Certified Arabic confirmation certificate translation for Embassy.
Native-speaker review on every translation. Signed certification statement. Delivered as a single PDF in as little as 14 hours.
A process you can hand to USCIS without rereading the rules.
Upload, we translate, you submit. Every step is bounded by a real deadline and a named reviewer.
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Our translation engine produces a first draft. A vetted native-speaker reviewer with regional expertise edits and signs the certification before release.
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You receive a single PDF: original, translation, and the signed certification statement that meets 8 CFR 103.2(b)(3). Notarization and hard copies on request.
Arabic confirmation certificates submitted for embassy — what reviewers look for, and what we attach.
Confirmation certificates issued by Arabic-speaking jurisdictions are among the most-translated civil documents in US embassy filings. Confirmation certificates — and the closely related first-communion and chrismation certificates — record receipt of the Catholic, Maronite, Chaldean, Coptic, or Orthodox sacraments. They appear in marriage-tribunal cases, in genealogy-based citizenship claims (notably Italian, Spanish, Lebanese, and Portuguese descent), and as supporting religious-record evidence in adoption and family-court proceedings.
Arabic is the official language of 22 countries and the liturgical language of Islam. Verdacert handles civil status, academic, court, and medical documents from across the Arabic-speaking world, with reviewers calibrated to each country's documentary conventions. Verdacert's reviewer pool covers Modern Standard Arabic (MSA), Egyptian, Levantine, and other regional variants, with country-specific document conventions from Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Syria, and beyond.
Most Arabic civil documents use both Arabic and an Indo-Arabic numeral system. Dates may appear in Hijri (Islamic) or Gregorian formats. Proper nouns require careful transliteration: Verdacert follows USCIS-recognized conventions and respects the spelling on your existing immigration paperwork.
Translation of US documents for filing at foreign embassies and consulates abroad, plus translation of consular documents issued abroad for US-based use.
For confirmation certificate translations specifically, our reviewers focus on eastern catholic and orthodox churches use chrismation terminology — translation must preserve the sacramental distinction and sponsors' names that may differ from civil-registry spellings of the same person, among other patterns. The AI draft is calibrated to surface uncertainty rather than guess, so the reviewer always knows where to spend their attention.
Every translation we deliver includes a signed certification statement, a faithful transcription of every field on the source, descriptions of all seals and stamps, and explicit [illegible] markers anywhere the source is unreadable rather than a guess. The reviewer signs the certification under their own name.
Every field on a arabic confirmation certificate, transcribed without omission.
Confirmation certificates — and the closely related first-communion and chrismation certificates — record receipt of the Catholic, Maronite, Chaldean, Coptic, or Orthodox sacraments. They appear in marriage-tribunal cases, in genealogy-based citizenship claims (notably Italian, Spanish, Lebanese, and Portuguese descent), and as supporting religious-record evidence in adoption and family-court proceedings.
Fields the translation will include
- Full name of the confirmand
- Date and place of birth
- Date and parish of confirmation or chrismation
- Sponsor / godparent
- Officiating priest or bishop
- Parish registry book and entry number
- Diocese or eparchy seal
- Date of issuance
Where reviewers earn their fee
- Eastern Catholic and Orthodox churches use chrismation terminology — translation must preserve the sacramental distinction
- Sponsors' names that may differ from civil-registry spellings of the same person
- Older parish entries written in abbreviated ecclesiastical Latin
- Saint names assumed at confirmation that appear nowhere else in the file
What Embassy actually requires of a translation.
Translation of US documents for filing at foreign embassies and consulates abroad, plus translation of consular documents issued abroad for US-based use.
Checklist for Embassy acceptance
- Bilingual layout where the receiving authority requires it
- Apostille coordination for documents leaving the US
- Reverse certification (English-to-source-language) on request
Where this translation is typically submitted
- Visa applications at foreign embassies
- Dual-citizenship paperwork
- Consular registration documents
Used on tens of thousands of filings since 2023.
Verdacert is the specialist provider US immigration attorneys reach for when arabic documents need to be accepted on the first read.
Common questions about arabic confirmation certificate translation.
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