Apostille Korea
Documents · USA

Issuance & certification of academic and career documents for U.S. jobs and studyApostille Korea issues and certifies academic and career records for applicants pursuing jobs and study in the United States

Apostille Korea says it issues and certifies the academic and career documents applicants need for employment and study in the United States, preparing diplomas, transcripts and employment records and authenticating them by the route the U.S. recipient accepts, so the paperwork is ready for the application.

Key points
  • The service covers academic and career documents for U.S. jobs and study.
  • Issuance, translation and certification are handled together online.
  • The United States is a Hague member, so documents are typically apostilled.
  • The exact requirement can vary by the receiving school or employer.

What the U.S. service prepares

Applicants heading to the United States for work or study commonly need to submit verified academic and career documents — diplomas, transcripts, degree certificates, employment or career records — and U.S. schools and employers generally accept them only once they have been properly authenticated. Apostille Korea says it issues these documents where needed, arranges certified translation and notarization, and applies the matching certification, so applicants can hand over a complete, recognized set rather than chasing each step separately while a deadline approaches.

How the certification works for the United States

The United States is a party to the Hague Apostille Convention, so a Korean-issued document for use there is typically notarized and translated, then issued with an apostille that U.S. institutions recognize. A document issued in the United States for use in Korea is, conversely, certified in the U.S. before submission here. Apostille Korea notes that even with apostille as the standard route, the exact requirement can differ by the receiving school or employer, so applicants should confirm what each institution expects and prepare the matching documents in advance to avoid a rejected submission.

Frequently asked questions

Do U.S. documents need an apostille?

The United States is a Hague Convention member, so a Korean-issued document for U.S. use is typically notarized, translated and issued with an apostille; a U.S.-issued document is certified in the United States before use in Korea.

Which documents does this cover?

Academic and career records such as diplomas, transcripts, degree certificates and employment or career documents used for U.S. jobs and study.

When should I prepare them?

Before the application deadline, and after confirming the receiving school or employer's exact requirement, so issuance, translation and certification can be completed in time.

Source: 겟뉴스 (getnews.co.kr) ↗

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