Rajasthan achieved a landmark milestone in electoral administration by becoming the first state in India to complete 100% digitisation of its electoral rolls under the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) programme conducted by the Election Commission of India. The Special Intensive Revision is a periodic, structured exercise aimed at updating electoral rolls to ensure they are accurate, comprehensive, and free of errors — covering additions of newly eligible voters (those turning 18), deletions of deceased or shifted voters, and corrections of errors in names, addresses, and photographs. The full digitisation of electoral rolls means that every voter entry in Rajasthan is now available in a verified digital format, accessible through the Election Commission's Voter Service Portal and enabling better voter facilitation services such as online form submission, status tracking, and digital voter ID cards (e-EPIC). This achievement is significant for a state with a large electorate of approximately 5.2 crore registered voters spread across 200 Assembly constituencies and 25 Lok Sabha constituencies, including geographically challenging areas like the Thar Desert, tribal belt of southern Rajasthan, and remote Aravalli villages. The digitisation supports the Election Commission's broader Digital India-aligned initiative to enhance electoral transparency, reduce impersonation and bogus voter entries, and improve the quality of voter data. Rajasthan's electoral administration has been under the spotlight following the state assembly elections in December 2023 and the Lok Sabha elections in April-May 2024.