Spokesman Jordi Turull told reporters there would be "2,315 polling stations all over the region" and more than 7,200 people involved in holding the referendum despite a crackdown by Madrid.
"A total of 5.3 million Catalans who have the right to vote are called to vote," he said.
At the end of the press briefing, Turull, Catalan Vice- President Oriol Junqueras and Raul Romeva, in charge of foreign relations for the Catalan executive, unveiled a plastic ballot box with a regional government stamp on it.
But they had failed to find any ballot boxes until yesterday, when police seized 100 from a warehouse in a Catalan town, although the company in charge alleged they were destined for internal elections at the FC Barcelona football club.
More From This Section
Over the past few days, judges and prosecutors have also ordered the closure of websites linked to the vote and the detention of key members of the team organising the referendum.
The electoral board set up to oversee the vote has been dissolved, and on Wednesday a judge ordered police to prevent public buildings from being used as polling stations.
And Catalonia's separatist executive has vowed to go ahead despite Madrid's ban.
Junqueras told reporters that if "someone closes a polling station, there is an alternative for citizens to vote," without giving further details.
He urged people to vote "responsibly" and "not to yield to provocations of those who want to stop the vote.