Overview
Voting precincts in St. Petersburg, Florida are established and administered by the Pinellas County Supervisor of Elections, the county-level office responsible for managing voter registration, precinct boundaries, polling place assignments, mail ballot processing, and election results for all jurisdictions within Pinellas County, including the City of St. Petersburg. St. Petersburg, incorporated since 1892 and home to an estimated 260,646 residents as of the U.S. Census Bureau ACS 2023, is Florida's fourth-largest city and generates one of the largest local voting populations in the county.
The city operates under a strong mayor-council form of government, with the mayor serving as chief executive and an eight-member City Council functioning as the primary legislative body. Each council member represents one of the city's eight geographic districts, making the alignment between precinct geography and council district boundaries a practical concern for residents determining which local races appear on their ballots. Countywide and state races also appear on St. Petersburg ballots and are managed through the same precinct infrastructure administered by the Pinellas County Supervisor of Elections.
Elections Administration
The Pinellas County Supervisor of Elections maintains primary responsibility for all aspects of precinct administration in St. Petersburg. The office's official website, votepinellas.gov, hosts precinct lookup tools, voter registration services, and mail ballot tracking for registered voters. As documented by the Pinellas County Supervisor of Elections St. Petersburg office listing, the office operates a dedicated downtown St. Petersburg location at 501 First Avenue North, accessible via the 5th Street North entrance, St. Petersburg, FL 33701, reachable by phone at 727-464-8683. Supervisor of Elections Deborah Clark oversees the office.
The Supervisor of Elections office handles precinct boundary delineation, polling place selection and notification, early voting site operation, and official canvassing for all elections conducted within Pinellas County. St. Petersburg residents receive precinct-specific polling place assignments through the voter registration record maintained by the county office. Precinct assignments determine not only where a registered voter casts a ballot but also which subset of contested races — city council district seats, county commission seats, state legislative districts, and federal races — appears on that voter's specific ballot.
City Council Districts and Precinct Geography
St. Petersburg's City Council is composed of eight members, each elected from one of the city's eight geographic districts, as described by Ballotpedia's St. Petersburg, Florida entry. Because council members represent specific geographic areas, a resident's precinct assignment determines which council district seat appears on that resident's local ballot. The council holds authority over the city budget, tax levy, and ordinance adoption.
Precinct boundaries within St. Petersburg are drawn by the Pinellas County Supervisor of Elections in coordination with state and federal redistricting requirements and must conform to the geographic boundaries of state legislative and congressional districts as well as local council district lines. The interaction between these overlapping geographic units means that a single St. Petersburg address may fall within a specific voting precinct, a city council district, a Pinellas County Commission district, a state House district, a state Senate district, and a federal congressional district simultaneously. The Pinellas County Supervisor of Elections website provides an official precinct lookup tool that allows registered voters to identify the precinct number and polling place associated with their address of record.
The city's eight council districts roughly correspond to geographic neighborhoods and community areas spread across the Pinellas peninsula. The peninsula geography — bounded by Tampa Bay to the east and north and the Gulf of Mexico to the west, as documented by the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation — shapes the spatial distribution of precincts and polling places across the city's urban, coastal, and inland neighborhoods.
Upcoming St. Petersburg Elections
According to Ballotpedia, the next St. Petersburg mayoral and city council general election is scheduled for November 3, 2026, with a primary election on August 18, 2026. The candidate filing deadline for the 2026 cycle is May 29, 2026. These dates establish the schedule within which precinct-level voter activity — including polling place operations, early voting, and mail ballot distribution — is organized by the Pinellas County Supervisor of Elections.
Mayor Kenneth T. Welch, who was sworn in as St. Petersburg's 54th mayor on January 6, 2022, holds a term that ends January 7, 2027, as documented by Ballotpedia's Kenneth Welch entry and the City of St. Petersburg's official biography page. Welch, the city's first African American mayor, won the general election on November 2, 2021, per Ballotpedia. The 2026 mayoral election will therefore appear on ballots in precincts across all eight city council districts. City council district seats cycle on staggered schedules; the specific districts on the 2026 ballot are determined by the city's electoral calendar as maintained by the Pinellas County Supervisor of Elections.
Voter Services Available Through Precinct System
The Pinellas County Supervisor of Elections administers several services tied directly to the precinct system for St. Petersburg residents. Voter registration records establish each resident's precinct assignment, which in turn determines polling place location and ballot style. The official votepinellas.gov website provides online access to precinct lookup, voter registration status checks, and mail ballot request and tracking functions.
Mail ballot voting is an alternative to in-precinct voting available to all registered Pinellas County voters; requests are tracked through the Supervisor of Elections system. Early voting, when offered, occurs at designated countywide sites separate from individual precinct polling places; the Supervisor of Elections office announces early voting locations and hours in advance of each election cycle. The downtown St. Petersburg office at 501 First Avenue North serves as a physical point of contact for voters seeking in-person registration assistance, ballot replacement, or other precinct-related services in the city.
The City of St. Petersburg's government structure adds a layer of local ballot content on top of countywide and statewide races. St. Petersburg's eight City Council districts, combined with at-large or citywide races such as the mayoral contest, mean that different precincts within the city may carry different combinations of local contests depending on district boundaries. Residents can confirm the full contents of their specific ballot by consulting their precinct record through the Pinellas County Supervisor of Elections voter portal.
