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North Carolina Apostille: Fees, Processing Time & How to Order (2026)

North Carolina apostilles are issued by the North Carolina Secretary of State, Authentication Office for $10 per document. Mail orders take about 3–7 business days; same-day counter service is available — hand-delivery in raleigh is roughly five days faster than mail.. Documents headed to a non-Hague country need authentication and embassy legalization instead of an apostille.

North Carolina apostille at a glance (verified July 13, 2026)
Government fee$10 per document
Competent authorityNorth Carolina Secretary of State, Authentication Office
Mail processing3–7 business days
Counter optionsame-day counter service — Hand-delivery in Raleigh is roughly five days faster than mail.
County pre-certificationNot required
Paymentcheck, money order, credit card
Official pageNorth Carolina Secretary of State, Authentication Office →

Check your exact North Carolina steps

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

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Step-by-step: order a North Carolina apostille by mail

  1. Get the right certified copy. North Carolina vital records come from the NC Department of Health and Human Services, Vital Records.
  2. Prepare a cover sheet. 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.
  3. Add payment. Pay $10 per document by check or money order, payable to the North Carolina Secretary of State, Authentication Office.
  4. Include a return envelope. Add a prepaid, trackable return envelope so your apostille comes back safely.
  5. Mail it to the North Carolina Secretary of State, Authentication Office and keep your tracking number. Mail turnaround is about 3–7 business days.

Walk-in / same-day option

Hand-delivery in Raleigh is roughly five days faster than mail. Bring the certified document, a completed cover sheet, and payment. Counter rules change often, so confirm hours on the official page before you drive in.

Which documents can North Carolina apostille?

These are state-issued documents. Each guide covers the exact copy type and steps for that document in North Carolina.

State documents North Carolina can apostille
Birth certificateA certified copy of a birth record, apostilled by the issuing state for use abroad.
Diploma / degree certificateA diploma, typically notarized, apostilled for work or teaching abroad.
Marriage certificateA certified marriage record apostilled by the state that recorded it.
Power of attorneyA notarized power of attorney apostilled for property or banking acts abroad.
Single status affidavitA sworn affidavit of no marriage record, apostilled — a near-universal foreign-marriage requirement.
Notarized documentAny notarized document (consent letters, copies, statements) apostilled by the state.
Academic transcriptA sealed or notarized transcript apostilled for foreign admission or credential evaluation.
Death certificateA certified death record apostilled for foreign probate, insurance, or repatriation.
State police / background checkA state criminal-history record apostilled when an FBI check is not demanded.
Corporate documentsArticles, good-standing certificates, and resolutions apostilled for foreign business use.
Divorce decree / judgmentA court-certified divorce judgment apostilled for remarriage or status proof abroad.
Adoption documents / home studyCourt-certified or notarized adoption paperwork apostilled for intercountry adoption.
Certified translation + affidavitA translator's notarized affidavit apostilled to accompany a translated document.

Federal documents are different

Some documents never go to North Carolina. FBI background checks, IRS letters (like Form 6166), and naturalization certificates are federal — they go only to the U.S. Department of State — Office of Authentications, at $20 per document. If you hold one of these, start at the federal channel guide instead.

Going to a non-Hague country?

If your destination is not a Hague Apostille Convention member, an apostille is not enough. You need the North Carolina authority's certification, then US Department of State authentication, then embassy legalization. Use the Country Checker to see your destination's chain, or read apostille vs. authentication.

Common rejection reasons in North Carolina

Frequently asked questions

How much does an apostille cost in North Carolina?

The North Carolina Secretary of State, Authentication Office charges $10 per document. That is the government fee only — you pay separately for the certified copy and return shipping. Federal documents cost $20 at the US Department of State instead.

How long does a North Carolina apostille take?

Mail processing runs about 3–7 business days. You can also use same-day counter service — Hand-delivery in Raleigh is roughly five days faster than mail..

Can I get a North Carolina apostille in person?

Yes. Hand-delivery in Raleigh is roughly five days faster than mail. Bring the certified document, payment, and a completed cover sheet.

Does an old birth certificate still work for a North Carolina apostille?

Age is usually fine as long as it is a current certified copy with the registrar's seal. North Carolina vital records come from the NC Department of Health and Human Services, Vital Records.

Do notarized documents need extra steps in North Carolina?

No. North Carolina apostilles notarized documents directly — there is no county-clerk pre-certification step.

Neighboring states

Sources

Reviewed by Billy Reiner, Editor

Last verified: July 13, 2026 against the North Carolina Secretary of State, Authentication Office 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.