Voter registration forms have two address choices, residential address and mailing address. Students who live on campus will need to fill in both.
Your campus residential address:
The Leon County Supervisor of Elections advises that you use only your residence hall name (and not the hall's street address or your campus mailbox number) as your residential address.
Your on-campus mailing address:
Your campus mailbox or another address can then be used as your mailing address. Using the appropriate mailing address is critical because that is where you will receive your voter registration card and other important election literature. This is also the address you will use to request a vote-by-mail ballot.
The mailing address for all on-campus housing residents is:
Student Name
75 N. Woodward Ave., U-box #___
Tallahassee, FL 32313–7500
Registered at a different address?
If you are registered to vote at a different address but want to vote at your FSU address, you may update your voter registration address at the StudentVote.org website or the RegistertoVoteFlorida.gov website.
If you would rather vote at your hometown address; we recommend selecting the vote-by-mail option at least 30 days before the next election and changing the mailing address on your voter registration form to your address at FSU. You can then vote in your hometown elections through vote-by-mail.
Already received a vote-by-mail ballot for a different address?
If you are registered to vote in another Florida county and have already received a vote-by-mail ballot from that county, but have not mailed it, you may still vote in Leon county. You can change your voter registration residence address to Leon county by phone, online, or, during early voting, at the polling location (the supervisor of elections recommends changing your address before going to the polls). You may only change this information past the Florida registration deadline if you were already registered in a different Florida county. If you have your vote-by-mail ballot in your possession, you should bring it to the polling location to be invalidated, but this is not necessary. If you don't have your vote-by-mail ballot in your possession, the poll workers will confirm that they have not received your ballot. However, if it is confirmed that your vote-by-mail ballot has been received, you cannot vote a regular ballot at the polls. If you believe this determination to be incorrect, you can cast a provisional ballot and it will be counted upon confirmation that your vote-by-mail ballot has not be received.