Nevada’s 2026 statewide primary on June 9 falls in the middle of desert heat, bright sun, and heavy traffic around Las Vegas and Reno. A clean, high-contrast yard sign helps your name stand out on busy corridors and neighborhood corners.
Locking in your layout now gives you one less thing to worry about as you move toward the November 3 general election.
Below are simple Nevada-ready primary yard sign template ideas you can plug your name into and hand off to our design team.
Always double-check your state and local sign rules before printing, but these layouts work for everything from city council and county commission to school board, sheriff, and legislative races across
Nevada.
Quick Nevada sign rules (not legal advice):
Nevada’s 2026 statewide primary is June 9, 2026, and the general election is November 3, 2026.
Do not place political signs in the right-of-way of state highways. NDOT says that ban applies to state highway right-of-way, including many numbered routes and some city streets under NDOT control.
Place campaign yard signs on private property where you have permission, and check local city or county rules before placing signs near public roads, medians, sidewalks, or utility poles.
During early voting and on Election Day, electioneering is restricted within 100 feet of the polling place entrance or voting area, and posted “Distance Marker” signs may be used to show that boundary.
If your sign is on private property next to a National Highway System route, NDOT has additional placement and timing rules that may apply.
Nevada primary yard sign templates you can steal:
Template 1 – Challenger, Short and Strong
Top: ELECT
Middle: FIRST + LAST NAME
Bottom: OFFICE and one short value: NEW VOICE • LOCAL FOCUS
Best for newcomers running into crowded Nevada primaries who want to feel fresh without cluttering the sign.
Template 2 – Incumbent Re-Elect Layout
Top: RE-ELECT
Middle: LAST NAME (big, bold)
Bottom: OFFICE (for example, CITY COUNCIL • WARD 3, COUNTY COMMISSION, or SHERIFF)
Great if you’re already in office and want simple name + office reinforcement on commuter routes and neighborhood corners.
Template 3 – Down-Ballot & Local
Top: VOTE JUNE 9
Middle: LAST NAME
Bottom: SCHOOL BOARD, JUDGE, or REGENT
Perfect for local and judicial races where the office matters more than party label and voters mainly remember your name.
Why we print these on SmartFlute® yard signs:
SmartFlute® is UZ Marketing’s patented yard sign board with light-blocking channels, so double-sided designs don’t ghost through in Nevada sun or under streetlights.
Eco-friendly: made from recycled material, so you can talk about sustainability while your signs work along highways, subdivision entrances, and neighborhood streets.
At UZ Marketing, we print SmartFlute® yard signs starting at $2.99 each (100 signs, 1-color) with double-sided printing, H-stakes included, free shipping, fast turnaround with rush options,
and a 14-day Price Match Guarantee as long as all specs align.
Watch out for “too good to be true” pricing on other sites. Many super-cheap offers are for smaller half-sized signs with single-sided printing,
thin material, and no stakes or shipping included. Our $2.99 each (100) pricing is for full-size 18" x 24" SmartFlute® yard signs,
so you know exactly what you’re getting.
Start your Nevada design in the candidate yard sign design tool or
ask us for a free design proof based on these templates before you file.
FAQ – Nevada primary yard signs
1. When should I put Nevada primary yard signs out?
Nevada’s 2026 statewide primary is June 9. If your signs are on private property next to a National Highway System route, NDOT says primary-election signs may be erected no more than 60 days before the primary and must be removed within 30 days after
it.
2. Where should I place Nevada campaign yard signs?
Place signs on private property where you have permission. Avoid state highway right-of-way and check local rules before placing signs near busy roads, medians, sidewalks, or public fixtures.
3. How close can Nevada campaign signs be to a polling place?
Nevada law prohibits electioneering within 100 feet of the entrance to the voting area during early voting and within 100 feet of the entrance to the polling place building on Election Day. Counties mark
this line with “Distance Marker” signs. Campaigns typically place yard signs well outside the 100-foot buffer and follow any extra instructions from local election officials to avoid complaints or
violations.
4. Do Nevada campaign yard signs need a disclaimer?
Many campaigns include a small attribution line as a practical compliance step. Nevada disclosure rules apply to certain public political advertising, but the exact requirement can depend on the type of communication and applicable exceptions, so I would
avoid a blanket claim that every yard sign always needs a disclaimer. Confirm the current rule before final printing.