Find my senators
Find your U.S. senators and know when the Senate is the office that matters.
Find the two U.S. senators who represent your state, then contact them about Senate bills, votes, confirmations, and legislation.
Every state has two U.S. senators. That part is simple. The harder question is whether your senators can act on the thing you care about right now.
Modern Action answers the lookup question quickly, then explains the Senate-specific action: a bill moving through the Senate, a companion bill, a vote, a confirmation, or a public-position window.
When to start with your senators
Statewide office
Senators represent the whole state, so your street address matters less than your state for identifying them.
Senate decision
Contact senators when the next meaningful action is a Senate vote, hearing, nomination, treaty, or public position.
Specific ask
Name the bill, nomination, or issue and ask for the vote, cosponsorship, amendment, or statement you want.
Senate lookup works better when the bill is clear.
When you search find my senators, you usually need names, contact links, and confidence that you are reaching the correct offices. You also need to know whether the Senate can still do anything about the issue.
Modern Action shows what the bill means, whether the Senate can still act, and what kind of ask fits your senators.
The right senator message is direct.
A Senate message should not bury the request. Say the issue, say the bill or nomination if there is one, say your position, and ask what you want the senator to do next.
If the next action is really in the House, Modern Action says that too. Honest guidance builds trust.
Senate contact checklist
- Your state and both senators are confirmed.
- The issue has a Senate bill, vote, hearing, nomination, or public-position path.
- Your ask names the Senate action you want.
- Your message includes your constituent information.
- You send before the relevant Senate window closes.
Common questions
How many U.S. senators do I have?
Every state has two U.S. senators. Both represent the full state in the Senate.
Do senators represent districts?
No. Senators represent the entire state. House representatives represent congressional districts within a state.
Can I contact senators about House bills?
Yes, especially when a House bill is likely to reach the Senate, when a companion Senate bill exists, or when senators are taking public positions on the issue.
