Australian citizens may register to vote at age 18.
In Ancient Greece, citizens were allowed to vote for their leader (but only men were considered citizens. women were not allowed to vote until 1918 and only at 30 years of age).
Ireland is a democracy, so Irish citizens can vote once they reach the age of 18.
Australian citizens 18 years and over are not only eligible to vote, but legally required to do so. British subjects who were on the electoral roll before 26 January 1984 are also allowed to vote. A prisoner serving a sentence of five years or more, or a person with a standing conviction of treason, may not vote.
In the early years of America, not all citizens above the age of 21 were allowed to vote. Women were not allowed to vote until 1920. The Fifteenth Amendment granted black men the right to vote in 1870.
The youngest age is 18 years old.
Only Australian citizens can enrol: you need to be 16 or over to enrol and you need to be 18 years of age to vote.
All citizens in Spain over 18 are allowed to vote
All Australian citizens who are 18 years of age or over, and who are not incarcerated for one reason or another.
Once you become a Australian citizen then alone will you be allowed to vote. If you have a P.R. Permienent Residence will not allow you to vote , as you do not have an Australian passport yet.
You have to be 18+ to vote!!!!
British and Irish citizens resident in the UK and over 18 years of age can vote in the UK. Prisoners cannot vote.
Non-citizens, theose not yet the age of majority (18), and convicted felons who have not yet completed their sentences.