Why Afghanistan requires embassy legalization, not an apostille.
Because Afghanistan has not acceded to the 1961 Hague Apostille Convention, a federal apostille carries no legal force there. Instead, your U.S. document must pass through the traditional authentication and legalization chain that predated the Convention — a sequence of verifications from a U.S. notary (if applicable), the issuing state, the U.S. Department of State, and finally the destination country's embassy in Washington, D.C.
Our role is to act as your representative at every step of that chain — carrying documents in person to the Office of Authentications at the U.S. Department of State and then to the Embassy of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan, maintaining chain of custody, and returning the finished, fully legalized documents to you by tracked courier.
How we move your documents through the chain.
Every Afghanistan order follows the same five-stage sequence. What varies by country is timing, fees, and translation requirements — not the structure.
Document intake & review
Submit through our secure portal, by mail, or in person. We verify each document is complete, properly notarized or state-certified where required, and eligible for legalization in Afghanistan.
State authentication (when applicable)
State-issued documents — birth and marriage certificates, diplomas, notarized affidavits — are authenticated by the Secretary of State of the issuing state. Federal documents (FBI, USCIS, IRS, USPTO) skip this step.
U.S. Department of State authentication
We hand-deliver to the Office of Authentications in Washington, D.C. Standard processing takes 3–5 business days; expedited 1–2.
Embassy of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan legalization
We hand-carry the authenticated document to the embassy in Washington, D.C. The embassy verifies the U.S. authentication, applies its own seal and signature, and returns it to us.
Return to you
Shipped via your chosen courier — USPS, FedEx, DHL, or UPS — with tracking. Domestic or international delivery available.
The Embassy of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan.
All legalizations for Afghanistan are processed through the embassy below. Our couriers submit documents in person; the embassy does not accept walk-in submissions from the general public.
Embassy of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan
Washington, D.C.Submission Address
2341 Wyoming Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20008
United States of America
Contacts
Embassy phone
(202) 483-6410
Our office
(760) 469-2997 · 24/7
submissions@federalapostille.org
What Afghanistan legalization costs.
Pricing reflects published fees at the time of writing. Embassy fees change without public notice — we confirm the current rate at order intake and will not proceed without your approval of any change.
Typical cost breakdown — one personal document
Commercial documents — certificates of origin, commercial invoices, corporate resolutions — typically carry higher embassy fees and may require U.S.-Arab Chamber of Commerce certification. Call (760) 469-2997 for a commercial quote.
What every Afghanistan submission needs.
Original or certified copy
Photocopies are not accepted. The document must be an original or a certified copy from the competent authority.
Notarization & state certification
Private documents — powers of attorney, affidavits, corporate resolutions — must be notarized, then state-certified before federal authentication.
Translation
Dari or Pashto translation typically required for legal, academic, and commercial documents.
No staples, no alterations
Documents must be free of staples, tape, or changes. Any attachment is made by the authenticating authority.
Documents we commonly process for Afghanistan
FBI background checks, birth and marriage certificates, educational diplomas and transcripts, powers of attorney, corporate resolutions.
End-to-end processing estimate.
| Stage | Typical Duration |
|---|---|
| State authentication (if required) | 3–10 business days |
| U.S. Department of State — standard | 3–5 business days |
| U.S. Department of State — expedited | 1–2 business days |
| Islamic Republic of Afghanistan legalization | 2–4 weeks |
| Return shipping (domestic · international) | 1–7 business days |
Total timeline typically runs from three to six weeks depending on document type, state of origin, and embassy workload. For time-sensitive matters, ask about our expedited Department of State submission option.
Frequently asked questions.
Can I get an apostille for Afghanistan instead?
No. Afghanistan is not a party to the Hague Apostille Convention, so an apostille has no legal force there. Your document must go through the full embassy legalization chain.
Do I need to be in Washington, D.C. to use your service?
No. We serve clients nationwide. Ship your documents to our Washington, D.C. office via tracked courier and we handle the full chain in person. Completed documents are shipped back to any U.S. or international address.
How long are legalized documents valid for use in Afghanistan?
Validity depends on the receiving institution. Most government offices and courts in Afghanistan accept legalized documents for three to six months from the date of issuance. FBI background checks are often the most time-sensitive. Confirm acceptance with the receiving party before starting.
Do commercial documents follow the same process?
Largely yes, but commercial documents — certificates of origin, commercial invoices, corporate resolutions — typically require an additional step: certification by the U.S.-Arab Chamber of Commerce (for Arab-League destinations) or the appropriate chamber before embassy submission. Embassy fees for commercial documents are also substantially higher than for personal documents.
What if the embassy rejects my document?
Rejections are rare when documents are prepared correctly in advance. If rejection occurs due to an embassy-side error or evolving requirement, we re-submit at no additional service fee. If rejection is due to the document itself (missing notarization, invalid seal), we work with you to correct and resubmit.