
UgandaToday: Ugandan Developers Launch Voter-Friendly Polling Station App Ahead of 2026 Elections
By Uganda Today
December 28, 2025
In a significant leap for civic technology in Uganda, a group of local Generation Z software developers has launched a privately developed web-based application that enables voters to quickly and conveniently find their polling station details ahead of the 2026 General Elections.
The platform — accessible at https://registry.ugtally.com/find-your-polling-station — allows citizens to lookup their designated polling locations using just their full name and date of birth, eliminating the need for a National Identification Number (NIN) — a requirement that has frustrated many voters trying to use official systems.
Multilingual Support and Detailed Station Data
The developers behind the initiative say the app supports eight languages, broadening accessibility for Ugandans across linguistic groups. Users can retrieve a range of information tied to their polling station, including:
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Name and location of the assigned polling station
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GPS-enabled directions via mapping links
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Voter population breakdown at each station (number of registered voters, gender, age brackets)
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Individual Voter Identification Numbers (VINs) and Personal Numbers (PERNO) where available
According to tech observers, this granular level of detail offers voters a clearer picture of the electoral environment in their communities, especially for those in rural and under-served districts.

Independent Innovation — Independent Response
The portal — developed outside government and electoral commission structures — comes at a time when many voters have faced hurdles using official channels to confirm registration and polling details. The Independent Electoral Commission (IEC) is issuing Voter Location Slips (VLS) nationwide to help voters locate polling stations for the upcoming elections, but that process still relies heavily on in-person collection and NIN-based systems. EC Uganda
At the time of filing this report, the Independent Electoral Commission had not issued an official comment on the privately developed system or its implications for the electoral process.
Ease of Use Without NIN Barriers
The developers say that the system intentionally bypasses the requirement for NIN, opting instead for easily verifiable personal information — a design choice they argue broadens democratic participation. Users only need to enter their full name and date of birth to retrieve their details.
“This tool is for all Ugandan voters — no NIN needed — and can be used from any internet-enabled device,” one member of the development team told Uganda Today in an email interview.
Looking Ahead
As the 2026 elections draw closer and the EC continues voter education and registration activities, tech-driven civic engagement tools are emerging as critical supplements to official information channels. Voters are being encouraged to verify their details both on the app and through established EC platforms to ensure accuracy before polling day.
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