County and State Context
St. Petersburg sits within Pinellas County, one of Florida's most densely populated counties, positioned on the Pinellas peninsula between Tampa Bay and the Gulf of Mexico. The Pinellas County Supervisor of Elections office administers elections for all municipalities within the county, including Clearwater, Largo, Gulfport, and the barrier island communities of St. Pete Beach, in addition to St. Petersburg. The county-level administration of precinct boundaries, polling places, and voter rolls means that precinct changes affecting St. Petersburg residents are announced through the Supervisor of Elections rather than through city government channels.
Florida state law governs the framework within which the Pinellas County Supervisor of Elections operates, including rules on precinct size, polling place accessibility, and voter registration deadlines. The Pinellas County Supervisor of Elections website is the authoritative source for precinct boundary maps, polling place assignments, and election calendars applicable to St. Petersburg voters. The city's formal recognition as a Preserve America Community, designated in December 2007 by the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation, reflects its status as an incorporated municipality with established civic infrastructure, of which precinct-based voting is a foundational component. St. Petersburg's estimated population of 260,646 as of the U.S. Census Bureau ACS 2023 positions it as a substantial contributor to Pinellas County's overall voter pool.
Sources
- History of St. Pete — City of St. Petersburg Official Website https://www.stpete.org/visitors/history.php Used for: City founding date (1888), incorporation (1892, 1903), Peter Demens/John C. Williams naming, Tony Jannus commercial aviation 1914, spring training baseball history, African American Heritage Trail, Florida Stories Walking Tour, Albert Whitted Airport
- St. Petersburg, Florida — Advisory Council on Historic Preservation https://www.achp.gov/preserve-america/community/st-petersburg-florida Used for: Location on Pinellas peninsula between Tampa Bay and Gulf of Mexico; Preserve America Community designation December 2007; 1920s Mediterranean Revival architecture (Vinoy Hotel, Princess Martha, Snell Arcade); early real estate boom (1909–WWI); 1926 collapse and PWA recovery; Heritage Village at Pinewood Cultural Park (21 acres, 28 structures); Historic Downtown District walking tour (82 structures)
- Vintage St. Pete: Founding fathers and famous names — St Pete Catalyst https://stpetecatalyst.com/vintage-st-pete-founding-fathers-and-famous-names/ Used for: City founded 1888, incorporated 1892; Williams Park named for John Constantine Williams; founding history of Williams and Demens
- Mayor's Biography — City of St. Petersburg Official Website https://www.stpete.org/government/mayor___city_council/mayor_s_office/mayors_biography.php Used for: Kenneth T. Welch sworn in as 54th mayor January 2022; first African American mayor; grew up in Gas Plant area; father was city council member
- Mayor's Office — City of St. Petersburg Official Website https://www.stpete.org/government/mayor___city_council/mayor_s_office/index.php Used for: Mayor's Cabinet structure; Pillars for Progress; annual progress reports; affordable housing reports
- St. Petersburg Mayor Ken Welch 2026 State of the City Address — City of St. Petersburg https://www.stpete.org/news_detail_T30_R1598.php Used for: 2025 affordable/workforce housing completions (434 multifamily units, 122 ADUs, 24 homes); hurricane recovery (15,635 permits, $3.03M fee relief); Booker Creek Trail CSX segment acquisition; $200,000 Individual Artist Grants; Level Up Arts Grants; Microfund Program ($1.4M, 196 businesses); Future Ready Academy fourth cohort; crime down 16% in 2025; lowest homicide count since 1967; $260,000 Childhood Homelessness Project; Palladium Theater venue
- Historic Gas Plant District Redevelopment — City of St. Petersburg https://www.stpete.org/residents/current_projects/tropicana_field_site.php Used for: Gas Plant neighborhood displacement history; City Council approval July 18, 2024; Pinellas County BCC approval July 30, 2024; $50M equity commitment; redevelopment partners (Pinellas County, Tampa Bay Rays, Hines); phase one timeline (late 2027/early 2028); July 2025 roof replacement mobilization; hurricane Milton roof damage October 2024
- Pinellas County Supervisor of Elections — Official Website https://www.votepinellas.gov/ Used for: Official elections administration for Pinellas County including St. Petersburg; voter registration, mail ballot, precinct lookup services
- Pinellas County Supervisor of Elections — St. Petersburg Office Location https://files.pinellas.electionsfl.org/index.php1106.htm Used for: St. Petersburg SOE office address: 501 First Avenue North (5th Street North entrance), St. Petersburg, FL 33701; phone 727-464-8683; Supervisor of Elections Deborah Clark
- St. Petersburg, Florida — Ballotpedia https://ballotpedia.org/St._Petersburg,_Florida Used for: Strong mayor-council form of government; City Council of eight members elected by eight districts; mayor's duties (budget, legislation, appointments); 2024 general election (November 5, 2024); 2026 election schedule (November 3, 2026 general, August 18, 2026 primary, May 29, 2026 filing deadline)
- Kenneth Welch — Ballotpedia https://ballotpedia.org/Kenneth_Welch Used for: Welch assumed office January 6, 2022; current term ends January 7, 2027; won general election November 2, 2021; previously Pinellas County Commission member 2000–2020
- U.S. Census Bureau American Community Survey https://www.census.gov/programs-surveys/acs Used for: Population (260,646); median age (43.1); median household income ($73,118); median home value ($331,500); median gross rent ($1,542); total housing units (141,039); total households (116,772); owner-occupied 63%; renter-occupied 37%; poverty rate 11.7%; unemployment rate 4.9%; labor force participation 72.8%; bachelor's degree or higher 26.1% — all ACS 2023