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Apostille vs Notary: What’s the Difference & When Do You Need Each?

Apostille and notarisation are two different steps in the authentication process for international documents. A notary verifies your identity and witnesses your signature. An apostille confirms that the notary’s certificate is genuine — so it will be accepted in another country.

This guide explains when you need one, the other, or both — with clear steps for getting your documents ready. Written by a London notary practice that handles both services every day.

What are the key differences between an apostille and a notary?

Quick answer: A notary public is a legal professional who verifies the identity of signers and authenticates documents through a notarial act. An apostille is a government-issued certificate (from the FCDO in the UK) that authenticates the notary’s signature for international recognition in Hague Convention countries. They serve different purposes — but often work together.

FeatureNotary (Notarisation)Apostille
What is it? A notarial act performed by a qualified notary public — verifying identity, witnessing signatures and issuing a notarial certificate A government-issued apostille certificate authenticating the signature and seal on official documents
Who issues it? A notary public — in the UK, a qualified legal professional regulated by the Faculty Office A government department — in the UK, the FCDO Legalisation Office
Purpose Validates identity of the signers, authenticates signatures, certifies copies of documents Gives the notarised document international recognition under the Hague Apostille Convention
Where accepted? Domestically and as a first step before apostille or legalisation In all 124 countries that are members of the Hague Convention
Format Notarial certificate attached to the document, bearing the notary’s signature and official seal An apostille stamp or certificate — a standardised form attached or affixed to the document
When needed? Whenever an overseas authority requires verified documents — powers of attorney, statutory declarations, certified copies When a Hague Convention country requires proof that the notary’s signature is genuine
Typical cost (UK) Varies by document — contact us for a quote From £80 plus VAT (standard) + £40 FCDO fee (no VAT)
Turnaround Usually same day or next day by appointment Standard 5 working days, express next day

Understanding these key differences helps you identify the correct authentication path for your legal documents — and avoids delays or rejections at the destination.

What is a notary and what does notarisation involve?

A notary public is a qualified legal professional authorised to perform notarial acts — including verifying the identity of the signers, witnessing signatures, administering oaths and certifying copies of documents. In the UK, notaries are regulated by the Faculty Office of the Archbishop of Canterbury.

Notarisation is the process by which a notary authenticates a document for use outside the UK (or domestically where a higher level of verification is required). The notary verifies your identity using official identification, witnesses the signing of the document, and then attaches a notarial certificate bearing their signature, seal and a description of the notarial act performed.

A notarised document carries the notary’s personal guarantee that the signatures are genuine, the signers understood the document, and that proper procedures were followed. This is essential for legal documents used in international transactions — from powers of attorney to company resolutions.

UK vs US notary — an important distinction

In the United Kingdom, a notary public is a senior legal professional — either a solicitor with additional qualifications or a person specifically trained and admitted by the Faculty Office. They undergo years of legal training and are subject to regulation and professional indemnity requirements.

In the United States, a notary (sometimes called a “notary public” or “commissioned notary”) is typically an administrative role with minimal training. US notaries mainly verify identity and witness signatures but do not provide the same level of legal authentication as a UK notary.

This distinction matters: when a foreign country requests a “notarised document” from the UK, they are asking for the authentication services of a Faculty Office registered notary — not simply a witnessed signature.

How to find a registered notary

In the UK, all practising notaries are registered with the Faculty Office. You can search the Faculty Office register or contact a notary practice directly. Look for a notary experienced in the specific type of document you need authenticated — whether that is a personal document like a birth certificate, or a commercial document such as a board resolution.

Mobile notary services in London

If you cannot come to our Wigmore Street office, we offer a mobile notary service across central London — we travel to your home, office, hospital, or care home. Mobile notary fees include a travel surcharge from our base in Marylebone. Read full details on our mobile notary page.

Remote and virtual notary services (UK)

UK notarisation is increasingly available remotely via secure video link, where the notary witnesses you signing a document over a verified video call. This is sometimes called a remote notary, virtual notary, or e-notary appointment. The Faculty Office authorises this method for a defined set of document types. See our online notary UK page for eligibility and booking.

What is an apostille and what does it do?

An apostille is a government-issued certificate that authenticates the origin of a public document — specifically the signature, seal or stamp on the document — so it will be accepted in another country that is a member of the Hague Apostille Convention. In the UK, apostilles are issued exclusively by the FCDO Legalisation Office.

