Politics & Government
It's Primary Day, New York. Here's What To Know Before Heading To The Polls.
Remember a water bottle and don't hold your breath for results tonight. We made it to Primary Day, New York.

June 24, 2025, 5:00 a.m.
We made it to Primary Day, New York. If you’re among the 384,000 New Yorkers who already cast your ballot, good job.
Find out what's happening in New York Cityfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
If you’re not, here’s what to know on the last day you can vote in the city’s local primaries:
Get your vote in
Find out what's happening in New York Cityfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Polls are open on Tuesday, June 24, from 6 a.m. to 9 p.m. and you can find out where your polling site is here. Be aware: Your election day location is often different from your early voting site, so check carefully.
If you have a mail-in ballot, today is the last day to postmark that and send it by mail to the Board of Elections. You can also drop it off at an election day poll site or your county Board of Elections office by 9 p.m.
Read up on the races
You can look up exactly what’s on your ballot by typing your address into the BOE’s poll site locator tool, clicking through and looking for the blue button at the top that says “View Sample Ballot.
If you’re a last-minute voter, here are some guides for you before you head to the ballot box:
Get to know the mayoral candidates with THE CITY’s Meet Your Mayor quiz.
Read about the other citywide race for comptroller.
Check if there are competitive races in your borough for district attorney, borough presidents and judicial candidates.
Learn about who’s running in your City Council district and the 13 races to watch in New York’s legislative body.
New Yorkers are casting votes in a particularly bad heatwave. Long wait times outdoors were rare in the early voting period, but they could pop up on Primary Day. Turnout has proven to be much higher this year than the last time we had a citywide election, in 2021, Gothamist reported, especially among young people.
Experts told THE CITY voters should be prepared with fans, water, hats and umbrellas if they think they will have to wait outside to vote. The New York City Board of Elections and NYC Emergency Management said they will deploy fans at polling sites that need them, make sure electricity stays on and provide water.
New Yorkers should also know it is legal to hand out water to voters waiting in line after a federal judge overturned an earlier ban on the practice.
Be patient for the final count
It is very unlikely we will know who won the mayor’s race Tuesday night, as THE CITY previously reported. That’s because the Board of Elections will release only the first-place vote tally counting preliminary ballots. The board plans to release the full ranked choice tally — known as voting rounds — one week later, which should give us a picture of who came out on top. (Remember: Mayor Eric Adams won in the eighth round of the ranked choice tally in 2021.)
If the race is very, very close, we may not get an answer for even longer — until all absentee and affidavit ballots are counted, which could take weeks.
It’s not over after the primary
After we find out who won the mayoral primary, that’s just the beginning — of another campaign cycle for the general election in November.
There are several independent candidates ready for the fall: We already know Mayor Eric Adams will be on the ballot as an independent. Former Gov. Andrew Cuomo has also laid plans to run independently in the general election if he doesn’t win the Democratic nomination. Independent Jim Walden, a former federal prosecutor, will also appear on the ballot and has been campaigning for months.
Republican candidate Curtis Sliwa will make another run at City Hall. (He will appear on the November ballot since he ran uncontested in the Republican primary.)
And the Working Families Party also has a ballot line in November, which they may choose to fill with whoever they’d like. If Cuomo wins in June, for example, they may elevate a progressive to take that line to compete against him — and all the other candidates — in the fall.
This press release was produced by The City. The views expressed here are the author’s own.