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The DD Form 214 — Certificate of Release or Discharge from Active Duty — is the federal record of a service member‘s separation from the U.S. armed forces. To use a DD-214 abroad, you need a certified copy issued by the National Personnel Records Center (NPRC) and a federal apostille from the U.S. Department of State. Your personal copy of the original (Member Copy 4) cannot be apostilled directly. This guide explains how to obtain the certified copy and how to apostille it.
We coordinate the full chain in Washington, D.C. — NPRC liaison, U.S. Department of State apostille, embassy legalization for non-Hague destinations, and certified translation — so your DD-214 is delivered ready for foreign use.
Sample DD Form 214. Your personal copy of this form (typically Member Copy 4) is your reference document, not the apostille-ready instrument. For apostille, you need a fresh certified copy from the National Personnel Records Center (NPRC) — bearing the NPRC certifying officer‘s signature and seal — and then the federal apostille from the U.S. Department of State.
The DD Form 214, Certificate of Release or Discharge from Active Duty, is the official record issued by the U.S. Department of Defense upon a service member‘s separation from active duty in any branch of the U.S. armed forces (Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps, Space Force, Coast Guard). It records the dates and character of service, primary specialty, awards and decorations, military education, and the reason for separation.
Abroad, the DD-214 is commonly required for:
When a service member separates, several copies of the DD-214 are produced — Member Copy 1, Member Copy 4 (most often retained by the veteran), and other copies routed to the service branch, the VA, and the National Archives. None of the personal member copies are apostille-ready by themselves. The reason is technical but important:
Federal privacy law restricts who can request a veteran‘s military service records. The categories of authorized requesters are:
| Requester | Authority & Requirements |
|---|---|
| The veteran (alive) | Full access to their own records. Must verify identity (via ID.me for online requests, or signature for paper requests). |
| Next of kin (veteran deceased) | Spouse, parent, child, or sibling. Must provide proof of death (death certificate or obituary) and proof of relationship (birth certificate, marriage certificate, etc.). |
| Authorized representative | Attorney, agent, or service organization acting under a written authorization signed by the veteran. The authorization must be specific and recent. |
| Federal government agency | For official purposes, with appropriate authorization. |
| General public (62 years post-separation) | After 62 years from the date of separation, records become archival and are open to the public — but for a fee, and typically requiring purchase of the entire Official Military Personnel File. |
There are several recognized methods. For most veterans, methods 1 (eVetRecs) and 3 (SF-180) are the most practical. Method 2 (milConnect) is faster for recent veterans. Methods 4 through 6 are available in specific circumstances.
| Method | Best For | Typical Turnaround | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. eVetRecs (online) | Most veterans and next of kin | Often 10 days to 90 days | Free |
| 2. milConnect (DoD portal) | Recent separations (within last few years) | Same day to a few days | Free |
| 3. SF-180 by mail/fax | Veterans without internet access or with complex requests | Typically 90 days or longer | Free |
| 4. Direct from service branch | Very recent separations | Varies by branch | Free |
| 5. State Veterans Affairs office | Veterans who filed copy with state at separation | Varies by state | Varies by state |
| 6. In-person at NPRC | Local to St. Louis, by appointment | Same day to a few days | Free |
eVetRecs is the National Archives‘ online portal for requesting military service records, including DD-214s. It is generally the fastest and most reliable method for veterans and next of kin.
milConnect is the U.S. Department of Defense‘s portal for service members, veterans, and dependents. For recently separated veterans, milConnect can provide a DD-214 faster than NPRC because the record is still active in DoD systems before transfer to the National Archives.
Standard Form 180, Request Pertaining to Military Records, is the paper alternative to eVetRecs. It works for any veteran or next of kin and is the fallback when online methods are not available.
For very recent separations (typically within the last 1 to 2 years), the service branch‘s personnel records office may still hold the DD-214 before transfer to NPRC. Each branch maintains its own records process:
At separation, a copy of the DD-214 is sent to the state Veterans Affairs office of the veteran‘s home state. Many veterans also file their DD-214 with the county recorder or clerk of their home county for local recording.
These copies can be useful as a backup reference, but for federal apostille purposes there is an important distinction:
Both routes are valid for foreign use, but they are different chains. Choose the route at intake based on which certified copy you can obtain most efficiently.
For veterans local to St. Louis, in-person visits to the National Personnel Records Center are accepted on an appointment basis. Walk-ins are not generally permitted; call to schedule.
An in-person visit can be faster than mail/online processing when the records are readily accessible and you can produce identity and (if applicable) next-of-kin documentation on the spot.
