Canada In Canada, elections are administered by
Elections Canada. Early in-person voting is called
advance polls, which are held on the 10th, 9th, 8th and 7th days before election day at designated advance-poll stations. Canadian voters may locate the date, hours, and address of their advance-poll station at the Elections Canada website, on their voter information card, or by telephoning Elections Canada. About 4.9 million Canadians cast advance votes in the
2019 election, and almost 5.8 million Canadians cast ballots during the four advance-poll dates of the
2021 election, setting a record. Canadians may also vote, upon application, at Elections Canada local offices (established during election seasons in every
riding in Canada), or by mail. Ballots cast via these methods are termed "special ballots." Voting by mail in Canada increased during the 2021 election, with more than 1.1 million special ballots received (including from
Canadian Forces servicemembers, Canadians living abroad, Canadians away from home on election day, and incarcerated Canadians); of this total, about 99,988 special ballots were not counted because they arrived after the receipt deadline (6 p.m. on election day), did not have a voter signature, or had some other problem.
United States participating in early voting for the
2016 elections The period since 2000 has seen a significant expansion in the number of U.S. states offering options to vote before Election Day, the percentage of the total population with those options, and the portion choosing to exercise those options. In the
2000 general election, 40% of all voting-age citizens lived in states with at least one early-voting option. A July 2024 study by the
Center for Election Innovation & Research found that nearly 97% of all voting-age citizens lived in states offering at least one option to vote in
the 2024 election. In the 2000 election, 14% of ballots were cast before Election Day. For 16 years the percentage increased steadily—21% in 2004, 31% in 2008, 33% in 2012, and 40% in 2016—before jumping to 69% in 2020 during the
COVID-19 pandemic, then returning to the long-term trend with 50% in the 2022 midterm elections. Of the 47 states that allow early in-person voting, eight have all-mail voting. In these states, each eligible, registered voter is sent a ballot, which can either be returned by mail, or dropped off at designated site during the early voting period. The duration, start date, and end date of the early in-person voting period varies from state to state, from a low of five days to a high of 50 days; the average number of days of early in-person voting is 23. In addition to (or in lieu of) in-person early voting, all states offer
absentee ballots (also called mail-in ballots) to some or all voters, with significant differences among states. As of 2024, 36 states and D.C. offer either "no-excuse absentee voting" (in which any qualified voter may cast an absentee ballot without an excuse) or conduct all elections by mail; in the remaining states, an absentee ballot will only be provided to a voter with a valid excuse. Absentee ballots are often returned to election offices by mail (see
postal voting in the United States) but some states offer "in-person absentee voting" (in which the voter requests, completes, signs, and submits the absentee ballot at a polling place). The voting experience for in-person absentee balloting is similar to the early-voting experience. and voters in
Maryland approved a constitutional amendment in November 2008 to allow early voting, starting with the primary elections in 2010. Early voting was first used in
Massachusetts for the
general election of November 2016. New York began early voting in 2019, as a result of a state law requiring eight days of early voting throughout the state. In 2022, Connecticut was one of just four remaining states without early in-person voting. In November 2022, Connecticut voters approved a constitutional amendment authorizing the state legislature to enact early in-person voting. In May 2023, the Connecticut House and Senate passed H.B. 5004, which was signed into law by Governor
Ned Lamont on June 7, 2023. The
COVID-19 pandemic in the United States led many states both to reduce the number of polling stations for the
2020 United States elections and to relax requirements for both mail-in and early voting, including mailing applications to all active registered voters and providing drop-boxes for ballots. In the November 2020 elections, about 26% of votes nationwide were cast by early in-person voting, as compared to 46% of votes cast by mail/absentee ballot and 28% of votes cast in Election Day in-person voting. After the
attempts to overturn the 2020 United States presidential election, following false claims of widespread voter fraud in the election by
Donald Trump, Republican lawmakers initiated a push to restrict early voting (see
Republican efforts to restrict voting following the 2020 presidential election). In 2020,
MTV founded the campaign for "
Vote Early Day" as a civic holiday to celebrate the concept of early voting, directed primarily at young people. The MTV program partnered with businesses and nonprofits, and its advantage being that it isn’t ‘owned’ by any one entity. == See also ==