If you are preparing your birth certificate for a skilled worker or employment visa application in the Philippines, the document must first carry an officially recognized apostille. Without it, the Philippines's receiving institutions — embassies, consulates, employers, universities or immigration officers — cannot legally verify that your record was issued by a competent authority. This page explains how the apostille works specifically for the Philippines, who issues it, what other steps usually accompany it, and how DoCertify handles the entire chain on your behalf.
Documents bound for the Philippines are authenticated through the Philippine Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA), which joined the Hague Apostille Convention in 2019. Because both the Philippines and most likely the country where the document was issued are members of the 1961 Hague Apostille Convention, a single apostille certificate is sufficient — no embassy legalization is needed.
Yes. The apostille we issue is performed by the Philippine Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA), which joined the Hague Apostille Convention in 2019, the recognized authority for documents of this type. Receiving institutions in the Philippines — embassies, consulates, employers and immigration offices — verify the document through the same channel.
If your birth certificate is not in one of the Philippines's working languages, a sworn translation is normally required in addition to the apostille. We can add a certified translation as part of the same order.
Three issues account for most rejections: (1) the apostille is missing or was issued by a non-competent authority; (2) the translation was completed by a translator not recognized in the Philippines; (3) the order of operations was wrong — for example, a translation produced before the apostille was added, leaving the apostille text untranslated. We sequence the chain correctly the first time.
Generally no. the Philippines authorities for skilled worker or employment visa application purposes require the physical original or a re-issued certified true copy bearing a wet-ink stamp from the issuing institution. Digital-only documents are accepted only for a narrow set of issuers that publish a verifiable online register.
Employers and skilled-worker visa officers in the Philippines sit on dozens of applications per week. A document chain that arrives correctly authenticated and translated the first time moves through the queue faster, while a chain with a missing step is set aside and often only flagged after weeks of waiting. We process your birth certificate so that the work-visa decision-maker can verify it on first inspection.