Voting Tool
Create a quick vote and see live results
Quick Poll Maker — Tips & Guide
Create instant polls and votes for teams, classrooms, events, and social decisions. No account needed — build your poll, share the screen, and collect votes in real time.
Keep Options Short
Short, clear option labels make it easier to read results at a glance. Aim for 2–5 words per option. For complex choices, use the option as a title and discuss verbally.
Limit to 5–7 Options
More than 7 options creates choice overload and splits votes too thinly. If you have many ideas, do a preliminary round to narrow down to the top candidates first.
Use for Team Decisions
Quick polls are ideal for naming decisions, prioritization votes, and "which day works best" scheduling. They make group preferences visible and reduce back-and-forth discussions.
Reset Between Sessions
If you're running the same poll for different groups, use the Reset button between sessions to clear all vote counts before the next group starts voting.
Live Voting on Shared Screen
For in-person meetings or classes, display this page on a projected screen and let participants call out their votes. The live percentage bars make results immediately clear.
Phrase Questions Neutrally
Avoid leading questions that push toward one answer. "Which option do you prefer?" is more neutral than "Don't you think Option A is better?" Neutral phrasing produces more honest results.
Type your question in the question field, then add your options one by one using the Add Option button. Once your poll is set up, participants can click any option to cast their vote. Results are shown instantly as percentage bars. No sign-up, no sharing a link — just set it up and start voting.
Yes. Click the Reset button to clear all vote counts back to zero while keeping your question and options intact. This is useful when you want to run the same poll with a different group, or if you accidentally registered test votes during setup.
You can add as many options as you need. However, for best usability we recommend keeping polls to 5–7 options. Too many options splits votes across many choices and makes it harder to identify a clear winner. For large lists, consider running a preliminary elimination round first.
Yes — this tool does not track who voted for what. It only counts the total number of votes per option. All vote data is stored locally in your browser and is not sent to any server, so votes are completely private and anonymous.