OPINION
COCHRAN, J.,
delivered the opinion of the Court
in which MEYERS, PRICE, WOMACK, JOHNSON and HOLCOMB, J.J., joined.
Appellant was charged with credit card abuse under section 32.31 of the Texas [741]*741Penal Code. The indictment contained three paragraphs, alleging three separate criminal acts — stealing a credit card, receiving a stolen credit card, and fraudulently presenting a credit card to pay for goods or services. The three application paragraphs in the jury charge permitted the jury to convict appellant if some of the jurors found that he stole the credit card, others believed he received a stolen credit card, and still others thought that he fraudulently presented it. The Eastland Court of Appeals held that this jury charge “did not require that the jurors unanimously agree upon any one of the three alternate theories,” and thus, it violated both the Texas Constitution and state statutes which require a unanimous jury verdict.1 The court of appeals further found that, although appellant affirmatively stated that he had “no objection” to the jury charge, this error was reversible under Almanza2 because appellant suffered “egregious harm.”3 We granted the State’s petition for discretionary review to determine the correctness of that decision.4 Because we agree with the court of appeals’ reasoning and result, we affirm its judgment.
I.
The evidence at trial showed that, on December 13, 2002, appellant went to a karaoke bar in Houston around 11 p.m. and ordered a couple of beers. He gave Hanh Nguyen, the Vietnamese manager of the bar, a credit card. The name on the credit card was Hong Truong. Mr. Nguyen was immediately suspicious because “Hong” is a woman’s name, and, serendipitously enough, “Hong Truong” is the name of Mr. Nguyen’s ex-wife. Mr. Nguyen immediately called his ex-wife and asked her to come down to the bar. Meanwhile, appellant pulled out a large stack of credit cards, as well as an HMO and dental plan card, all in the name of Hong Truong, and asked: “Which one of these can I use?” Mr. Nguyen declined to take any of them, and appellant sat quietly finishing his beer.
Mr. Nguyen told his security guard to call the police. They arrived at about the same time as Hong Truong. She told her ex-husband and the policeman that all of her credit cards had been stolen when her apartment was burglarized a few weeks earlier. She had come home from visiting her sick grandfather in the hospital on [742]*742Thanksgiving Day and found that the lock on her window had been broken and her apartment ransacked. All of her credit cards had been in a purse in her bedroom closet. As far as she knew, none of the cards had been used after the burglary because she had called and canceled them. Ms. Truong identified the credit card that appellant had given to Mr. Nguyen as one of her credit cards that had been stolen during the burglary.
Ms. Truong had seen appellant around her apartment complex several times. He had knocked on her door before, but she did not open the door for him because she had a small child. Appellant had also asked her for money. He made her nervous.
Appellant testified that he had come to America from Vietnam and had lived here for eleven years, but he did not speak much English. He worked on a shrimp boat. He said that his friend Mike gave him the credit cards while they were playing pool. Mike wanted appellant to give the credit cards to Mr. Nguyen, so appellant waited at the bar until Mr. Nguyen came in. Meanwhile, he bought a beer and paid for it with cash. He insisted that he did not try to use a credit card to pay for the beer. “I don’t know about credit card because I’m from Vietnam. I never use credit card. I know nothing about credit card.” He denied burglarizing Ms. Truong’s apartment or stealing any of her credit cards. He did admit to having a prior burglary conviction.
The application paragraphs of the jury charge instructed the jury to find appellant guilty if it concluded that he committed credit card abuse by any one of three separate acts.5 Appellant’s counsel stated that he had no objection to the jury charge.
The prosecutor told the jury during his closing argument that the jury charge did not require that the jurors unanimously agree upon any one of the three alternate theories:
You know what? I have all the ways that we can prove it. You know, he even testified that, you know, he received the card from someone else.
I don’t know how, you know — / don’t know if I proved all three or one or two or all — I have no idea. You know, what I do know is that for sure the credit card, he had no right to use it. That’s clear. And that he tried to present it and it was presented to Mr. Nguyen. And he was trying to get something for it. That’s clear. That’s how simple this is. (emphasis added).
The jury returned a general guilty verdict and sentenced appellant to two years in a state jail facility, plus a $3500 fine.
