What Is an Apostille? A Guide for Baltimore, Ohio
Updated June 2026 · By Asal Multi Services · Columbus, OH
When a document from Baltimore, Ohio has to be used in another country, you may be told it needs an apostille. Here is what that means, when you need one, and how to get it.
Quick Answer
- ✓ An apostille is a certificate that authenticates a public document for use in another country.
- ✓ It is issued under the Hague Apostille Convention by a designated state authority — in Ohio, the Secretary of State.
- ✓ It verifies the seal and signature on the document (such as a notary’s) so a foreign country will accept it.
- ✓ It only applies to countries that are part of the Hague Convention.
What an apostille is
An apostille is a standardized certificate, recognized internationally under the 1961 Hague Apostille Convention, that authenticates the origin of a public document. It does not certify that the document’s contents are correct — it confirms that the signature, seal, or stamp on it (for example, a notary’s commission or a registrar’s signature) is genuine, so officials in the receiving country can trust it.
When you need one
You typically need an apostille when a foreign government, court, university, or employer asks for an authenticated U.S. document — common examples include birth and marriage certificates, diplomas and transcripts, powers of attorney, and affidavits. In Ohio, the Secretary of State issues apostilles for documents that originate in Ohio or are notarized by an Ohio notary.
How to get an apostille
First make sure the document is in the right form — a notarized original, or a certified copy of a vital record from the issuing authority. Some documents need county or state certification before the apostille step. You then submit the document to the Ohio Secretary of State for the apostille. If the destination country is not part of the Hague Convention, you cannot use an apostille; the document goes through a longer legalization chain involving the U.S. Department of State and the country’s embassy.
What this means for Baltimore, Ohio
Central Ohio clients typically need notarizations for immigration affidavits, real estate transactions, vehicle title transfers, and out-of-state document submissions. Our Fairfield County clients use our notary for immigration affidavits, contract signatures, and the kind of routine notarization that needs to happen the same day.
communities where new arrivals often join families already established in central Ohio for the lower cost of living — and Baltimore, with a population near 3,050, reflects that mix in its schools, workplaces, and houses of worship.
rural and small-town drive routes feed into I-71 or U.S. 23 for the final approach to our Morse Rd office. From Baltimore (ZIP 43105), the trip is roughly 25 miles each way.
The 25-mile drive from Baltimore (~35 min) is short enough that most notary visits are walk-ins — no appointment required.
Verify current details: Fees, processing times, and rules change. Confirm the latest figures for your situation with Ohio Secretary of State – Apostilles before you file.
Need help in Baltimore?
Asal Multi Services helps Baltimore-area clients with notary public services and more — at a fraction of typical lawyer fees. Walk in or call; we speak Somali, Arabic, and English.
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Frequently Asked Questions
What does an apostille actually prove?
It authenticates the signature, seal, or stamp on a public document — such as a notary’s — so another country accepts it. It does not certify that the document’s contents are true.
Where do Baltimore, Ohio residents get an apostille?
From the Ohio Secretary of State, which issues apostilles for Ohio documents and Ohio-notarized documents. Asal Multi Services can notarize and coordinate the apostille for Baltimore-area clients.
Does every country accept an apostille?
No. Apostilles work only for countries in the Hague Apostille Convention. For other countries, the document needs a longer legalization process through the U.S. State Department and the destination country’s embassy or consulate.
Do I need to notarize before getting an apostille?
Often yes. Many documents must be notarized (or be a certified copy of a vital record) before the state can issue an apostille, because the apostille authenticates that underlying signature or seal.
How long does an apostille take?
Ohio Secretary of State processing is usually a few business days, but plan extra time for mailing and any certification steps. Verify current timelines with the Ohio Secretary of State.
Asal Multi Services is a non-attorney document service. A notary public verifies identity and witnesses signatures and cannot give legal advice. This guide is general information; verify current rules with the Ohio Secretary of State.