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How to Apostille a Hawaii Certified translation + affidavit (2026 Guide)

To apostille a Hawaii certified translation + affidavit, have the translator sign an affidavit of accuracy before a notary. Then submit it to the Office of the Lieutenant Governor for $3 per document. Mail processing takes about 7–10 business days; dropoff. For a non-Hague destination, you also need US Department of State authentication and embassy legalization.

Hawaii certified translation + affidavit apostille (verified July 13, 2026)
Government fee$3 per document
Where to send itOffice of the Lieutenant Governor
Required copyHave the translator sign an affidavit of accuracy before a notary.
Mail time7–10 business days
Counterdropoff
County pre-certNot required for this document

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The state that ISSUED the document — not where you live.

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Step 1 — Get the right copy

Have the translator sign an affidavit of accuracy before a notary. In Hawaii, hawaii vital records come from the Hawaii State Department of Health.

Step 2 — Submit to the Office of the Lieutenant Governor

Include a signed cover sheet naming the destination country, payment payable to the authority above, and a prepaid return envelope. Confirm exact requirements on the official page linked in sources. Pay $3 per document by check or money order. Drop-off; roughly 7–10 business days.

Step 3 — Check the destination country

If your document is going to a Hague Apostille Convention member, the apostille is the last step. If the destination is not a member, you continue to the U.S. Department of State — Office of Authentications for authentication and then to that country's embassy for legalization. Confirm with theCountry Checker.

Common rejection reasons

Who typically needs this

Accompanying any translated US document abroad.

Meeting a foreign authority's certified-translation rule.

Frequently asked questions

How much does it cost to apostille a certified translation + affidavit in Hawaii?

The Office of the Lieutenant Governor charges $3 per document. You pay separately for the certified copy and your return envelope.

Can I apostille a photocopy of my certified translation + affidavit?

No. Hawaii apostilles the certified or properly notarized document, not a plain photocopy. The affidavit, not the translation itself, is what gets apostilled — confusing the two causes rejection

How long does it take?

Mail processing in Hawaii runs about 7–10 business days. A counter option (dropoff) can be faster. A non-Hague destination adds the federal and embassy steps on top.

Who usually needs a certified translation + affidavit apostille?

People who accompanying any translated us document abroad or need it for meeting a foreign authority's certified-translation rule. The apostille lets a foreign authority accept your Hawaii certified translation + affidavit.

Other Hawaii documents

Same document, other states

Sources

Reviewed by Billy Reiner, Editor

Last verified: July 13, 2026 against the Office of the Lieutenant Governor and the HCCH status table(official page). See how we verify and how often on ourmethodology page.

This is informational, not legal advice. The receiving authority sets the final requirements — confirm with them and the office named above before you send anything.