[743]*743In his sole point of error on appeal, appellant argued that his constitutional and statutory right to a unanimous jury verdict was violated “by the disjunctive submission in the jury charge of two or more separate offenses.”6 First, the court of appeals, preseiently anticipating this Court’s decision in Bluitt v. State,7 concluded that it could address the merits of appellant’s complaint even though he had affirmatively said he had no objection to the jury charge.8 Second, the court of appeals held that the trial court erred in submitting the three separate offenses set out in application paragraphs of the jury charge in the disjunctive because such a charge would allow for a non-unanimous jury verdict.9 Third, it concluded that this error was “egregious” under Almanza “because it deprived appellant of his right to a unanimous jury verdict and, thus, denied appellant a fair and impartial trial.”10 The court of appeals reversed the judgment of the trial court and remanded the case for a new trial.
II.
In its petition for discretionary review, the State contends that the court of appeals erred in finding that appellant was denied his right to a unanimous verdict. First, it argues that the application paragraphs merely set out alternate means of committing a single offense of credit card abuse, but those paragraphs did not allege separate credit card abuse offenses. Second, the State argues alternatively that the application paragraphs “merely showed repeated instances of commission of the offense of credit card abuse.” Because appellant failed to request the State to elect which single offense it would rely upon for conviction, it was permissible to submit the three separate offenses in the disjunctive. Each juror could then decide which of the three criminal acts it thought the State had proven and return a general verdict so long as all of the jurors unanimously agreed that he had committed the general offense of credit card abuse. In sum, according to the State, there was no error, much less egregious harm.
Our first duty in analyzing a jury-charge issue is to decide whether error exists.11
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OPINION
COCHRAN, J.,
delivered the opinion of the Court
in which MEYERS, PRICE, WOMACK, JOHNSON and HOLCOMB, J.J., joined.
Appellant was charged with credit card abuse under section 32.31 of the Texas [741]*741Penal Code. The indictment contained three paragraphs, alleging three separate criminal acts — stealing a credit card, receiving a stolen credit card, and fraudulently presenting a credit card to pay for goods or services. The three application paragraphs in the jury charge permitted the jury to convict appellant if some of the jurors found that he stole the credit card, others believed he received a stolen credit card, and still others thought that he fraudulently presented it. The Eastland Court of Appeals held that this jury charge “did not require that the jurors unanimously agree upon any one of the three alternate theories,” and thus, it violated both the Texas Constitution and state statutes which require a unanimous jury verdict.1 The court of appeals further found that, although appellant affirmatively stated that he had “no objection” to the jury charge, this error was reversible under Almanza2 because appellant suffered “egregious harm.”3 We granted the State’s petition for discretionary review to determine the correctness of that decision.4 Because we agree with the court of appeals’ reasoning and result, we affirm its judgment.
I.
The evidence at trial showed that, on December 13, 2002, appellant went to a karaoke bar in Houston around 11 p.m. and ordered a couple of beers. He gave Hanh Nguyen, the Vietnamese manager of the bar, a credit card. The name on the credit card was Hong Truong. Mr. Nguyen was immediately suspicious because “Hong” is a woman’s name, and, serendipitously enough, “Hong Truong” is the name of Mr. Nguyen’s ex-wife. Mr. Nguyen immediately called his ex-wife and asked her to come down to the bar. Meanwhile, appellant pulled out a large stack of credit cards, as well as an HMO and dental plan card, all in the name of Hong Truong, and asked: “Which one of these can I use?” Mr. Nguyen declined to take any of them, and appellant sat quietly finishing his beer.
Mr. Nguyen told his security guard to call the police. They arrived at about the same time as Hong Truong. She told her ex-husband and the policeman that all of her credit cards had been stolen when her apartment was burglarized a few weeks earlier. She had come home from visiting her sick grandfather in the hospital on [742]*742Thanksgiving Day and found that the lock on her window had been broken and her apartment ransacked. All of her credit cards had been in a purse in her bedroom closet. As far as she knew, none of the cards had been used after the burglary because she had called and canceled them. Ms. Truong identified the credit card that appellant had given to Mr. Nguyen as one of her credit cards that had been stolen during the burglary.