The apostille certification process exists to simplify the authentication of documents for international use. Before the Hague Convention, sending documents abroad required a lengthy chain of authentication through multiple government departments and embassies. The apostille replaced this with a single, standardised certificate recognised across all member countries.

An apostille stamp (or apostille certificate) is a standardised form that confirms the document bearing it has been properly authenticated. It verifies the signature of the person who signed the document, the capacity in which they acted, and the identity of any seal or stamp on the document.

Who can issue apostilles in the UK?

Only the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO) — formerly the Foreign and Commonwealth Office — can issue apostilles in the UK. You cannot obtain an apostille from a notary, solicitor, or any other private professional. However, a notary public or apostille services provider can submit your document to the FCDO on your behalf and manage the entire process.

What documents can be apostilled?

The FCDO can apostille documents that bear the signature or seal of a UK public official — including notaries public, court officials, and government registrars. Common examples include notarised documents, birth certificates issued by the General Register Office, marriage certificates, death certificates, court orders, and Companies House certificates. Degree certificates and professional qualifications can also be apostilled once certified and notarised. Private documents (such as a business contract) must first be notarised before they can be apostilled.

How does the Hague Apostille Convention work?

The Hague Apostille Convention (formally the Hague Convention Abolishing the Requirement of Legalisation for Foreign Public Documents) is an international treaty established in 1961 by the Hague Conference on Private International Law. It simplifies the process of authenticating documents for use between member countries.

Before the Convention, getting a UK document accepted in a foreign country required multiple steps: notarisation, FCDO authentication, and then legalisation by the embassy or consulate of the destination country. The Hague Convention replaced this with a single apostille certificate that all member countries agree to accept.

Today, over 124 countries are members of the Hague Convention — including most of Europe, the United States, Australia, Japan, South Africa, and many South American countries. If your document is going to a Hague Convention country, an apostille is all you need for international recognition.

What if the destination country is not in the Hague Convention?

If the country where your document will be used has not signed the Hague Convention, you will need full consular legalisation instead. This is a longer process involving notarisation, FCDO authentication, and then legalisation at the embassy or consulate of the destination country. Common non-Hague countries include the UAE, China, Canada, and several African and Middle Eastern nations.

We handle both routes — apostille for Hague Convention countries and full legalisation for non-Hague destinations. See our country-by-country legalisation requirements guide to check the route for your destination.

Which documents need an apostille or notary?

The type of document determines whether you need notarisation, apostille, or both. Here is a breakdown by category:

Personal documents

Educational documents

  • Degree certificates — commonly needed for overseas job applications and visa processes. See our degree legalisation hub
  • Academic transcripts — often require notarised copies before apostille. See degree authentication
  • Professional qualifications — ACCA, RICS, medical certifications
  • School records and references — for international school transfers

Legal documents

  • Powers of attorney — the most common document we notarise for overseas use
  • Court documents and judgments — require court seal for direct apostille
  • Statutory declarations — sworn before a notary, then apostilled
  • Affidavits — witnessed and authenticated for foreign proceedings

Business documents

Not sure which route your document needs? The simplest approach: if it was issued by a UK government body (GRO, Companies House, HMCTS), it can usually go straight to the FCDO for apostille. If it is a private document, you will need a notary to authenticate it first.

How do you get a document notarised?

The notarisation process is straightforward when you know what to expect. Here is how it works at our London practice:

1

Contact us with your documents

Tell us what documents you need notarised and where they are going. We will confirm the process, fees and what to bring to your appointment.

2

Attend your appointment

Bring your original documents and valid photo ID (passport or driving licence). The notary verifies your identity, witnesses any required signatures, and performs the notarial act.

3

Receive your notarial certificate

The notary attaches a notarial certificate with their signature, seal and a description of the act performed. Your notarised document is ready — or we can submit it for apostille on your behalf.

What to bring to your notarisation appointment

  • The original document(s) you need notarised — or the document you need to sign in the notary’s presence
  • Valid photo identification — current passport or UK driving licence (the notary must verify the identity of the signers)
  • A second form of ID or proof of address if specifically requested
  • Any instructions from the receiving party or foreign authority about specific requirements

Ready to book a notary appointment? Call 0207 100 4089 or email ey@notarypubliclondon.co.uk to book at 19 Wigmore Street W1U 1PH. Walk-ins welcome for routine certifications. Same-day appointments usually available for urgent documents.

How do you get a document apostilled in the UK?

The UK apostille process is managed by the FCDO Legalisation Office. You can apply directly, or use an apostille services provider (like us) to handle it for you.

