Certified Hausa birth certificate translation for USCIS.
Native-speaker review on every translation. Signed certification statement per 8 CFR § 103.2(b)(3). 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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We translate & certify
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.
Hausa birth certificates submitted for uscis — what reviewers look for, and what we attach.
Birth certificates issued by Hausa-speaking jurisdictions are among the most-translated civil documents in US uscis filings. Birth certificates are the most frequently submitted civil document in US immigration filings. USCIS requires a complete certified English translation of any non-English birth certificate submitted with form I-130, I-485, N-400, and most asylum and family-based petitions.
Hausa is the most widely spoken language in West Africa and a lingua franca across northern Nigeria, southern Niger, and neighboring regions. Verdacert translates Hausa-language civil status records, sharia court documents from northern Nigerian states, and academic and identity documents for asylum, family-based immigration, and educational filings. Verdacert's reviewer pool covers Kano (Eastern) Hausa, Sokoto and northwestern Hausa, Niger Hausa, with country-specific document conventions from Nigeria, Niger, Ghana, Cameroon.
Modern Hausa is written in a Latin-based alphabet called Boko, with diacritics for hooked letters (ɓ, ɗ, ƙ). Older religious, scholarly, and northern Nigerian sharia court documents may appear in the Arabic-based Ajami script — Verdacert handles both. Nigerian civil documents are frequently bilingual (Hausa + English), and the certified translation reconciles both versions where they differ.
USCIS requires that any non-English document submitted in support of an immigration petition be accompanied by a full English translation, plus a signed statement from a competent translator attesting that the translation is complete and accurate. Verdacert's certification statement is drafted to meet this requirement exactly. The applicable standard is 8 CFR § 103.2(b)(3).
For birth certificate translations specifically, our reviewers focus on names transliterated inconsistently across documents in the same file and hijri/solar hijri vs gregorian date conversions, 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 hausa birth certificate, transcribed without omission.
Birth certificates are the most frequently submitted civil document in US immigration filings. USCIS requires a complete certified English translation of any non-English birth certificate submitted with form I-130, I-485, N-400, and most asylum and family-based petitions.
Fields the translation will include
- Full name (and any spelling variants)
- Sex
- Date of birth
- Place of birth
- Father's full name
- Mother's full name (maiden and married, where applicable)
- Registry / record number
- Issuing authority and seal
- Date of issuance
Where reviewers earn their fee
- Names transliterated inconsistently across documents in the same file
- Hijri/Solar Hijri vs Gregorian date conversions
- Older documents with handwritten entries or faded seals
- Documents reissued multiple times (especially common with Egyptian, Iraqi, and Iranian records)
What USCIS actually requires of a translation.
USCIS requires that any non-English document submitted in support of an immigration petition be accompanied by a full English translation, plus a signed statement from a competent translator attesting that the translation is complete and accurate. Verdacert's certification statement is drafted to meet this requirement exactly.
Checklist for USCIS acceptance
- Full English translation of the entire document — no summaries, no omissions
- Certification statement signed by a translator who is competent in both languages
- Translator's contact information (name, address, signature, date)
- All seals, stamps, and signatures on the original described in the translation
- Source-language preserved alongside the translation where layout permits
Where this translation is typically submitted
- I-130 Petition for Alien Relative
- I-485 Application to Register Permanent Residence
- I-589 Application for Asylum
- N-400 Application for Naturalization
- K-1 Fiancé Visa Petition
- I-751 Petition to Remove Conditions on Residence
Used on tens of thousands of filings since 2023.
Verdacert is the specialist provider US immigration attorneys reach for when hausa documents need to be accepted on the first read.
Common questions about hausa birth certificate translation.
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