Are there any limits to how I can vote? What are they?

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up vote 41 down vote accepted

There are limits to how much you can vote per day.

  • Maximum 30 all-purpose votes per day per user (up or down)
    • Maximum 10 additional question-only votes per day per user
  • Upvotes available for users with 15 or more reputation
  • Downvotes available for users with 125 or more reputation
  • At 15 or more reputation, at least 5 spam/offensive flag votes per day per user
    • One additional spam/offensive flag vote per 2000 reputation or 20 flag-weight, to a maximum of 100 spam/offensive votes
  • At 10k reputation, at least 5 delete votes per day per user
    • One additional delete vote per 1000 reputation, to a maximum of 30 delete votes
  • At least 10 general moderator flag votes per day per user with 15 or more reputation.
    • One additional general moderator flag vote per every 1k of reputation or 20 flag-weight, up to a maximum of 100.
  • Maximum 12 close/open votes per day per user with 3,000 or more reputation.
  • When you have 5 votes or fewer remaining, a popup will inform you how many votes you have remaining.
  • When you reach the limit and try to vote, a red popup will indicate the number of hours you need to wait before voting again.
  • The website uses the UTC/GMT clock for all users - A new day starts at 00:00:00 UTC/GMT (see: time.gov UTC Clock)

There are also limits on changing your votes.

  • In general, once you have voted, you cannot change your vote. There are two exceptions.
    • Exception one: you may change your vote an unlimited number of times within a very brief window from the first vote you cast on that post.
    • Exception two: you may change your vote after every time the post is edited. A new window starts with the first vote you cast after each edit.
  • To simply undo a vote — i.e. make it as if you had never voted in the first place — click the "lit up" vote button. The result will be that neither an upvote nor a downvote is active, and you can come back to vote any time you like. Only cast votes are locked in.
  • To reverse a vote — i.e. change an upvote to a downvote or vice versa — click the "unlit" vote button, as you usually would. There is no need to perform an undo first.
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Thank you Sam. I just deleted my answer. I wanted to be sure you was ok with the suggested new informations I posted before directly put them in your post. – VonC Oct 23 '08 at 9:03
I wasn't my post, check the history. I just pasted in the more complete answer from the unofficial FAQ – Sam Hasler Oct 23 '08 at 14:03
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Why does it reset at 0:00 UTC GMT? I realize the web is global, but maybe it would make more sense to have a 30 vote limit in 24 hours. – Jim McKeeth Jan 6 '09 at 1:40
You do get 30 votes in 24 hours. 0:00.00 to 23:59.59 – jjnguy Jan 6 '09 at 2:07
I assume Jim means 24 hours from the first vote – Bedwyr Humphreys Feb 27 '09 at 19:29
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That would make sense. However it is probably much easier for them to just use a continuous clock. – jjnguy Feb 27 '09 at 19:34
Is that USNO clock right? It's showing 16:54:46 right now. It's currently 8:55pm Wednesday (GMT) according to Google. That USNO site is kind of ghetto ("Clock Requires Netscape") – Andy White Mar 11 '09 at 20:55
USNO is the United States Naval Observatory. The site might be retro, but the clock isn't; it's used to run all USN subs and ships, as well as lots of other US military and non-military stuff. <g> I just checked, and selecting my time zone is exactly in synch with everything else here. – Ken White Mar 11 '09 at 22:10
Sorry, retro would be a better word than "ghetto." I know the actual clock is tried and true, but I think the web-site clock is messed up: tycho.usno.navy.mil/cgi-bin/… Am I just seeing things? That doesn't look like UTC time to me... maybe it's my browser? – Andy White Mar 11 '09 at 22:26
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