Skip Global Navigation to Main Content
Skip Breadcrumb Navigation
Messages for U.S. Citizens
 

This page contains the most recent message sent via e-mail from the U.S. Embassy's Consular Section directly to American citizens registered with the U.S. Embassy in Tallinn. You can find other messages here.

If you are an American citizen and wish to receive these periodic messages directly, you must subscribe to our mailing list by registering with the U.S. Embassy.

There are currently no Travel Warnings or Alerts for U.S. citizens in Estonia. However, please review the Worldwide Caution.

 

U.S. Embassy Tallinn, Estonia
Message for U.S. Citizens
Completing and Returning Absentee Ballots

October 4, 2012

Many absentee ballots already delivered to overseas voters.  Every U.S. citizen who requested an absentee ballot and selected the fax or email delivery option should have it by now.  Please vote and take steps to return your voted ballot promptly so your vote will count.  See instructions below.

Returning your ballot by mail.  Place your voted ballot in a U.S. postage-paid envelope containing the address of your local election officials.  Drop it off at the Embassy and we’ll send it back home for you without the need to pay international postage.  If you can’t visit the Embassy in person, ask a friend or colleague drop it off for you.  If it’s easier for you to use Estonia's postal system, be sure to affix sufficient international postage, and allow sufficient time for international mail delivery.  If time is tight, you may want to use a private courier service (e.g., FedEx, UPS, or DHL) to meet your state's ballot receipt deadline.

You can hand-deliver your ballot in a sealed envelope with sufficient postage paid to the Embassy on business days between 0900 and 1200 or between 1400 and 1700.  You can also attend our Voting Open House on Friday, October 5, at any time between 1200 and 1800 and use one of our preprinted envelopes to drop off your ballot.

Returning your ballot by email, fax, or upload.  Some states allow these options, but may also require you to still mail in the signed paper ballot.  Learn more at the Federal Voting Assistance Program's website at http://www.fvap.gov/.

Haven’t received your ballot yet?  Use the emergency write-in ballot.  U.S. citizens who requested an absentee ballot but haven’t received it should go to http://www.fvap.gov/ to complete a Federal Write-in Absentee Ballot.  Follow the above guidance for returning your ballot.  If you later receive your regular absentee ballot, vote and return it immediately.  Local election officials will count just one ballot per voter, and will use the regular ballot if received by your state’s ballot receipt deadline.

Forgot to register or request an absentee ballot?  Act immediately!  There are three options.

Option #1:  Register and request a ballot today using the federal post card application at http://www.fvap.gov/.  Select the electronic ballot delivery option, include your email address (and fax number) and send it to local election officials in your state.  Almost every state lets you submit it by email or fax.  Once your application is processed they will send you your ballot via fax or email depending on your state.  Vote as soon as you receive the blank ballot.  Registration deadlines vary and some are as early as October 7, so check your state’s requirements carefully.

Option#2:  Follow the instructions in Option #1, but also complete and send in a Federal Write-in Ballot at the same time to make sure your vote is counted.  This option may be the best one for first-time voters if your state requires you to submit your Federal Post Card Application by mail.  Vote and submit your regular absentee ballot if/when it arrives.  Local election officials will count just one ballot per voter, and will use the regular ballot if it's received by the ballot receipt deadline.

Option #3:  Voters from the following states can use the Federal Write-in Absentee Ballot as a combined voter registration form, absentee ballot request, and absentee ballot:  Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado, Delaware, District of Columbia, Georgia, Hawaii, Iowa, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Mississippi, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Virginia, and Washington.  (NOTE: This form must reach your local election officials by your state's absentee ballot request deadline or voter registration deadline, whichever is first.)

Returning your Federal Write-in Absentee Ballot by mail.  Follow the guidance above for returning your ballot by mail.

Returning your Federal Write-in Absentee Ballot by email or fax.  The following states allow voters to email or fax their signed, voted Federal Write-in Absentee Ballots back to local election officials:  Arizona, California (fax only), Colorado, Delaware, District of Columbia, Florida, Indiana, Kansas, Massachusetts, Mississippi, Montana, Nevada, North Carolina, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Utah, Washington, and West Virginia.  (NOTE:  see instructions at http://www.fvap.gov/ for faxing or emailing your voted ballot.)

Need help?  Please contact us at ACSTallinn@state.gov.

Have Questions?  If you have any questions about registering to vote, please contact Embassy Tallinn's Voting Assistance Officer at 668-8128, or at ACSTallinn@state.gov.

Confirm your registration and ballot delivery online.  Learn more at the Federal Voting Assistance Program's (FVAP) website at http://www.fvap.gov/.

 

Contact Information

  • Contact Information Consular Section
    U.S. Embassy
    Kentmanni 20
    15099 Tallinn
    Estonia
    Phone: 372-668-8128
    Fax: 372-668-8267
    E-mail: ACSTallinn@state.gov