states that consistently welcome and integrate them into our political system." With a 60-point gap between the highest and lowest performing states, the data suggests that administrative barriers are effectively silencing millions of potential voters ahead of the 2026 midterms.

To bridge this divide, The Civics Center has launched a dynamic resource mapping voter gaps down to the county level. The organization encourages peer-to-peer registration drives in high schools, providing toolkits and training to help students navigate local laws. John Bridgeland, CEO of More Perfect, emphasized that as the nation nears its 250th anniversary, simplifying the path to the ballot box is essential for the health of the democracy.

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