If the veteran is deceased, next of kin (spouse, parent, child, or sibling) may request the DD-214 with additional supporting documentation:
Next-of-kin requests are accepted via eVetRecs, SF-180, and in-person at NPRC. Online requests will prompt for upload of the supporting documents during the ID.me process.
NPRC accepts emergency requests for time-sensitive situations:
Emergency requests can sometimes be processed within days. To request emergency processing: call NPRC at 314-801-0800, or mark the request clearly as emergency on the SF-180 or in the eVetRecs comments. Funeral directors can also assist with emergency requests for burial purposes.
| Address | National Personnel Records Center Military Personnel Records 1 Archives Drive St. Louis, MO 63138 |
| Phone | 314-801-0800 |
| Fax | 314-801-9195 |
| Online portal | vetrecs.archives.gov |
| Information page | archives.gov/personnel-records-center |
| Records held | Generally, military service records less than 62 years past separation; older records become archival and require purchase of the full Official Military Personnel File. |
An apostille-ready certified DD-214 will display the following:
If your certified copy does not contain all of these elements, it is likely not apostille-ready. Request a corrected certification or a replacement from NPRC.
With the certified copy in hand, the apostille chain for a DD-214 is:
For Hague Convention destinations (Mexico, Spain, Italy, Germany, UK, Brazil, Japan, China since 2023, the UAE since 2024, and most other major economies), the chain ends at Step 2.
For non-Hague destinations (Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Kuwait, Egypt, Vietnam, Iran, Iraq, Pakistan, and others), the chain extends to Step 3 — embassy or consulate legalization in Washington, D.C., usually with certified translation.
Your Member Copy 4 (or other personal copies) is your reference. For apostille, you need a fresh certified copy from a federal records authority (most commonly NPRC).
Submit a request via eVetRecs (Method 1, fastest for most), milConnect (Method 2, for recent veterans), SF-180 by mail or fax (Method 3, paper fallback), or one of the other methods above. Specify the request is for international apostille use.
When the certified copy arrives, verify that it contains the NPRC certifying officer‘s signature, NPRC seal, and recent date of certification. The NPRC certification page is what the U.S. Department of State will authenticate.
Send the NPRC-certified copy to us, or directly to the U.S. Department of State Office of Authentications in Washington, D.C. We hand-deliver the document and request the apostille (for Hague destinations) or authentication certificate (for non-Hague destinations).
For non-Hague destinations, we submit the apostilled document to the destination country‘s embassy or consulate in Washington, D.C. for final legalization.
If your destination requires translation, we provide certified translations alongside the apostille. Final delivery is via tracked, insured shipping worldwide — to you, to your foreign address, or directly to the receiving foreign authority.
The most common rejection. Your personal copy of the DD-214 (Member Copy 4) bears the signatures from the original separation — not from a current federal records officer. The U.S. Department of State cannot authenticate it. Fix: request a fresh certified copy from NPRC.
The U.S. Department of State authenticates original certifications, not photocopies of certified copies. Fix: request multiple originals from NPRC if you need multiple apostilles.
Many non-Hague country embassies require certifications issued within the last 3 to 6 months. Fix: request a fresh certified copy from NPRC shortly before initiating the apostille chain.
An NPRC-certified copy is a federal document — it must go to the U.S. Department of State, not to any state Secretary of State. Fix: route the federally-certified copy through the federal apostille process.
Conversely, a DD-214 certified by a state veterans affairs office or county recorder is a state-certified document — it must go through that state‘s Secretary of State, not the U.S. Department of State. Fix: match the apostille route to the certifying authority.
Many non-Hague embassies require certified translation into the destination language. Fix: coordinate certified translation alongside the apostille.
If NPRC reports the veteran‘s records cannot be located — particularly relevant for Army records affected by the 1973 NPRC fire — alternate reconstruction methods exist (Alternate Records Reconstruction). NPRC can identify substitute documents that may serve a similar purpose abroad. Fix: contact NPRC to discuss reconstruction options.
For destinations that are not Hague Convention members, the federal apostille is not the final step. The document must also be legalized by the destination country‘s embassy or consulate in Washington, D.C. Common non-Hague destinations for DD-214 use include Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Kuwait, Egypt, Vietnam, Iran, Iraq, Pakistan, and certain African countries.
Most of these destinations also require certified translation into the destination‘s official language (Arabic for Gulf states, Vietnamese for Vietnam, Farsi for Iran, Urdu for Pakistan). Plan for translation time alongside the apostille and embassy stages.
Hague Convention membership shifts periodically — China joined in 2023, the UAE and Canada joined in 2024. Documents bound for those destinations no longer require embassy legalization.