Ms. Truong had seen appellant around her apartment complex several times. He had knocked on her door before, but she did not open the door for him because she had a small child. Appellant had also asked her for money. He made her nervous.
Appellant testified that he had come to America from Vietnam and had lived here for eleven years, but he did not speak much English. He worked on a shrimp boat. He said that his friend Mike gave him the credit cards while they were playing pool. Mike wanted appellant to give the credit cards to Mr. Nguyen, so appellant waited at the bar until Mr. Nguyen came in. Meanwhile, he bought a beer and paid for it with cash. He insisted that he did not try to use a credit card to pay for the beer. “I don’t know about credit card because I’m from Vietnam. I never use credit card. I know nothing about credit card.” He denied burglarizing Ms. Truong’s apartment or stealing any of her credit cards. He did admit to having a prior burglary conviction.
The application paragraphs of the jury charge instructed the jury to find appellant guilty if it concluded that he committed credit card abuse by any one of three separate acts.5 Appellant’s counsel stated that he had no objection to the jury charge.
The prosecutor told the jury during his closing argument that the jury charge did not require that the jurors unanimously agree upon any one of the three alternate theories:
You know what? I have all the ways that we can prove it. You know, he even testified that, you know, he received the card from someone else.
I don’t know how, you know — / don’t know if I proved all three or one or two or all — I have no idea. You know, what I do know is that for sure the credit card, he had no right to use it. That’s clear. And that he tried to present it and it was presented to Mr. Nguyen. And he was trying to get something for it. That’s clear. That’s how simple this is. (emphasis added).
The jury returned a general guilty verdict and sentenced appellant to two years in a state jail facility, plus a $3500 fine.
[743]*743In his sole point of error on appeal, appellant argued that his constitutional and statutory right to a unanimous jury verdict was violated “by the disjunctive submission in the jury charge of two or more separate offenses.”6 First, the court of appeals, preseiently anticipating this Court’s decision in Bluitt v. State,7 concluded that it could address the merits of appellant’s complaint even though he had affirmatively said he had no objection to the jury charge.8 Second, the court of appeals held that the trial court erred in submitting the three separate offenses set out in application paragraphs of the jury charge in the disjunctive because such a charge would allow for a non-unanimous jury verdict.9 Third, it concluded that this error was “egregious” under Almanza “because it deprived appellant of his right to a unanimous jury verdict and, thus, denied appellant a fair and impartial trial.”10 The court of appeals reversed the judgment of the trial court and remanded the case for a new trial.
II.
In its petition for discretionary review, the State contends that the court of appeals erred in finding that appellant was denied his right to a unanimous verdict. First, it argues that the application paragraphs merely set out alternate means of committing a single offense of credit card abuse, but those paragraphs did not allege separate credit card abuse offenses. Second, the State argues alternatively that the application paragraphs “merely showed repeated instances of commission of the offense of credit card abuse.” Because appellant failed to request the State to elect which single offense it would rely upon for conviction, it was permissible to submit the three separate offenses in the disjunctive. Each juror could then decide which of the three criminal acts it thought the State had proven and return a general verdict so long as all of the jurors unanimously agreed that he had committed the general offense of credit card abuse. In sum, according to the State, there was no error, much less egregious harm.
Our first duty in analyzing a jury-charge issue is to decide whether error exists.11 Then, if we find error, we analyze that error for harm.12 Preservation of charge error does not become an issue until we assess harm.13 The degree of harm necessary for reversal depends on whether the appellant preserved the error by objection.14 Under Almanza, jury charge error requires reversal when the defendant has properly objected to the charge and we find “some harm” to his rights.15 When the defendant fails to ob[744]*744ject or states that he has no objection to the charge, we will not reverse for jury-charge error unless the record shows “egregious harm” to the defendant.16 Thus, we review alleged charge error by considering two questions: (1) whether error existed in the charge; and (2) whether sufficient harm resulted from the error to compel reversal.17 We turn first to the question of error.
