New Brunswick · Municipality of Hampton

How to run for Council in Hampton

A plain-English guide to the 2026 cycle — eligibility, deadlines, paperwork, and key local contacts for councillor candidates in Hampton, New Brunswick.

Election day: Monday, May 11, 2026
Population (2021)
9,345
Council seats
5 seats
Term
4 years
Wards
3

Step 1

Are you eligible?

On the day you file your nomination paper for councillor in Hampton, you must be:

  • A Canadian citizen.
  • At least 18 years old.
  • A resident of Hampton, OR a non-resident owner or tenant of land in Hampton (or the spouse of one).
  • Not legally disqualified from running.
Common disqualifications include sitting judges, sitting MPs / Senators / MPPs (must resign before filing), municipal employees (must take an unpaid leave or resign), and people serving a sentence in a penal institution.

Step 2

What does the councillor do?

Councillors in Hampton vote on by-laws, the annual budget, and local services like parks, transit, and zoning. They are the most direct point of contact between residents and city hall.

RoleSeatsTermNotes
Councillor-at-Large44 yrsTown-wide
Councillor (Wards 1–3)1 each4 yrsWard residency required

Step 3

The nomination process

Filing happens at Elections New Brunswick, in person during regular office hours and on nomination day until 2:00 PM. You'll need to bring:

  • Nomination paper, signed in the presence of the clerk or a commissioner of oaths.
  • 10 nominators from eligible electors of Hampton.
  • Government-issued photo ID showing your name and qualifying address.
  • Filing fee: None — the deposit was eliminated in 2004.

Where to file

Elections NB Municipal Returning Office for Hampton.

Step 4

Key dates — 2026 cycle

DateEvent
Apr 10, 5:00 p.m.Nomination period closes (last day to file)
May 11, 2026Election day
May 31, 2026New term of council begins

Step 5

Campaign finance

New Brunswick has no campaign-finance regulation at the local level — no contribution caps, no spending limits, no financial-statement requirement.

Local

Specific to Hampton

  • Post-reform expanded town. The 2023 reform brought former Hampton parish LSDs into the town; Wards 1–3 reflect the larger boundary. Many newer "Hampton" voters are first-cycle as town residents.
  • Sussex / KV commuter overlap. Hampton has historic ties to both the Kennebecasis Valley (Quispamsis/Rothesay) and the Sussex area; voters split commuting patterns. Candidates often emphasize highway access (Route 1, Route 121) and rural service delivery.

Ballot

Other roles on the same ballot

Voters in Hampton also choose:

  • MayorAt-large
  • Anglophone South DEC memberSame ballot

Sources

Official resources

Related guides

Also running in Hampton?

Considering a different office? We have plain-English guides for every position on the Hampton ballot:

This page is a plain-English summary, not legal advice. Always confirm details with Elections New Brunswick and the most recent provincial candidate guide before filing. Last reviewed 2026-05-01.

How RidingDesk helps

Running for Council in Hampton? We built the platform for you.

RidingDesk is a Canadian-built campaign platform for municipal, provincial, and federal candidates. Hosted in Canada, MEA-compliant out of the box, and shaped by the way local campaigns actually run.

Collect your nominators online

Stand up a public nomination page in minutes. Supporters fill in their info from their phone — you witness their physical signature later when you bring the paperwork in.

Recruit and manage volunteers

Sign-up forms, shift scheduling, and a single place where the whole team knows what's next.

Canvass smarter

Door-knocking with turf cutting, pinned maps, and walk lists generated from the Hampton voters list.

Fundraise inside the rules

Stripe-powered donation pages with built-in MEA contribution-limit and tax-receipt logic. Receipts signed by your registered Official Agent.

Free until October 26, 2026 — no credit card required.