Use our Processing Time Estimator for a destination-specific projection.
Can I just apostille my personal copy of the DD-214 (Member Copy 4)?
No. Your personal copy bears signatures from the original separation date — not a current federal records officer whose signature is on file with the U.S. Department of State. You must obtain a fresh certified copy from NPRC (or equivalent federal records authority) before the apostille process can begin.
How long is an NPRC certified copy valid for apostille?
For the apostille itself, the NPRC certification does not formally expire. However, many non-Hague country embassies require the certification to be issued within the last 3 to 6 months. For Hague destinations, the apostille is generally accepted regardless of how recently the certification was issued, though some receiving foreign authorities may apply their own freshness rules.
I am the next of kin of a deceased veteran — what do I need?
You can request the DD-214 through eVetRecs, SF-180, or in-person at NPRC. You must provide proof of the veteran‘s death (death certificate or obituary), proof of your relationship to the veteran (birth certificate, marriage certificate), and your own identity documents. Eligible next of kin include spouse, parent, child, and sibling.
I have a state-certified copy from my state veterans affairs office — can that be apostilled?
Yes, but through a different route. A state-certified DD-214 goes to that state‘s Secretary of State for apostille — not to the U.S. Department of State. Both routes produce valid apostilles for foreign use; the choice depends on which certified copy is most efficient to obtain. The federal route described on this page is the one applicable to NPRC-certified copies.
The veteran‘s records were affected by the 1973 NPRC fire — what now?
The 1973 fire at the NPRC destroyed approximately 16 to 18 million military personnel files (predominantly Army records from 1912 to 1959 and Air Force records from 1947 to 1963). NPRC has an Alternate Records Reconstruction process that uses other federal records — payroll, hospital admission, unit morning reports, VA records — to reconstruct service history. If full reconstruction is possible, NPRC can issue a substitute document (such as an NA Form 13038, Certification of Military Service) that serves the same purpose as a DD-214 for many uses, including some apostille applications. Discuss your situation with NPRC and, if needed, with us.
Can a veteran living abroad request a DD-214?
Yes. eVetRecs is accessible from anywhere; the certified copy can be mailed internationally (though shipping times are longer). U.S. embassies and consulates abroad can assist with identity verification and forwarding of documents in some cases. For apostille work, the certified copy must reach a U.S. address to be carried into the U.S. Department of State — we can receive the document for you at our D.C. office.
What if the veteran‘s name changed (marriage, legal name change)?
Provide both names on the request: the name as it appeared in service (which is the name on the original DD-214) and any current name. NPRC will search under the service-era name. If you need the certified copy to reflect the current name, a legal name change document (marriage certificate, court order) can be requested alongside.
How many certified copies should I request from NPRC?
Request as many as you need — each will be a separately certified original. If you plan to apostille multiple copies (for use in multiple countries, multiple agencies, or different proceedings), request the full number of originals from NPRC at the outset. Photocopies of a single certified copy will not be accepted for apostille.
I have a hard foreign deadline — can the process be expedited?
The NPRC stage cannot be expedited for ordinary foreign deadlines — emergency processing is limited to funeral, medical, and natural disaster situations. The U.S. Department of State federal apostille stage can be expedited through our office (typically 1 to 5 business days). Embassy stages vary by country; some are fast (a few days), others are slow (several weeks). Plan backward from the deadline, and start the NPRC request as early as possible.
Does my VA disability rating decision work as a substitute for a DD-214?
No — they serve different purposes and are different documents. A VA disability rating decision (or VA Benefit Verification Letter) is useful for income and disability proof but does not establish dates and character of service the way a DD-214 does. For purposes requiring service-history proof, the DD-214 is the canonical document. VA documents follow a separate federal apostille route (see our VA document page).
Do you handle older WD AGO and NAVPERS discharge documents?
Yes. Before 1950, the armed services used several different discharge document forms (WD AGO 53, WD AGO 55, WD AGO 53-55, NAVPERS 553, NAVMC 78, and others). For veterans separated before the DD-214 era, the equivalent discharge document is the apostille-eligible record. NPRC can certify these older forms in the same way it certifies a DD-214, and the federal apostille process is the same.
Federal apostille of NPRC-certified DD-214s at the U.S. Department of State. Embassy legalization for non-Hague destinations handled in-house. Certified translation in Arabic, Vietnamese, Farsi, Urdu, and other languages. We can also coordinate the NPRC request on your behalf with your signed authorization.
Start My Order Call (760) 469-2997Federal Apostille and Notary Processing
400 8th St NW, Washington, DC 20004
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