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June 23, 2026 · 6 min read

Voting methods explained: first-past-the-post, ranked choice & more

A plain-English tour of the main voting methods — first-past-the-post, ranked choice, approval, and score voting — what each is good and bad at, and which to use for an online vote.

By the PollsLive team·VotingHow-to

How you count votes changes who wins. Picking a voting method is really about one question: *do you want the single most popular option, or the option most people can live with?* Here are the methods that matter for an online vote, in plain English. For the practical setup, see the online voting guide.

First-past-the-post (single choice)

Everyone picks one option; the option with the most votes wins. It's simple, instant, and what people expect — perfect for a quick decision in a meeting or event. The catch: with many options, a winner can emerge with well under half the vote, splitting the room.

Live poll

Where should we hold the team offsite?

Lisbon38% · 76
Berlin34% · 68
Amsterdam28% · 56
First-past-the-post: Lisbon wins with 38% — but 62% wanted something else.

Ranked choice (instant runoff)

Voters rank the options. If no option has a majority, the lowest is eliminated and its votes flow to each voter's next choice, repeating until something crosses 50%. The result is a winner most people are okay with — great for higher-stakes decisions. The cost: it's more to explain and takes longer.

Approval voting

Voters tick every option they'd be happy with — as many as they like — and the most-approved option wins. It's almost as simple as first-past-the-post but avoids vote-splitting, which makes it a sweet spot for online group decisions.

Score (range) voting

Voters rate each option on a scale (say 1–5); the highest average wins. It captures intensity of preference — useful when 'somewhat like' and 'love' should count differently — but averages can be gamed by strategic min/max scoring.

Which should you use?

  • Quick, low-stakes decision? First-past-the-post (single choice).
  • Several options and you want a consensus winner? Ranked choice or approval.
  • Care how strongly people feel? Score voting (a 1–5 scale).
  • Sensitive or contested? Whatever you pick, keep it anonymous and close the vote to lock it.

PollsLive supports single choice, ranking, scales, and multi-select so you can match the method to the moment — live on a screen or async over a link, with no voter login. Common scenarios in live voting for nonprofits & AGMs.

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