India is the world's largest democracy with over 97 crore registered voters and 543 Lok Sabha constituencies. Understanding how the Indian election system works — from the announcement of dates to the declaration of results — helps every citizen become a more informed and active participant in democracy.
This guide explains India's entire election process in simple language — no jargon, no political bias, just the facts every Indian voter should know.
Types of Elections in India
| Election Type | What Is Elected | Frequency |
|---|---|---|
| Lok Sabha General Elections | 543 MPs to Parliament | Every 5 years |
| State Assembly (Vidhan Sabha) | State MLAs | Every 5 years per state |
| Rajya Sabha Elections | RS MPs (indirect) | Biennial (1/3 retire every 2 years) |
| Presidential Election | President of India | Every 5 years |
| Vice Presidential Election | Vice President | Every 5 years |
| Local Body Elections | Municipal/Panchayat members | Every 5 years per body |
| By-Elections | Single vacant seat | When a seat falls vacant |
Who Conducts Elections in India?
The Election Commission of India (ECI) is an independent constitutional body (Article 324) responsible for conducting free and fair elections across India. It is headed by the Chief Election Commissioner (CEC) and two Election Commissioners.
Key powers of ECI:
- Announces election schedule and dates
- Enforces Model Code of Conduct
- Transfers or suspends government officials who can influence elections
- Registers political parties and assigns symbols
- Monitors campaign finance and expenditure limits
- Settles election disputes (before results)
State-level elections are overseen by the State Election Commission (for local body elections only). Lok Sabha and State Assembly elections are conducted by the central ECI.
Step-by-Step: How a Lok Sabha Election Works
Phase 1 — Announcement of Election Schedule
The ECI announces the election date(s) through a press conference and official gazette notification. Once announced, the Model Code of Conduct (MCC) comes into force immediately. The schedule typically includes:
- Date of Notification (official start)
- Last date for filing nominations
- Date of scrutiny of nominations
- Last date for withdrawal of candidature
- Date(s) of polling
- Date of counting of votes
Large states like Uttar Pradesh and Tamil Nadu often vote in multiple phases to allow adequate security deployment.
Phase 2 — Candidate Nominations
Any Indian citizen aged 25+ (Lok Sabha) or 30+ (Rajya Sabha) can contest elections as a candidate if they:
- Are a registered voter in India
- File nomination form with the Returning Officer of the constituency
- Pay security deposit: ₹25,000 for Lok Sabha (₹12,500 for SC/ST candidates)
- Are not disqualified (no criminal conviction for 2+ years, not declared insolvent, not a government employee)
Candidates can contest as a party representative (with official party symbol) or as an Independent candidate.
Phase 3 — Campaign Period
Candidates have 14–21 days to campaign (varies by election schedule). Rules during campaign:
- Campaign expenditure limit: ₹95 lakh per Lok Sabha candidate (₹40 lakh for Assembly)
- Campaigning must stop 48 hours before polling (Silence Period)
- No hate speech, no communal propaganda, no bribery
- Government resources (vehicles, offices, officials) cannot be used for campaigning
- Opinion polls cannot be published 48 hours before polling
Phase 4 — Polling Day
Voters go to their assigned polling booths and vote using Electronic Voting Machines (EVM). See our detailed How to Vote in India guide for the complete polling day process.
The Electronic Voting Machine (EVM) — How It Works
India replaced paper ballots with EVMs starting from 1998 (fully rolled out by 2004). An EVM consists of two units:
- Control Unit — Operated by the Polling Officer. It records votes, keeps count, and can be sealed after polling ends.
- Balloting Unit — Seen by the voter. Has buttons for each candidate with their name, photo, and party symbol.
The two units are connected by a 5-metre cable. EVMs run on ordinary alkaline batteries (no internet connection, no Bluetooth, no external connectivity).
VVPAT (Voter Verified Paper Audit Trail): Attached to the Balloting Unit, VVPAT prints a paper slip showing the candidate you voted for, visible for 7 seconds, then dropped into a sealed box. Used for verification in case of disputes.
Model Code of Conduct (MCC)
The Model Code of Conduct is a set of guidelines by ECI that all political parties and candidates must follow from the date of election announcement until results. Key rules:
- Government cannot announce new schemes, projects, or policies that might influence voters
- Ministers cannot use government vehicles for campaigning
- No religious or caste appeals in campaign speeches
- No defacing public property (walls, electricity poles) with posters
- No distribution of cash, liquor, or gifts to voters
- No campaign within 100 metres of polling stations on polling day
Violations are reported to ECI via the cVIGIL app — action is taken within 100 minutes of a valid complaint.
How Votes Are Counted and Winners Declared
Counting day is usually 2–4 days after the last phase of polling. Process:
- EVMs are brought from strongrooms under heavy security to counting centres
- Each candidate's representative (Counting Agent) is present to observe
- Votes are counted round by round — first postal ballots, then EVM votes table by table
- Candidate with the highest number of votes wins — First Past the Post (FPTP) system
- No minimum vote percentage required — the candidate with most votes wins even if it's 25%
- In case of a tie, winner is decided by draw of lots
- Returning Officer declares the result and issues winning certificate
The security deposit of losing candidates is forfeited if they get less than 1/6th (16.7%) of valid votes polled.
Government Formation After Elections
After Lok Sabha results:
- The party or coalition with majority (272+ seats out of 543) forms the government
- The President invites the leader of the majority to form government
- The Prime Minister is sworn in, followed by the Cabinet
- If no party gets clear majority, a hung parliament results — parties negotiate to form coalition
Important Election Helplines and Resources
| Resource | Details |
|---|---|
| Voter Helpline | Call 1950 (free, 6 AM – 10 PM) |
| ECI Official Website | eci.gov.in |
| Voter Registration Portal | voters.eci.gov.in |
| Election Results Portal | results.eci.gov.in |
| Report MCC Violations | cVIGIL app (Android/iOS) |
| Voter Helpline App | Available on Google Play & App Store |