We can meet you online to get your important documents notarized for Same Day Texas Secretary of State Apostille Service.
Texas Apostille service can be done for you on the very same day. We will hand deliver your document to the Texas SOS for authentication so your document can be used in a foreign country.
2121 Lohmans Crossing Road, Suite 504-707, Austin, Texas 78734, United States
Mon | 09:00 am – 09:00 pm | |
Tue | 09:00 am – 09:00 pm | |
Wed | 09:00 am – 09:00 pm | |
Thu | 09:00 am – 09:00 pm | |
Fri | 09:00 am – 09:00 pm | |
Sat | 09:00 am – 09:00 pm | |
Sun | 10:00 am – 07:00 pm |
Get your Texas Apostille hand delivered by a Texas Notary. We meet you at your home, office, or local coffee shop, and then we take your docs to the Texas Secretary of State for authentication to get apostilled. We can hand deliver back to you! Ask about our same day service.
You can mail your documents to the address below:
Texas Notary Live
2121 Lohmans Crossing Rd.
Suite 504-707
Austin, Texas 78734
In this video, I'll show you the steps to get an online notarization and Texas Apostille on the same day. You can be anywhere in the world during our online session. I am a Texas Online Notary, and I will meet you online to get your important documents notarized. Then, we hand-walk your documents to the Texas Secretary of State. Learn the quick and easy way to get your documents apostilled even if you are out of the country—you can be anywhere in the world!
Please call us at 512-535-1688 if you cannot find an answer to your question.
Yes! The Texas Secretary of State will now accept documents that have been notarized online by a Texas Online Notary on any type of non-recordable document. The Texas SOS will only accept an online notarization that has been completed by a commissioned Texas online notary (no other states or country notaries). This went into effect on October 1, 2023.
Request an online notary session for your Texas apostille service
An Apostille is a form of certification set out in the 1961 Hague Convention, to which the United States became a subscriber in 1981. It is a form of numbered fields, which allows the data to be understood by the receiving country regardless of the official language of the issuing country.
What is an Apostille and when do I need one?
An Apostille is a certificate that authenticates the origin of a public document (e.g., a birth, marriage, or death certificate, a judgment, an extract of a register, or a notarial attestation).
Apostilles can only be issued for documents issued in one country that is party to the Apostille Convention and that are to be used in another country that is also a party to the Convention.
You will need an Apostille if all of the following apply:
• the country where the document was issued is a party to the Apostille Convention; and
• the country in which the document is to be used is party to the Apostille Convention; and
• the law of the country where the document was issued considers it to be a public document; and
• the country where the document is to be used requires an Apostille to recognize it as a foreign public document.
An Apostille may never be used for the recognition of a document in the country where that document was issued – Apostilles are strictly for the use of public documents abroad!
An Apostille may not be required if the laws, regulations, or practice in force in the country where
the public document is to be used have abolished or simplified the requirement of an Apostille or
have exempted the document from any legalization requirement. Such simplification or exemption may also result from a treaty or other agreement that is in force between the country where the public document is to be used and the country that issued it (e.g., some other Hague Conventions exempt documents from, legalization, or any analogous formality, including an Apostille).
If you have any doubts, you should ask the intended recipient of your document whether an Apostille is necessary in your particular case.
The current processing time for documents mailed in is 25 Business Days. However, with our service, there is no wait time as we hand-walk your documents to the Texas SOS and return them to you the same day! TexasApostilleNotary.com
Also, note that the Texas Secretary of State does not offer expedited service for mail-in requests. The use of overnight mail service does not expedite processing time.
The object of the Apostille is to "abolish the requirement of diplomatic or consular legalization for foreign public documents." The completed Apostille certifies the authenticity of the signature, the capacity in which the person signing the document has acted, and identifies the seal/stamp which the document bears answer to this item.
Each subscribing nation may designate those authorities which may issue Apostilles for their jurisdiction. The United States has appointed the Secretary of State (or their counterpart) of the various states as said authority. The Secretary of State of Texas has expanded this authorization to include the Deputy Secretary of State and the division directors.
The Secretary of State of Texas may issue an Apostille on documents issued by persons on file with this agency, including county clerks, notaries public, and statewide officials. For the Secretary of State to issue an apostille, recently issued birth/death certificates issued by local registrars must have been issued within the past three (3) years.
The competent authority for the issuance of Apostilles on documents issued by the federal government is the clerks of the federal courts.
The Apostille may be obtained to transmit public documents executed in one subscribing country to another subscribing country wherein the documents need to be produced. The Hague Convention defines 'public documents' as:
These types of 'public documents' would include birth/death certificates, marriage licenses, divorce decrees, school transcripts, and diplomas/degrees, among others.
Fill out the form above to get started with your request.
Requests for Apostille on documents executed before a Texas notary public, documents issued by statewide officials (such as the State Registrar of Vital Statistics, district judges, motor vehicle custodian of records, etc.), and certified copies issued within the past five years by county officials and local registrars should be submitted to the Authentications Unit.
Along with the document(s), please provide us with the name of the country to which the document(s) will be transmitted.
If a document needs to be translated, then a notary would witness the translator's signature on the translation, and the document being translated would be submitted along with the notarized translation for authentication.
The “Apostille Section” of the Hague Conference website includes the electronic version of the “ABCs of Apostilles” – a brochure that provides basic information about the Apostille Convention and its operation. Click here to access the Apostille Section and the “ABCs of Apostilles”. Brochure prepared by the Permanent Bureau (Secretariat) of the Hague Conference on Private International Law and reproduced with its permission.
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