State apostille guide

New Hampshire Apostille Services

A New Hampshire apostille is commonly needed for documents issued, certified, or notarized in New Hampshire and used in another country. The correct process depends on the document type, destination country, and whether the document is certified or notarized.

When a New Hampshire apostille is usually needed

A New Hampshire apostille is commonly used when the document was issued, certified, or notarized under New Hampshire authority and will be presented in another country.

Common New Hampshire documents

  • Birth, marriage, death, and divorce records
  • Notarized powers of attorney, affidavits, and consent letters
  • Court-certified orders and records
  • School records, diplomas, and transcripts
  • Business records, certificates of good standing, and corporate filings

Cities and ZIP areas in your XML for New Hampshire

These city names come from your states XML and can be used for internal relevance, but I would not create thin city apostille pages unless each page has unique helpful content.

Acworth
Alstead
Alton
Alton Bay
Amherst
Andover
Antrim
Ashland
Ashuelot
Atkinson
Auburn
Barnstead
Barrington
Bartlett
Bath
Bedford
Belmont
Berlin
Bethlehem
Bradford
Bristol
Brookline
Campton
Canaan
Candia
Canterbury
Center Barnstead
Center Conway
Center Harbor
Center Ossipee
Center Sandwich
Center Tuftonboro
Charlestown
Chester
Chesterfield
Chocorua
Claremont
Colebrook
Concord
Contoocook

Frequently asked questions

New Hampshire Apostille Services refers to the apostille process for this specific document or service need. The correct process depends on the document source, destination country, and whether notarization, certification, translation, or legalization is required.

Some private documents need notarization first, but vital records and many government-issued records usually need certified copies instead. The safest approach is to review the document before notarizing or mailing it.

Many apostille requests can be handled by mail when the document is properly prepared and eligible for the requested destination country.

Make sure the document is the correct version, properly certified or notarized, connected to the correct state or federal authority, and submitted for the correct destination country.

Translation requirements depend on the receiving country and agency. Some want the original document apostilled first, while others may require a notarized translation certification.

No. Apostilles are generally used for Hague countries. Non-Hague countries may require authentication and embassy or consulate legalization instead.

Need help with an apostille or legalization?

Send the document type, issuing state or federal agency, destination country, and deadline. We can help you identify the correct apostille, authentication, notarization, translation, or legalization path.