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Absentee Ballot-

You can request an absentee ballot by filling out the online absentee ballot request, downloading the PDF request, by email at voter@ocfelections.com (make sure to include required information below) or by contacting our office at 407 836-2070.  You or your designee can request an absentee ballot for all elections through the next countywide General Election (including those not yet scheduled at the time of the request).

To request an absentee ballot you are required to provide: your Name, date of birth, residential address, mailing address if different, your signature if a written request and for which elections you wish to receive a ballot for.  Florida law now allows you to request and absentee ballot for all elections through the end of the calendar year for the second ensuing regularly scheduled general election.

Requests made by a designee (immediate family members only) must also include: designee's name, relationship to voter, residential address and phone number (optional).

Your absentee ballot will arrive in the mail along with a secrecy envelope, instruction sheet, and a certificate envelope to use to return the ballot to us. Be sure to sign the certificate envelope prior to mailing it back to us. The Canvassing Board will reject your ballot if you forget to sign the certificate envelope.

If you don't want to mail your ballot, you may deliver your completed absentee ballot to the Supervisor of Elections office or to any early voting location.  You may NOT return an absentee ballot to a polling place on election day.

The last day to ask to have a ballot mailed to you is the sixth day prior to the election.  The deadline to return the ballot is 7 p.m. on election day.

 

 

 



 

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US Election Assistance Commission 
  
Federal Voting Assistance Program
     
Florida has a very broad public records law. As a result, any written communication created or received by the Orange County Supervisor of Elections Office will be made available to the public and media, upon request, unless otherwise exempt. Under Florida law, e-mail addresses are public records. If you do not want your e-mail address released in response to a public records request, do not send electronic mail to this office. Instead, contact our office by phone or in writing.