Spanish · USCIS

Certified Spanish arrest warrant 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.

Instant Quote2 page · Arrest warrant
$58.00Standard, in 48h
Native-speaker review on every translation. USCIS-accepted or your money back. Delivered as a single PDF with signed certification.
Standard
48 hrs
$58.00
Express
24 hrs
$66.00
Rush
14 hrs
$158.00
Final price depends on page count and complexity. No charge until you confirm.
How it works03 STEPS · ~5 MIN TO QUOTE

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.

01

Upload your document

Drag & drop a PDF, or photograph the original with your phone. We accept JPG, PNG, HEIC, PDF, and TIFF up to 25 MB.

· Instant page count & quote· Multi-document orders supported
02

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.

· Layout preserved 1:1· Names transliterated to your I-130 spelling
03

Download your USCIS-ready file

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.

· Notarization & apostille add-on· Hard-copy mailing via USPS Priority
ContextES · ARREST-WARRANT · USCIS

Spanish arrest warrants submitted for uscis — what reviewers look for, and what we attach.

Arrest warrants issued by Spanish-speaking jurisdictions are among the most-translated civil documents in US uscis filings. Arrest warrants — and the closely related summons, charge sheets, and court-issued judicial orders — are central corroborating evidence in I-589 asylum applications, withholding-of-removal claims, and Convention Against Torture cases. Verdacert translates these documents with the procedural precision adjudicators need, preserving the issuing court, charges, dates, and judicial signatures exactly. Reviewers experienced with Iranian Revolutionary Court orders, Egyptian State Security referrals, Syrian terrorism-court warrants, and Afghan provincial-court summons handle them.

Spanish is the official language of 20 countries and the most-translated source language for US immigration, court, university, and medical filings. Verdacert handles Spanish-language civil status records, court orders, academic transcripts, and medical records from across Latin America, Spain, and Equatorial Guinea — with reviewers calibrated to each country's documentary conventions. Verdacert's reviewer pool covers Mexican Spanish, Caribbean Spanish, Andean Spanish, and other regional variants, with country-specific document conventions from Mexico, Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, and beyond.

Spanish civil documents follow distinct registry conventions in each country — Mexican actas differ from Salvadoran partidas and Spanish certificaciones literales. Names typically include both paternal and maternal surnames (apellidos), and Verdacert preserves the exact order and accent marks on the certified translation. Dates use the day-month-year order and the Gregorian calendar throughout. Apostille requirements and document numbering (CURP, DNI, cédula, RUT) vary by country; the certified translation transcribes all identifiers exactly and notes the issuing authority.

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 arrest warrant translations specifically, our reviewers focus on distinguishing arrest warrants from summons, from in-absentia conviction notices, and from prosecutor referrals and charge citations to local criminal-code articles that need an explanatory reviewer note for the adjudicator, 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.

What we translateARREST WARRANT

Every field on a spanish arrest warrant, transcribed without omission.

Arrest warrants — and the closely related summons, charge sheets, and court-issued judicial orders — are central corroborating evidence in I-589 asylum applications, withholding-of-removal claims, and Convention Against Torture cases. Verdacert translates these documents with the procedural precision adjudicators need, preserving the issuing court, charges, dates, and judicial signatures exactly. Reviewers experienced with Iranian Revolutionary Court orders, Egyptian State Security referrals, Syrian terrorism-court warrants, and Afghan provincial-court summons handle them.

TYPICAL FIELDS

Fields the translation will include

  • Issuing court of jurisdiction
  • Named individual (sometimes including known aliases)
  • Charges or alleged offenses with citation to the local criminal code
  • Date of issuance
  • Judge or prosecutor signature
  • Court seal and case number
  • Service / notification record
REVIEWER FOCUS AREAS

Where reviewers earn their fee

  • Distinguishing arrest warrants from summons, from in-absentia conviction notices, and from prosecutor referrals
  • Charge citations to local criminal-code articles that need an explanatory reviewer note for the adjudicator
  • Documents intentionally withheld from the asylum seeker until they fled — frequently photographed from a relative's secondary copy
  • Names presented in transliteration that differs from the asylum seeker's other documents
  • Faxed or photocopied documents where seals are partially illegible
USCIS requirements8 CFR § 103.2(b)(3)

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.

REQUIREMENTS

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
COMMON FILINGS

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
Trust signalsREAL FILINGS · REAL OUTCOMES

Used on tens of thousands of filings since 2023.

Verdacert is the specialist provider US immigration attorneys reach for when spanish documents need to be accepted on the first read.

A+
BBB accredited business since 2024
20
Languages supported — Arabic, Farsi, Urdu, Pashto, Dari, and more
100%
USCIS acceptance · refund if rejected
FAQPRE-PURCHASE QUESTIONS

Common questions about spanish arrest warrant translation.

If your question isn't here, our support team replies within an hour — even outside business hours.

A single PDF containing the complete English translation of your arrest warrant, with the original layout preserved as faithfully as standard text rendering allows, plus a signed certification statement meeting 8 CFR § 103.2(b)(3). The certification names the reviewer, gives their credentials, and asserts both their competence in Spanish and the completeness of the translation.
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