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The California Secretary
of State provides authentication of public official signatures on
documents to be used outside the United States of America. The country
of destination determines whether the authentication is an Apostille or
Certification.
- The California
Secretary of State can only authenticate documents issued in
the State of California by the following public officials and their
deputies:
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County Clerks or
Recorders |
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Executive Officers |
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Court Administrators |
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Judges of the Superior
Court |
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Executive Clerks |
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Notaries Public |
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Officers whose authority
is not limited to any particular county |
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State Officials
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- Some examples of
documents submitted for authentications are:
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Birth Certificates |
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Marriage Licenses |
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Bylaws |
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Papers for adoption purposes |
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Certificates of Non-Marital Status |
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Powers of Attorney |
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Corporate documents such as articles, mergers, amendments, etc. |
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School records such as diplomas, transcripts, letters relating to
degrees, etc. |
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Deeds of Assignment |
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References and Job Certification |
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Distributorship Agreements |
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Trademarks |
- Documents submitted to
the Secretary of State for authentication must be currently certified
by the appropriate public official or must be notarized by a
California Notary Public.
Customers requiring authentication of any school records (e.g.,
college transcripts) must obtain a notarized copy of the record from
the high school, university, etc., before submitting the documents for
authentication.
Any document executed by County Health Officers and County Local
Registrars can be authenticated only if the document is first
certified by the county clerk/recorder.
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The Secretary of State’s four regional offices (Fresno, Los
Angeles, San Diego and San Francisco) can only authenticate a
California notary public’s signature if the county
clerk/recorder (on the notary public’s stamp) first authenticates
the signature. The customer must take the notarized document to
the county clerk/recorder for certification and then submit the
certified document to one of the four regional offices for
authentication. Having a document certified at the county level is
only required for authentication at our regional offices. The
Secretary of State's Sacramento office can authenticate documents
notarized by a California notary public without being certified at
the county level. |
- To avoid delays that
may result from out-of-date documents, a document certified by a
county official (e.g. county clerk) should have a certification date
within the last five years or a new certified copy should be obtained
from the appropriate county official.
- The customer must
identify the country of destination when the documents are submitted
to the Secretary of State. If documents are submitted by mail to the
Sacramento office, a letter identifying the country of destination
must accompany the documents. To facilitate the processing of
documents submitted by mail, please include a self-addressed envelope.
- Documents can be hand
delivered to any office location for over-the-counter processing
between the hours of 8:00 am and 4:30 pm, Monday through Friday
(excluding holidays) or mailed to the Sacramento office. Regional
offices do not process mailed in documents. Office locations are as
follows:
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Sacramento Office |
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Street Address: |
Mailing Address: |
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Notary Public Section
1500 11th Street, 2nd Floor
Sacramento, CA 95814
(916) 653-3595 |
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Notary Public Section
Post Office Box 942877
Sacramento, CA 94277-0001 |
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Regional Offices |
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Fresno: |
Los Angeles: |
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1315 Van Ness Avenue, Suite 203
Fresno, CA 93721
(559) 445-6900 |
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300 South Spring Street, Room 12513
Los Angeles, CA 90013
(213) 897-3062 |
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San Diego: |
San Francisco: |
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1350 Front Street, Suite 2060
San Diego, CA 92101
(619) 525-4113 |
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455 Golden Gate Avenue, Suite 14500
San Francisco, CA 94102-7007
(415) 557-8000 |
- When submitting documents to any of our offices for
over-the-counter processing, no appointment is necessary. Customers
are served on a “first come first serve” basis.
- Documents submitted for over-the-counter processing are normally
processed within an hour. The average processing time for documents
submitted by mail is approximately two weeks.
- There is a $20.00 processing fee (per signature authenticated) and
a $6.00 special handling fee (per public official for documents
submitted over the counter). Payments for documents submitted:
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by mail to Sacramento can be made by check or money order. |
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over-the-counter in Sacramento can be made by check, money order,
cash, or credit card (Visa or MasterCard). |
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over-the-counter in any of the four regional offices can be made
by check, money order, or credit card (Visa or MasterCard).
Regional offices are not able to accept cash. |
Checks or money orders should be made payable to the Secretary of
State.
General Information
- In 1961 many nations joined together to create a simplified method
of "legalizing" documents for universal recognition. Members of the
conference, referred to as the Hague Convention, adopted a document
referred to as an Apostille that would be recognized by all member
nations.
Documents sent to member nations, completed with an Apostille
at the state level, may be submitted directly to the member nation
without further action.
Documents sent to non-member nations requiring a Certification
of the signature of the state’s public official at the state level,
then must be transmitted to the
Authentication Office of the Department of State in Washington,
D.C. for the Authentication of the State Official’s signature.
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