Certified Spanish property deed translation for Other.
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.
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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.
Spanish property deeds submitted for other — what reviewers look for, and what we attach.
Property deeds issued by Spanish-speaking jurisdictions are among the most-translated civil documents in US other filings. Property deeds — tapu (Turkish), طابو, سند ملکیت, kushan — establish ownership of real estate and are routinely translated for EB-5 immigrant-investor petitions (source-of-funds documentation), E-2 treaty-investor cases, and consular-processing evidence of continuing ties abroad. They also appear in family-court matters that touch on marital property and inheritance.
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.
Verdacert handles any document that requires a certified English translation for use in a US setting. If your use case isn't listed, the standard certification statement applies and most documents are accepted without further authentication.
For property deed translations specifically, our reviewers focus on co-ownership and inheritance share notations spanning multiple heirs and mortgage and lien encumbrances added to the deed margin over time, 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 spanish property deed, transcribed without omission.
Property deeds — tapu (Turkish), طابو, سند ملکیت, kushan — establish ownership of real estate and are routinely translated for EB-5 immigrant-investor petitions (source-of-funds documentation), E-2 treaty-investor cases, and consular-processing evidence of continuing ties abroad. They also appear in family-court matters that touch on marital property and inheritance.
Fields the translation will include
- Owner (or owners and share percentages)
- Property description, address, and cadastral identifiers
- Area in square meters
- Title category (residential, commercial, agricultural)
- Registry book number and entry
- Sale price or appraised value
- Liens, mortgages, and encumbrances
- Date of registration
- Issuing land registry
Where reviewers earn their fee
- Co-ownership and inheritance share notations spanning multiple heirs
- Mortgage and lien encumbrances added to the deed margin over time
- Land-registry formats that vary by country and by year
- Currency conversions and historical valuation calculations
- Bilingual (Arabic / English or Turkish / English) deeds with field-level inconsistencies
What Other actually requires of a translation.
Verdacert handles any document that requires a certified English translation for use in a US setting. If your use case isn't listed, the standard certification statement applies and most documents are accepted without further authentication.
Checklist for Other acceptance
- Standard certification statement
- Full English translation
Where this translation is typically submitted
- Adoption-related foreign documents
- Religious documents for family matters
- Historical records for genealogy and citizenship claims
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.
Common questions about spanish property deed translation.
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