A. Error existed in this jury charge because it allowed for a non-unanimous jury verdict.
The indictment charging appellant with credit card abuse under section 32.31 of the Penal Code alleged three statutorily different criminal acts:
1) stealing a credit card owned by Hong Truong;18
2) receiving a credit card owned by Hong Truong, knowing that it had been stolen, and acting with the intent to use it;19
3) presenting a credit card with the intent to obtain a benefit fraudulently, knowing the use was without the effective consent of the cardholder, Hong Truong.20
The State charged all three offenses in three separate paragraphs within a single count of one indictment. It sought one conviction for the commission of one credit card abuse offense by proving any of three different criminal acts, occurring at three different times, and in three different ways.
When the State charges different criminal acts, regardless of whether those acts constitute violations of the same or different statutory provisions, the jury must be instructed that it cannot return a guilty verdict unless it unanimously agrees upon the commission of any one of these criminal acts.21 In this case, for example, all twelve members of the jury must unanimously agree that appellant did at least one of three different acts: either he stole Ms. Truong’s credit card; or he received her credit card, knowing that it was stolen and intending to use it fraudulently; or he fraudulently presented her credit card with the intent to obtain a benefit.22 In [745]*745this case, however, the word “unanimously” appeared only in the “boilerplate” section of the jury charge dealing with selection of the jury foreman:
After you retire to the jury room, you should select one of your members as your Foreman. It is his or her duty to preside at your deliberations, vote with you, and when you have unanimously agreed upon a verdict, to certify to your verdict by using the appropriate form attached hereto and signing the same as Foreman.
Here the jury could well have believed that they need only be unanimous about their “verdict” of guilty or not guilty of the general offense of credit card abuse. Indeed, this unanimity instruction is worse than saying nothing because it affirmatively supports the prosecutor’s erroneous jury argument that the jurors need agree only on their ultimate general “verdict” of guilty, rather than specifying that they need to unanimously agree on any one of the three specific criminal acts set out in the jury charge.
Under our state constitution, jury unanimity is required in felony cases, and, under our state statutes, unanimity is required in all criminal cases.23 Unanimity in this context means that each and every juror agrees that the defendant committed the same, single, specific criminal act. Stealing a credit card on Monday is not the same specific criminal offense as receiving a stolen credit card on Tuesday or presenting a stolen credit card to a bartender on Wednesday. Indeed, stealing a credit card at 9:00 a.m. on Monday is not the same specific criminal offense as receiving a stolen credit card at 9:00 a.m. on Monday. These are all credit card abuse offenses, to be sure, but they are not the same, specific credit card abuse criminal acts committed at the same time or with the same mens rea and the same actus reus.
The State is mistaken in its first argument that the trial court simply submitted a single “credit card abuse” offense with three different statutory manners and means. The phrase “manner or means” describes how the defendant committed the specific statutory criminal act. It does not mean that the State can rely upon a laundry list of different criminal acts and let the individual jurors take their pick on which each believes the defendant committed.24 The State relies upon Schad v. Ari[746]*746zona,25 but that ease does not support its argument, rather it holds that a jury must be unanimous on what specific criminal act the defendant committed. In Schad, the Supreme Court noted that the actus reus was “murder.” All twelve jurors had to agree that the defendant committed that act. They did not need to be unanimous on the issue of whether the defendant murdered “with premeditation or in the course of committing a robbery.”26 The preliminary factual questions of premeditation or robbery go to “how” he committed the murder, not whether he committed the act of murder. As the Supreme Court explained:
We have never suggested that in returning general verdicts in such cases the jurors should be required to agree upon a single means of commission, any more than the indictments were required to specify one alone. In these cases, as in litigation generally, “different jurors may be persuaded by different pieces of evidence, even when they agree upon the bottom line. Plainly there is no general requirement that the jury reach agreement on the preliminary factual issues which underlie the verdict.” 27
Furthermore, the plurality opinion in Schad has been undercut by the reasoning and result in the Supreme Court’s later decision in Richardson v. United States.28 In this more recent case, the Court held that, under the “continuing criminal enterprise” statute, the jury must “agree unani[747]*747mously about which specific violations make up the ‘continuing series of violations.’ ” 29 In Richardson, as in the present case, it is not enough that the jurors might be convinced beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant committed “a series of violations in concert with others,” it must be unanimous about each specific violation (ie., which specific criminal act— which specific drug sale) that it found the defendant had committed.30 The Supreme Court explained that a federal criminal jury must unanimously agree on each “element” of the crime in order to convict, but need not agree on all the “underlying brute facts [that] make up a particular element.”31 The crucial distinction is thus between a fact that is a specific actus reus element of the crime and one that is “but the means” to the commission of a specific actus reus element.32 Richardson is precisely analogous to the present case.
