Many apostille requests fail before they ever reach the apostille office.
This is not because the apostille process is complicated — it’s because one or more steps before submission were done incorrectly.
Understanding where apostilles commonly fail can save weeks of delays, rejected applications, and unnecessary costs.
The Apostille Is Usually Not the Problem
An apostille only certifies the authenticity of a signature or seal on a document. It does not fix errors in the document itself.
If the underlying document is wrong, outdated, incomplete, or issued by the wrong authority, the apostille office will reject it.
Most Failures Happen Before Step One
Here are the most common reasons apostilles fail before submission.
1. The Wrong Document Was Used
Photocopies, scans, hospital certificates, church records, or commemorative certificates are not acceptable for apostille.
Only certified copies or properly notarized originals are eligible.
If the document itself is not valid, an apostille cannot be issued.
2. The Document Was Issued by the Wrong Authority
This is one of the most frequent causes of rejection.
Examples:
- A state apostille requested for a document that requires a federal apostille
- A county-issued certificate used when a state-issued certificate is required
- A notarized document missing a compliant notary acknowledgment
The issuing authority determines where the apostille must be obtained.
3. The Document Is Too Old for the Destination Country
Apostilles do not expire, but many countries require the underlying document to be recently issued.
This is common with:
- Birth certificates
- Marriage certificates
- FBI background checks
If the document is outside the accepted time window, it may be rejected even with a valid apostille.
4. The Order of Steps Was Incorrect
The apostille process follows a strict sequence.
Common order mistakes include:
- Translating before apostille
- Apostilling before obtaining the correct certified copy
- Ordering an FBI background check too early
Once steps are done out of order, the document often has to be reissued.
5. Missing or Incorrect Notarization
For notarized documents:
- The notary acknowledgment must be complete
- The notary must be commissioned in the correct state
- The wording must meet state requirements
Incomplete or noncompliant notarization leads to immediate rejection.
How to Avoid These Failures
Before submitting for an apostille, confirm:
- The document type is eligible
- The issuing authority is correct
- The document is recently issued if required
- Steps were completed in the correct order
- Notarization is compliant
Most apostille problems are preventable with verification at the beginning.
Where to Go Next
Start here if you need guidance on which path applies to your situation:
https://apostillehelp.blogspot.com/p/start-here-apostille-help.html
View the California Vital Records Directory to identify the correct issuing office, fees, and request method:
https://apostillehelp.blogspot.com/2026/01/california-vital-records-directory.html
If you prefer step-by-step instructions for a specific document type, a DIY guide may be appropriate.