A step-by-step 2026 guide to voting from Mexico as a US citizen abroad: FVAP, the FPCA, requesting your absentee ballot, state deadlines, plus a note for Canadian expats.
2026-07-11
Moving to Mexico doesn’t cost you your vote. As a US citizen living abroad, you retain the right to vote in federal elections (and often state and local ones) through the absentee voting process. The system is well-established and free — but it’s also a little bureaucratic, and it runs on deadlines that vary by state. Miss a deadline and there’s usually no recovering it, so the winning strategy is simple: register early, every year.
This guide walks through exactly how it works in 2026, including a note at the end for Canadian expats, whose rules are different.
This is general civic information, not legal advice. Confirm current requirements with official sources — the Federal Voting Assistance Program (FVAP) and your state’s election office — as rules can change.
The single most important resource is the Federal Voting Assistance Program (FVAP), the US government’s official program for overseas and military voters. Its website walks you through everything and generates the forms you need.
The core form is the Federal Post Card Application (FPCA). This one document does double duty: it registers you to vote and requests your absentee ballot at the same time. Key facts:
Here’s the whole process, start to finish.
You vote in your last state of US residence, using your last US address — even if you no longer own property there and have no plans to return. This is your “voting residence.” Don’t overthink it; it’s simply where you last lived.
Go through FVAP’s online assistant, which fills out the FPCA based on your answers. You’ll provide your voting-residence address and a way to receive your ballot (email, fax, or mail, depending on your state).
Print, sign, and send the FPCA to the local election official in your voting jurisdiction. Depending on the state, you can submit by email, fax, or postal mail. FVAP tells you which methods your state accepts and gives you the correct contact.
Once registered, your blank ballot is sent to you — many states now offer electronic delivery by email, which is a lifesaver from abroad. States are generally required to send ballots to overseas voters at least 45 days before a federal election.
Fill it out and return it by your state’s accepted method before the deadline. Some states allow electronic return; others require mail. If mailing from Mexico, allow generous time — international mail is slow and unpredictable.
If you requested your ballot on time but it never arrives, use the Federal Write-In Absentee Ballot (FWAB) — an emergency backup ballot, also available through FVAP. It ensures a slow mail system doesn’t silence your vote.
There is no single national deadline. Every state sets its own dates for registration, ballot requests, and ballot return. Some accept ballots postmarked by Election Day; others must receive them by then. This variation is exactly why early action matters.
| Milestone | General guidance | Reality check |
|---|---|---|
| Submit FPCA (register + request ballot) | As early in the year as possible | Do it in January if you can |
| Blank ballot sent to you | ~45 days before a federal election | Confirm your state’s date |
| Return your voted ballot | Varies: postmark vs. receipt deadline | Check YOUR state precisely |
| Use FWAB backup | If ballot doesn’t arrive in time | Have it ready as insurance |
Always verify your specific state’s dates on FVAP or your state election office’s website — treat the table above as orientation, not gospel.
Overseas voting rights aren’t identical across every contest, and this catches people off guard:
When you complete your FPCA, your local election office determines which ballot you’re entitled to based on your state’s rules — another reason to file early and let them sort it out.
A few avoidable errors account for most missed votes from abroad:
Every one of these is preventable with an early start and a quick check of your state’s specifics on FVAP.
A common worry: “If I vote in a state, will that state try to tax me?” Voting absentee as an overseas citizen is a federal right and generally should not, by itself, create state tax residency. But state rules on residency and taxation are genuinely complex and vary. If you’re concerned about state tax exposure, talk to a cross-border tax professional rather than guessing.
If you’re a Canadian citizen living in Mexico, your rules are separate and have changed in recent years. Canada expanded voting rights for citizens abroad, and many long-term expats can now vote in federal elections via Elections Canada’s process for electors residing outside Canada. You typically register with the International Register of Electors, receive a special ballot by mail, and return it by the deadline. Provincial and territorial rules differ. Confirm the current process directly with Elections Canada, as eligibility and procedures continue to evolve.
Living in Mexico and staying a full participant in your home country’s democracy are completely compatible. For US citizens, the recipe is: file your FPCA through FVAP early each year, choose electronic ballot delivery, watch your state’s specific deadlines, and keep the FWAB in your back pocket as a backup. For Canadians, register with Elections Canada and confirm the current rules. It takes an afternoon once a year — a small price to keep your voice.
While you’re settling into life abroad, we’re here for the housing side of the equation. Explore properties across Mexico’s most popular expat destinations, or schedule a call with the Mexico Living team to talk through where you’d like to plant roots.
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