The State is also mistaken in its second argument that, because the evidence shows the commission of two or more acts violating the same statutory offense, the defendant was required to request an election if he wanted the jury to reach a unanimous verdict on one single act. There are three variations on this theme, but none of them permits a non-unanimous verdict. First, the State could put on evidence of repetition of the same criminal act, but with different results.33 Second, the State could put on evidence of repetition of the same criminal act on different occasions.34 Third, the State could put on evidence, as it did in this case, of different criminal acts, each one of which [748]*748is a violation of a specific penal statute such as credit card abuse. Under any of these three scenarios, the defendant could require the State to elect which specific act it was relying upon for conviction, but he need not. Nonetheless, the jury must reach a unanimous verdict on which single, specific criminal act the defendant committed.
The present case bears great similarity to the scenario in Francis v. State,35 in which the defendant was charged with one count of indecency with a child in a single paragraph indictment.36 The State presented evidence of four separate acts of indecency, each act occurring at a different time and date. After the defendant requested the State to elect which specific act it sought to obtain a conviction, the State chose two of them — one involving touching the victim’s breasts and one touching her genitals.37 Those are separate criminal acts. These two separate acts were charged in the disjunctive in a single application paragraph,38 such that the jury could have returned a non-unanimous verdict, with some of the jurors finding that the defendant touched the child’s breast while others concluding that he touched her genitals. " In Francis, we held that a jury charge which allows for a non-unanimous verdict concerning what specific criminal act the defendant committed is error.39
In its Brief, the State attempts to distinguish Francis by arguing that appellant did not request an election, while the defendant in Francis did request an election. The State posits that jury unanimity is required only if the defendant requests an election between separate offenses. A request for an election, however, is not a prerequisite for implementing Texas’ constitutional and statutory requirement of jury unanimity. An election simply limits the number of specific offenses that the jury may consider during its deliberations. Appellant’s failure to request an election means that the jury may be instructed on several different criminal acts in the disjunctive, but it will still be instructed that it must unanimously agree on one specific criminal act.40 As the State correctly points out, one of the purposes of requiring an election is “to ensure unanimous verdicts, that is, all of the jurors agreeing that one specific incident, which constituted the offense charged in the indictment, occurred!.]”41 But the converse is not true. The failure to request an election does not eliminate a defendant’s right to a unanimous verdict.42
[749]*749There is one point upon which we disagree with the Eastland Court of Appeals. The error here is not in submitting the three separate offenses “in the disjunctive.” 43 The error is in failing to instruct the jury that it must be unanimous in deciding which one (or more) of the three disjunctively submitted offenses it found appellant committed. Indeed, the application paragraphs submitted to the jury in this case would have been clearly correct had each paragraph included just one additional word: “unanimously,” such that all twelve jurors would immediately realize that they had to agree on one specific paragraph which set out one specific criminal act.44 The general verdict form of “guilty” or “not guilty” is also proper because it does not matter which criminal act of credit card abuse the jury found appellant had committed as long as each juror agreed on the same criminal act. In this case, however, the jury was never informed, in any way, by anyone, at any time, that — as a collective body — it was required to reach a unanimous verdict concerning one specific criminal act. The way that these three application paragraphs were set out, the jury could well have been misled into believing that only its ultimate verdict of “guilty” need be unanimous. Under these particular circumstances, we conclude that, taken as a whole, the jury charge contained error.
Having found error in the jury charge, we now turn to the question of whether appellant suffered “egregious harm” because he failed to object to the jury charge.
[750]*750B. Appellant suffered “egregious harm” when the jury was repeatedly told that it need not return a unanimous verdict.
Under the Almanza standard, the record must show that a defendant has suffered actual, rather than merely theoretical, harm from jury instruction error.45 Errors that result in egregious harm are those that affect “the very basis of the case,” “deprive the defendant of a valuable right,” or “vitally affect a defensive theory.” 46 Appellant argues that he suffered actual harm from the faulty jury instruction and that he was, in fact, deprived of his valuable right to a unanimous jury verdict.
