This is our UAT website.
The latest Council news and events
Our staff and elected representatives
Find out about upcoming meetings and read agendas
Social, economic, environmental and cultural wellbeing
How to request official information from the Council
The Chathams Islands is a remote, awe-inspiring place
Information on the upcoming local election
Sets out our work and priorities for the next financial year
Our work and priorities for the next decade
A report on the Chatham Islands economy
An overview of the Council’s activity
Resource management framework summary
Transport priorities for 2021 – 2031
Dog Control Bylaw overview
Waitangi Beach vehicle bylaw
Managing boating and other activities on water
Understanding hazards and risks to build capability
The next local election will take place on Saturday 11 October 2025.
Voting will open from Tuesday 9 September 2025 until 12 noon Saturday 11 October 2025.
You can vote by post. Make sure you are on the Electoral Roll to receive your postal voting document. More information on how to enrol to vote is provided below.
At the closing of the nomination period, the below have been nominated for Chatham Islands Council.
Mayor (1 vacancy)
Council - at large (8 vacancies)
The Electoral Roll closed on Friday 1 August 2025. If you aren't enrolled, you will now need to cast a ‘special vote’ at the election.
You can only enrol, or be nominated to enrol, once in a council district, no matter how many properties you own in that council district.
If you are registered to vote in Parliamentary elections (a Parliamentary elector), you are automatically enrolled as a residential elector to vote in local authority elections. The address where you are registered as a Parliamentary elector must be in the council district for the local authority elections.
You may be eligible to enrol as a non-resident ratepayer elector in a council district if both of these apply:
Your eligibility to enrol or be nominated as a ratepayer may also depend on your individual circumstances as determined by criteria in the Local Electoral Act 2001(external link) and its regulations.
If partners, joint tenants and tenants in common collectively pay rates on a property in a council district, one of the group may be nominated to go on the Electoral Roll. The person nominating and the nominated person must be registered as Parliamentary electors at addresses outside the council district where the property is located.
Any organisation, firm, company, trust, corporation or society or association that pays rates on one or more properties in a council district may nominate one of its members or officers to be the ratepayer elector.
The person nominated must consent to the nomination and not be enrolled or nominated as a ratepayer elector for any other property. The person nominating and the nominated person must be registered as Parliamentary electors at addresses outside the council district where the property is located.
New Electoral Rolls are compiled every three years for the local authority elections. You should already have an enrolment confirmation form or other advice on your ratepayer elector status if:
If you are still waiting to receive your Enrolment Confirmation Form or other advice about your non-resident ratepayer status or you have misplaced your Enrolment Confirmation Form, you will need to contact our election management provider, electionz.com Ltd on 0800 666 049 or nrr@electionz.com.
If you think you may be eligible to enrol or to nominate someone as a ratepayer elector, you can request an Enrolment Form for Ratepayer Electors from electionz.com Ltd on on 0800 666 049 or nrr@electionz.com. You can also or enrol online on www.electionz.com(external link).
Make sure you request this form early so you can get answers to any questions you have about the form or being on the Electoral Roll before the roll closes on Friday 1 August 2025.
Contact our election management provider, electionz.com Ltd on 0800 666 049 or nrr@electionz.com if you need help with your application.
Download PDF (176 KB)
Download PDF (187 KB)
Download PDF (228 KB)
Download PDF (173 KB)
Download PDF (2.3 MB)
Download PDF (503 KB)