Philiana Ng
April 30, 2026
Ryan Seacrest had to break the news to viewers that voting results would be delayed after the first elimination episode. Eric McCandless/Disney The first time Alexa Rockwell went to vote for her favorite contestant on American Idol this season, she found the voting methods — especially the newly implemented process of casting votes via social media — unnecessarily complicated. It immediately turned her off. “It gets a little messy,” says Rockwell, a lifelong Idol fan who has watched and voted since the show’s first season. “It’s like, if it’s not broke, don’t fix it.”
Rockwell remembers learning how to make a phone call during the early Idol seasons, when finalists had dedicated call-in numbers, and still prefers casting votes through more traditional avenues, like texting. “At least when you text ‘21523’ and you text the number [of the contestant you’re voting for], you get a text back saying you voted,” she says. “With social, you are sending it out into the void. There could be people who think they’re voting, but they’re not actually doing it right.”
Rockwell is just one of many Idol fans who have registered complaints about the new voting method since it was first introduced for the show’s 24th season. Viewers are now asked to throw support behind their favorite contestants by engaging on TikTok, Instagram, and Facebook. For their votes to count, they must leave comments with the contestant’s correctly spelled name on specific pinned posts, up to 10 times each in individual comments, during limited voting windows — usually until the last commercial break during the show’s East Coast airings on Monday nights. Only those 18 and older are allowed to vote on social media, but it’s unclear how that is being policed. Social voting replaced the official American Idol app, which had been used as one of the main voting tools in recent seasons, before the app was discontinued following the last cycle. (Viewers can still text and vote on the American Idol website.)
“The rules weren’t clear, but at the same time, they were too specific,” Rockwell says. “A simple typo or extra letter could make it so a vote doesn’t count, and I know people would have a hard time finding which post to vote on.”
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Scroll through the dedicated Idol pages on TikTok, Instagram (where the latest voting post on April 27 drew over 777,000 comments late that evening), and Facebook, and there’s ample evidence of people thinking they’re voting for their favorite finalists but leaving comments on incorrect (often old) posts, replying to someone else’s comment or their own in a thread, or simply misspelling the contestant’s name, effectively negating their votes. One fan on X longed for a return to the old voting system, calling the new social-forward methods “ridiculous.” “Every week [I] look at the Facebook American Idol post,” another fan wrote on Reddit, and it’s “filled with people trying to vote but doing it wrong. It’s a joke.” (It’s worth noting that NBC’s Idol competitor, The Voice, did away with public voting entirely this season; that show’s decisions are now made by the judges and an in-studio audience, a choice that has met with less criticism.)
Signs that Idol’s newly introduced social voting system was not being executed as planned came during the season’s first live elimination episode on March 30. As the episode wound down, longtime host Ryan Seacrest shocked the contestants and viewers when he revealed that the results would be delayed until the following week due to an “unprecedented” number of social media votes, not all of which could be counted in time. It was a first in the franchise’s storied 24-year history.
“First time it’s ever happened,” Seacrest said when he broke the news live on television. “Believe me, I’ve been here every night. We want to make sure we get every vote counted.” That prompted Idol judge Lionel Richie to respond: “We broke the machine that we created to get all the votes.”
This was just the beginning of what’s proven to be a challenging and bumpy integration of Idol’s new social voting method. Though the two singers who failed to make the Top 12 in that episode were eventually eliminated a week later on the April 6 installment, subsequent episodes have featured Seacrest explaining the social voting rules in great detail (they’ve also been spelled out in lower-third chyrons) in efforts to avoid another repeat of the headline-making voting disaster. The Idol Instagram account has also left comments telling viewers not to vote on certain posts if they want their votes to count, and to inform them that the voting window has already closed. In the meantime, each voting post sees hundreds of thousands of comments pop up within minutes of the voting window opening.
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The lack of transparency with regards to Idol’s social voting mechanism has led some to question the validity of the weekly elimination results. “Is voting on American Idol legitimate?” one fan even asked on X. “There’s too much to keep track of,” Rockwell says. Others, like Idol Season 6 alumna Melinda Dolittle, have praised the social voting system as a “brilliant and clever” way to ignite “engagement.” (Fremantle, the company that produces Idol, did not respond to Rolling Stone’s request for comment for this story.)