The court of appeals found egregious error under Almanza because: 1) the jury charge permitted a non-unanimous verdict; 2) during its closing argument, the State forthrightly told the jury that it need not be unanimous in its verdict (as quoted in Part I supra); and 3) “there were contested issues at trial.”47 In fact, there was more.48
Near the beginning of the State’s voir dire, the prosecutor told the jurors:
So, I’m going to explain the three ways that we’ve alleged that I’m going to intend to prove in this case: That the defendant, Mr. Ngo, on or about December 13th, in Harris County, Texas, intentionally and knowingly stole a credit card with intent to deprive without the consent of Hong Truong. That’s one way we can do it.
Second way, that the defendant, on or about December 13, in Harris County, Texas, received with intent to deprive without the consent of Hong Truong. That’s one way we can do it.
And the third way, defendant, on or about Decémber 13th, in Harris County, Texas, with intent to obtain a fraudulent benefit used or presented a credit card to Mr. Hanh Nguyen without the consent of Ms. Hong Truong. Does that make sense to everybody? There’s several different ways this can happen. Who in the first row does that not make sense to?
The important thing with this is that if three of you who end up sitting on the jury panel feel like he stole the credit card and used it, six of you think that he received it and three of you think he presented it, it doesn’t matter which one you think he did. It can be a mix and match, whichever one you believe.
Everyone in the first row agree that that’s okay? Because that’s the law. (emphasis added).
But that is not the law; that is the error in this case. Then, during the defense voir dire, while the defense was trying to explain (erroneously) that the State must prove all three criminal acts, the prosecutor objected, and the trial judge told the jurors:
There’s three ways alleged that the offense can be committed. The State must prove, to your satisfaction, one of the number of them; however, in the course of the proof, the State may prove [751]*751one to the satisfaction of part of the jury, another one to the satisfaction of others, the third one to the satisfaction of another part of the jury, but if you found the defendant guilty, you must believe the State has proved one of the three paragraphs in its entirety.
Thus, both the trial judge and the prosecution misstated the law at the very beginning of the case and at the very end.49 This is not an instance of a jury charge which is simply missing an important word — “unanimously”—which reasonable jurors might infer from the context of the entire charge or from the comments of the advocates emphasizing the correct legal principles.50 Here, the jury was affirmatively told, on three occasions, twice by the prosecutor and once by the trial judge, that it need not return a unanimous verdict. Both told the jury that “a mix and match” verdict of guilt based upon some jurors believing appellant stole a credit card, others believing he received a stolen credit card, and still others believing that he fraudulently presented one, was “the law.”51
Furthermore, the evidence was contested as appellant testified and denied committing any one of the three offenses. And, under no theory of the evidence in this case, could appellant have committed both the original theft by burglarizing Ms. Truong’s apartment and have received the [752]*752stolen credit cards from someone else who had committed the burglary. These two offenses are mutually exclusive in this particular context. If even a single juror believed that appellant was not the original thief, but did believe that he had received the stolen credit card from “Mike,” this could not have been a unanimous verdict.
In sum, this is an instance in which the original jury charge error was not corrected or ameliorated in another portion of the charge; instead, it was compounded by the one misleading statement concerning unanimity that was set out in the jury charge, as well as by the affirmative statements of both the trial judge and prosecutor that the jury could indeed return a non-unanimous verdict. And, given the state of the evidence, we — like the court of appeals— cannot determine that the jury was, in fact, unanimous in finding appellant guilty of one specific credit-card-abuse offense. Some jurors could have found appellant’s defense to one or more of the three allegations persuasive while finding another one unpersuasive. We therefore agree that appellant’s constitutional and statutory right to a unanimous jury verdict was violated and this violation caused egregious harm to his right to a fair and impartial trial.52 We affirm the judgment of the court of appeals.
WOMACK, J., filed a concurring opinion in which MEYERS, J., joined.
HERVEY, J., filed a dissenting opinion in which KEASLER, J., joined.
KELLER, P.J., dissented without opinion.