Article 5 of the Constitution provides for the 
amendment of the Constitution by various means (see The 
Amendments Page for details). However an amendment is proposed, it does 
not become part of the Constitution unless it is ratified by three-quarters of 
the states (either the legislatures thereof, or in amendment conventions). The 
following is a record of each ratified amendment and the states and dates that 
led to the ratification. The Constitutional 
Timeline and the Ratification Grid may also 
be of interest.
The information contained on this page was found on the Amendments 
to the Constitution Page at Emory University’s site and on the Text of the 
Amendments Page at the GPO’s site. As noted on those pages, the dates 
published here are based on the best information available.
There is some disagreement about the ability of a state to rescind an 
amendment ratification prior to full ratification. In U.S. history, thus far, 
no rescinded ratifications have made a difference in the long run, though 
they certainly have happened, especially to the Reconstruction Amendments, 
13 through 15. On this page, only dates of first ratification 
are listed. States that never accepted an amendment are not 
listed at all.
In each table, the “*” column will contain a * symbol next to the state that 
provided the required three-quarters vote for ratification. Note that the 
number of states required for ratification increased through history – some 
amendments, then, required more states at the time of ratification than they 
needed at the time of proposal.
The first ten amendments, commonly known as a 
group as the Bill of Rights, were all ratified at once. The 
amendments were proposed on September 25, 1789.