1

Prepare your document

If your document is a private document (not from a UK government body), you will need a notary to notarise it first. GRO certificates and Companies House documents can go directly to the FCDO.

2

Submit to the FCDO

Send or deliver the document to the FCDO Legalisation Office with the correct fee (currently £40 per document, no VAT). We handle this submission on your behalf as part of our apostille service.

3

Receive your apostille certificate

The FCDO checks the signature and seal on your document against their records, then attaches the apostille certificate. Turnaround is 2–10 working days depending on the service level chosen.

Apostille pricing at Edward Young Notaries

Our apostille service fees (in addition to the £40 FCDO government fee per document):

  • Standard service: £80 plus VAT — approximately 5 working days
  • Express service: £100 plus VAT — next working day

Discounts for multiple documents. The FCDO fee of £40 per document is a government charge with no VAT.

How do apostille and notary work in practice?

Here are typical situations where our clients need notarisation, apostille or both. These illustrate how the two processes work together for international transactions.

Emigration

Moving to Spain — birth certificate apostille

A UK citizen relocating to Spain needed their birth certificate apostilled for residency registration. Since it was an original GRO certificate, it went straight to the FCDO for apostille without notarisation — ready in 5 working days with our priority service.

Business

Company expansion to Germany — board resolutions

A London-based company opening a subsidiary in Germany needed board resolutions and powers of attorney authenticated. We notarised the documents via our corporate notary services, then submitted them to the FCDO for apostille. Both steps completed within one week.

Property

Selling property in France — power of attorney

A client selling their French holiday home needed to grant power of attorney to a French notaire. We notarised the power of attorney in English with a French-language certification, then apostilled it for use in France. Our notary translation services handle multi-language requirements.

Education

Job offer in the UAE — degree certificate

An engineer accepting a role in Dubai needed their degree certificate authenticated. Since the UAE is not a Hague Convention member, an apostille was not sufficient — full consular legalisation was required. We handled notarisation, FCDO legalisation, and UAE Embassy attestation.

What mistakes should you avoid with apostille and notary?

We see these errors regularly. Each one causes delays, extra costs or rejected documents at the destination.

Apostilling documents for a non-Hague country

If the destination country has not signed the Hague Convention, an apostille will not be accepted. You need full consular legalisation instead. Check our country legalisation requirements before you apply — or ask us and we will confirm the correct route.

Skipping notarisation before apostille

Private documents (contracts, powers of attorney, copies of documents) must be notarised before the FCDO will apostille them. Only documents already bearing a UK public official’s signature can be apostilled directly.

Using uncertified copies

An apostille applied to a plain photocopy has no legal value. Copies of documents must be properly certified by a notary public as “true copies of the original” before apostille. The notary’s certification is what gives the copy its legal standing.

Not checking the destination country’s specific requirements

Some countries require documents in a specific format, with particular wording, or translated into the local language by a certified translator. Check with the receiving authority before you start — or ask us and we will confirm what is needed.

Confusing US and UK notarisation

A “notarised” document from the United States carries different legal weight than one from the UK. If a foreign authority requests a UK-notarised document, it must be done by a Faculty Office registered notary — not a US-style notary public or a solicitor witnessing a signature.

Why choose Edward Young Notaries for apostille and notarisation?

Both services under one roof

Notarisation and apostille handled together — no need to coordinate between different providers. One point of contact from start to finish.

Faculty Office registered

Our notary is registered with the Faculty Office and holds full professional indemnity insurance. Your documents carry the authority they need.

Express turnaround available

Same-day notarisation appointments and next-working-day FCDO apostille service when you need documents urgently.

Central London location

19 Wigmore Street, London W1U 1PH — minutes from Bond Street and Baker Street stations. Walk-in or by appointment.

Clear, fixed-fee pricing

No hidden charges. Apostille fees from £80 plus VAT. All costs confirmed before you commit. Discounts for multiple documents.

4.9★ Google reviews

Over 120 five-star reviews from clients who trusted us with their most important documents.

What our clients say

★★★★★

“Needed a power of attorney notarised and apostilled for use in Italy. The whole process was handled efficiently — I just dropped the documents off and collected them a few days later with the apostille attached. Very professional service.”

— James T., Google Review

★★★★★

“I was confused about whether I needed a notary or an apostille for my degree certificate going to France. They explained the process clearly, notarised my document and submitted it for apostille all in one visit. Excellent.”

— Sarah K., Google Review

★★★★★

“Used the express apostille service for my marriage certificate — needed it urgently for a visa application. Had the apostille back next working day. Could not fault the speed or the communication throughout.”

