Feeling overwhelmed by paperwork is normal. Many of us have stood in front of a stack of documents and worried that a small typo could derail travel, work, or study plans abroad. This short guide aims to calm that worry and give clear steps you can follow today.
At a glance: confirm destination country, confirm document type, obtain certified or notarized originals, complete the request form, pay the state fee, and submit in person or by mail. Small errors—names, dates, destination—often cause delays or returns.
For faster handling, Colorado Secretary of State in-person submissions are accepted at 1700 Broadway, Suite 200, Denver. If you want help organizing paperwork, call or text 3038270632 or stop by our office at 350 Terry St Ste 229, Longmont CO 80501. We serve individuals and businesses with vital records, background checks, diplomas, transcripts, and corporate filings.
Key Takeaways
- Verify your destination country and document type before you begin.
- Small mistakes can delay an apostille request; check names and dates carefully.
- In-person submission at the state office can be faster than mail.
- Call or text 3038270632 or visit our Longmont office for hands-on help.
- This guide covers when state steps suffice and when federal or embassy steps apply.
Apostille vs certification in Colorado and whether your document qualifies
Which authentication you need depends mainly on the destination country and the document’s origin. The Colorado Secretary of State offers two clear paths: apostilles for Hague nations and certifications for others.
What an apostille is
An apostille is a state-level authentication used when the receiving country is a Hague Convention participant. Use the Hague Conference “Status Table” to confirm which countries accept apostilles. If you need apostilles, the colorado secretary state issues the seal for eligible documents issued colorado.
When a certification is required
For countries not in the Hague, the secretary state issues a certification (sometimes called authentication). That certification may be only one step. Many non-Hague countries require further review by the U.S. department state or the destination embassy.
Jurisdiction limits and examples
Colorado can only authenticate documents issued colorado. A Colorado birth certificate, a Colorado-notarized power of attorney, or a corporate filing from state colorado qualify. Out-of-state documents must go to the issuing state’s secretary state.
| Type | Use | Issuer | Further steps |
|---|---|---|---|
| Apostille | Hague countries | Colorado Secretary of State | No federal review usually required |
| Certification | Non-Hague countries | Secretary State (state colorado) | U.S. Department State or embassy may review |
| Out-of-state document | Any | Issuing state’s Secretary State | Must return to issuing state for authentication |
- Qualification checklist: where the document was issued, whether it is an original certified copy or notarized, and the destination country.
- Warning: omitting the destination country can stall processing because the authentication type depends on that detail.
How to get an apostille in Colorado through the Colorado Secretary of State
Follow a clear checklist for faster processing at the secretary state office. Start by gathering the original certified copy or the original notarized document. Confirm that notarization was done by a Colorado notary public and matches local county or state level requirements.
Complete the request form and include key details
Use the Colorado Secretary of State Apostille Request Form. Enter your full name, phone or email, document type, destination country, and number of authentications. Write legibly and match names and dates exactly.
Payment and submission options
The state fee is $5 per authentication. By mail, include a check or money order payable to Colorado Secretary of State and a prepaid, self-addressed return envelope with tracking. Cash is not accepted by mail.
In person, submit at 1700 Broadway, Suite 200, Denver for faster same-day or next-business-day service when documents are in order. In-person payments may accept credit cards; confirm current methods on the secretary state website.
When to use a service or courier
Consider a third-party service if you face time constraints, must process many documents, or want a professional pre-check. Call or text 303-827-0632 or visit 350 Terry St Ste 229, Longmont CO 80501 for hands-on help before you submit.
Final quality-control checklist
- Destination country written clearly
- Number of apostilles equals number of documents
- Notary block is complete and performed by a Colorado notary public
- Check or money order amount equals $5 per authentication
Document-specific guidance and common delays to avoid
Start by confirming which exact version of a record the issuing agency provides. That single check prevents many rejections and lost time.
Vital records and birth certificates
Vital records must be official certified copies from the issuing office. Photocopies rarely qualify.
Order a certified birth certificate or other vital record before you submit. The Secretary of State will not accept uncertified copies.
Background checks and personal papers
Background checks and personal statements often require the original report or a notarized version. Confirm which original document the requesting agency needs.
Improper notarization is a common cause of delays. Verify the notary jurisdiction and signature block before mailing.
Diplomas, transcripts, and school-assisted submissions
Schools sometimes send official paper transcripts directly. UNC requires paper transcripts (no PDFs or eTranscripts) and may submit with a $5 check per document.
That workflow can take up to three weeks; hand-carry options may speed processing and keep pages flat.
| Document type | Required form | Typical fee | Common delay |
|---|---|---|---|
| Birth certificate | Certified original | $5 per authentication | Unsigned or photocopy |
| Background check | Original report or notarized statement | $5 per document | Wrong notary jurisdiction |
| Transcript / Diploma | Official paper transcript | $5 per item | Electronic files not accepted |
Top mistakes: missing destination country, mismatched names or dates, incomplete request forms, and wrong payment type (cash by mail). Double-check each document set.
If unsure, please visit our office or call/text 303-827-0632 for a quick pre-submission review. Confirm current requirements on the official website or department state pages before ordering records.
Conclusion
Confirming whether your destination accepts Hague documentation is the single best start. If it does, a state apostille is usually enough; if not, expect certification plus possible federal or embassy steps. Also verify that the document was issued by the issuing state and is an original certified or notarized copy.
Complete the Colorado Secretary of State form accurately, list the destination country clearly, and choose mail or in-person submission based on timing and sensitivity. A tracked return envelope is a smart practice when you mail documents. For quick help, the colorado secretary or our staff can review paperwork and explain options for business and personal filings.
Call or text 303-827-0632 for assistance, or please visit 350 Terry St Ste 229, Longmont CO 80501 to review documents before submission. Careful prep and correct country selection speed approvals for most countries and services.

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