Drawing on public opinion surveys conducted in Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania in the summer of 2021, the aim of this paper is twofold: first, to examine levels of public satisfaction with the authorities in handling the Coronavirus Pandemic and, second, to explore attitudes towards COVID-19 vaccination. One working assumption is that satisfaction with the handling of the pandemic corresponds with general political satisfaction, including political trust, satisfaction with democracy, and more. Attitudes towards vaccination are likely to be influenced by the same factors, but nevertheless involve a more complex cocktail of factors, such as ethnic majority/minority status, personal beliefs, degree and type of social networks, age, education, degree of information and knowledge, degree and type of media use, risk aversion, sense of collective responsibility, accessibility of vaccination, and more.