Amid tighter United States immigration enforcement, Apostille Korea says it is offering an agency service to prepare and authenticate the home-country documents required for dependent-visa and green-card applications, handling issuance, translation and certification online so applicants can keep filings on track without traveling.
- The service supports dependent-visa and green-card applicants who must submit home-country documents.
- Tighter enforcement has made complete, correctly authenticated paperwork more important.
- As a Hague member, the U.S. recognizes member-country documents through an apostille.
- Apostille Korea handles issuance, translation, notarization and certification remotely.
What tighter enforcement means for document preparation
As United States immigration authorities apply closer scrutiny, applicants for dependent visas and green cards face less tolerance for incomplete or improperly authenticated paperwork. Filings often require civil records, marriage and birth certificates, family records and police clearance certificates, issued in the applicant's home country and authenticated for U.S. use. Because the United States is a Hague Apostille member, a public document from another member state is recognized once it bears that state's apostille, while documents from non-member countries require foreign-ministry confirmation and embassy legalization.
How the agency service keeps filings on track
Apostille Korea acts on the applicant's behalf to obtain the original civil documents, arrange certified translation, secure notarization where needed, and complete the appropriate certification before delivering the package abroad. The company says handling the chain remotely is intended to help families avoid delays at a time when missing or mismatched documents can stall a dependent-visa or green-card case. By confirming requirements in advance, it aims to reduce the risk of resubmission once a filing is under review.
Frequently asked questions
Who is the agency service for?
Dependent-visa and green-card applicants who must submit authenticated home-country documents but cannot easily obtain them in person.
Does the U.S. accept an apostille for these filings?
Yes. The United States is a Hague member, so a member-country public document is accepted once it carries that country's apostille.
Can the documents be prepared without traveling?
Yes. Issuance, translation, notarization and certification are arranged remotely and the documents are delivered abroad.
Source: 겟뉴스 (getnews.co.kr) ↗
