Federal Apostille Service — FBI Background Checks & NARA Records

Federal documents — FBI background checks, NARA records, and all documents issued by US federal agencies — require apostille processing through the US Department of State’s Office of Authentications, not a state Secretary of State office.

Federal Apostille

What Is a Federal Apostille?

A federal apostille is an authentication certificate issued by the US Department of State, Office of Authentications. It verifies that a document originated from a legitimate US federal agency and meets the requirements of the Hague Convention of 5 October 1961, making the document legally recognizable in any of the 120+ Hague member countries.

Federal apostilles differ from state apostilles in a critical way: they bypass all state and county certification steps and are processed entirely at the federal level.

Which Documents Require a Federal Apostille?

Any document that originates from a US federal agency must go through the federal apostille pathway. Common examples:

  • FBI Identity History Summary (FBI background check / criminal history check)
  • NARA certified copies — National Archives and Records Administration records, including naturalization records and military service records
  • Certificate of Non-Existence (CoNE) - or any other signed correspondence from federal organizations
  • Naturalization Certificate (Form N-550) and related USCIS documents
  • Federal court orders, judgments, and apostilled court records
  • Social Security Administration correspondence and certifications
  • US Department of State certificates and official correspondence
  • Federal agency certificates of good standing (for corporate use abroad)

If your document was issued by a state agency — such as a birth certificate, marriage license, or state-notarized document — it requires a state apostille instead.

How the Federal Apostille Process Works

Unlike state-level authentication, which may involve county and state offices in sequence, the federal pathway is centralized:

  1. Document originates from a federal agency (FBI, NARA, USCIS, SSA, federal court, etc.).
  2. Agency certification — the originating agency’s signature is on record with the Department of State.
  3. Department of State review — the Office of Authentications verifies the signature and attaches the apostille certificate or authentication embossing.
  4. Document returned with apostille affixed.

State Secretary of State offices have no jurisdiction over federal documents. Submitting a federal document to a state apostille office will result in immediate rejection.

Processing Times: Apostille50 vs. DIY

Method Typical Timeline
Apostille50 (standard rush) ~2 weeks from receipt
DIY mail-in (Department of State) 6–8 weeks

Apostille50 achieves faster turnaround by coordinating submissions directly with the Department of State and managing all routing steps in-house.

A Note on FBI Background Checks

FBI Identity History Summary (background check) documents are frequently issued digitally and may contain a digital signature. Because of this, FBI background checks can be submitted electronically — by email to info@apostille50.com or via the upload portal on the order confirmation page — rather than by physical mail.

For most other federal documents issued on paper with wet or embossed seals, physical originals must be mailed to us.

Pricing

Apostille50 charges a flat USD 50.00 base service fee per order. Federal apostilles are USD 75.00 per apostille (not per page). To see the exact cost for your order, use the Build-A-Cart tool.

When Legalization Is Required Instead

If the destination country is not a member of the Hague Convention — such as several countries in the Middle East, Southeast Asia, and sub-Saharan Africa — an apostille is not accepted. Instead, a full consular legalization process is required, which adds embassy authentication steps and typically additional fees. Apostille50 handles legalization as well.

Frequently Asked Questions