Assam Finalizes 2026 Voter List with 2.49 Crore Electors Across 126 Seats

The Election Commission has published the final voter list for the Special Revision 2026 covering 126 assembly constituencies in Assam, totaling 2,49,58,139 voters. This reflects a decrease of over 2.43 lakh voters from the earlier draft list. The list comprises a nearly equal gender split and includes 343 third-gender voters, following a comprehensive house-to-house verification drive. Meanwhile, the ECI has extended the final publication timeline for West Bengal's revision to February 14, 2026, citing extensive enumeration work.

Key Points: Assam 2026 Final Voter List Published for 126 Constituencies

  • Final list has 2.49 crore voters
  • Decrease of 2.43 lakh from draft
  • Includes 343 third-gender voters
  • West Bengal's timeline extended to Feb 2026
2 min read

Assam's Election Commission released final voter list for Special Revision 2026, covering 126 assembly constituencies

Assam's Election Commission releases final 2026 voter list with 2.49 crore voters. Details on gender breakdown and revision process explained.

"The integrated draft voter list for the Special Revision (SR) 2026 was published on 27th December 2025 - Chief Electoral Officer's office, Assam"

Guwahati, February 10

The Election Commission on Tuesday published the final voter list for Special Revision 2026 for 126 assembly constituencies in Assam, with over 2.49 crore voters.

According to the Chief Electoral Officer, Assam, the total number of voters in the draft voter list was 2,52,01,624, which has now decreased by 2,43,485 to 2,49,58,139 voters in the final voter list.

According to the reports, the final voter list includes 1,24,82,213 male voters, 1,24,75,583 female voters, and 343 third-gender voters.

"The integrated draft voter list for the Special Revision (SR) 2026 was published on 27th December 2025, and prior to this, a H2H verification drive was successfully conducted across the state from 22nd November 2025 to 20th December 2025. The period for submitting claims and objections was from 27th December 2025 to 22nd January 2026," said in a press release issued by the Chief Electoral Officer's office, Assam.

Earlier, the ECI revised the timelines for West Bengal's SIR, pushing the final publication to February 14, 2026. That order cited extensive enumeration efforts and polling station rationalisation requirements.

In an official order issued on Wednesday, the ECI stated that the extension has been granted, taking into account the large-scale enumeration work and the need for proper verification and rationalisation of polling stations across the state.

Under the West Bengal schedule, Booth Level Officers completed house-to-house verification on December 11, 2025, while draft rolls were published on December 16, 2025. Claims and objections in the state were accepted until January 15, 2026.

The ECI has reiterated that all citizens are encouraged to participate in the SIR process actively to ensure accurate and up-to-date electoral rolls, which form the backbone of free and fair elections.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priyanka N
As a resident of Guwahati, I appreciate the effort for a special revision. The house-to-house verification is crucial. However, I hope the process for third-gender voters is made even more accessible and sensitive. 343 is a start, but we can do better on inclusion. 👍
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Aman W
Interesting to see the timeline comparison with West Bengal. Assam seems to have wrapped up faster. ECI must ensure the same rigor in verification everywhere. Our democracy depends on accurate rolls. Jai Hind!
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Sarah B
The detailed breakdown is impressive. Nearly 2.5 crore voters! The process seems transparent. I hope all citizens who are eligible take the time to check their names. Active participation is key, as the article says.
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Karthik V
A respectful criticism: While the numbers are published, was there enough awareness in rural areas about the claims and objections window? Sometimes these technical processes miss the common villager. The EC's job isn't done with just publishing a list; ensuring every eligible voter is on it is the real task.
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Nisha Z
This is a massive administrative exercise. Kudos to the Booth Level Officers who did the house-to-house work. Hope they were adequately compensated. Clean voter list = stronger democracy. 🇮🇳

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