— David R., Google Review

★★★★★

“Great experience from start to finish. I needed several company documents notarised and apostilled for a business deal in Germany. Wendy was thorough, friendly and everything was turned around faster than expected.”

— Claire M., Google Review

Read all reviews on Google →

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Frequently asked questions

What is the difference between an apostille and a notary?
A notary is a qualified legal professional who verifies the identity of signers, witnesses signatures and issues notarial certificates. An apostille is a government-issued certificate (from the FCDO in the UK) that authenticates the notary’s signature and seal for use in Hague Convention countries. Notarisation validates the document; the apostille gives it international recognition.
Do I need both a notary and an apostille?
It depends on the document and destination. Private documents (contracts, powers of attorney, copies) need notarisation before apostille. Some public documents — like GRO birth certificates and Companies House certificates — can be apostilled directly. We will advise which steps apply to your situation.
Who can apostille a document in the UK?
Only the FCDO Legalisation Office can issue apostilles in the UK. No notary, solicitor or other professional can issue an apostille directly. However, a notary practice can notarise your document and then submit it to the FCDO for apostille on your behalf — which is exactly what we do.
How long does the apostille process take?
Our standard apostille service takes approximately 5 working days (£80 plus VAT plus £40 FCDO fee). Express next-working-day is available for £100 plus VAT. Notarisation itself is usually same-day by appointment. Discounts for multiple documents.
Can a notarised document be used internationally?
A notarised document can be accepted internationally in some cases, but most countries require additional authentication. Hague Convention countries require an apostille. Non-Hague countries require full consular legalisation. Always check the destination country’s requirements before sending documents abroad.
What if my document is going to a non-Hague country?
If the destination country has not signed the Hague Convention, you will need full consular legalisation rather than an apostille. This involves notarisation, FCDO authentication, and then legalisation by the destination country’s embassy. Countries like the UAE, China and Canada are not Hague members. We handle the full legalisation process — see our country legalisation guide.
What documents can be apostilled directly without notarisation?
Documents already bearing the signature or seal of a UK public official can go straight to the FCDO. This includes GRO birth certificates, marriage certificates and death certificates, court orders with court seals, and Companies House certificates. Private documents must be certified and notarised first.
How much does it cost to get a document notarised and apostilled?
Notarisation fees vary by document type and complexity — contact us for a quote. Apostille fees start at £80 plus VAT for the standard service, plus the £40 FCDO government fee (no VAT on the FCDO fee). We offer discounts when you submit multiple documents.
Does the Indian High Commission in London do notary work?
No. The Indian High Commission and consulates do not perform UK notarisations. For documents going to India, you typically need: (1) UK notarisation by a registered UK notary, (2) an FCDO apostille (India joined the Hague Convention on 14 January 2025), and (3) translation if required. See our India legalisation requirements page for the full process.
Can I get a notarised document apostilled on the same day?
Yes — in many cases we can notarise your document and submit it for FCDO apostille on the same day. Our express apostille service returns the apostilled document on the next working day. Contact us with your document details and we will confirm the fastest route.
What is the difference between an apostille and consular legalisation?
An apostille is a single certificate issued by the FCDO for use in Hague Convention countries. Consular legalisation is a longer process required for countries that have not signed the Hague Convention — it involves notarisation, FCDO authentication, and then authentication by the destination country’s embassy or consulate. We handle both routes.
Do I need to attend in person for notarisation?
For most documents, yes — the notary must verify your identity and witness your signature in person. However, some documents can be notarised remotely via secure video link. We also offer a mobile notary service across central London if you cannot travel to our office.
How long is a notarised document valid?
A notarised document does not expire — the notarial act is a record of what the notary witnessed on a specific date. However, the receiving authority may impose its own time limits. Some countries require notarisation and apostille to have been carried out within the last three or six months. Always check with the destination authority before submitting.
Where can I get a notary near Mayfair, Bond Street, or Marylebone?
Our office at 19 Wigmore Street, London W1U 1PH is a two-minute walk from Bond Street station and in the heart of Marylebone — equally convenient for Mayfair, Fitzrovia, and the West End. Walk-ins are welcome for routine certifications, or call 0207 100 4089 to book an appointment. We also offer a mobile notary service across central London.

Edward Young Notaries & Lawyers · 19 Wigmore Street, London W1U 1PH · +44 20 7499 2605 · notary@notarypubliclondon.co.uk
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