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Apostille Application Mexico (Solicitud de Apostilla SRE)

Apostille Application Mexico (Solicitud de Apostilla SRE)

SOLICITUD DE APOSTILLA

Convenio de La Haya de 5 de Octubre de 1961 (Apostilla)

Secretaría de Relaciones Exteriores / Autoridad Competente Estatal

I. DATOS DEL SOLICITANTE

Nombre: [Applicant Name]

CURP: [Applicant CURP]

RFC: [Applicant RFC]

Identificación Oficial: [Applicant ID]

Domicilio: [Applicant Address]

Contacto: [applicantContact]

II. DOCUMENTO A APOSTILLAR

Tipo de Documento: [Document Type]

Descripción del Documento: [Document Description]

Autoridad Emisora del Documento: [Issuing Authority]

Autoridad Apostillante Competente: [Apostille Authority]

III. DESTINO Y PROPÓSITO

País de Destino: [Destination Country]

Propósito del Apostillado: [Purpose Of Apostille]

Institución Receptora en el Extranjero: [Receiving Institution]

El solicitante declara que el país de destino es signatario del Convenio de La Haya de 5 de Octubre de 1961 sobre la Apostilla y que el documento presentado es un documento público en los términos de dicho Convenio.

IV. PAGO DE DERECHOS

Referencia de Pago / Folio e5cinco: [Payment Reference]

Fecha de Presentación: [Submission Date]

FIRMA DEL SOLICITANTE

El solicitante firma la presente solicitud bajo protesta de decir verdad, en [Submission Date].

[Applicant Name]

Firma: _________________________

USO EXCLUSIVO DE LA AUTORIDAD APOSTILLANTE

Número de Apostilla: _________________________

Fecha de Emisión: _________________________

Sello / Firma del Funcionario Autorizante: _________________________ [Applicant Contact]

Applicant (Solicitante)

________________

Signature

Apostille Authority (Autoridad Apostillante)

________________

Signature

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What Is a Apostille Application Mexico (Solicitud de Apostilla SRE)?

An Apostille Application Mexico (Solicitud de Apostilla) is the formal request submitted to the competent Mexican authority — principally the Secretaría de Relaciones Exteriores (SRE) through its Dirección General de Coordinación Política, or the corresponding state authority designated under Mexican implementing law — to affix the apostille certification (apostilla) to a Mexican public document (documento público mexicano) so that the document will be recognised as authentic in another country that is a signatory to the Convenio de La Haya sobre la Apostilla of 5 October 1961 (the Hague Apostille Convention). Mexico ratified the Hague Apostille Convention and it entered into force for Mexico on 14 August 1995, making Mexican public documents eligible for apostille certification for use in all 125 current Convention member states without the need for consular legalisation (legalización consular) or chain authentication. Under Article 3 of the Hague Convention, an apostille issued in Mexico by a competent authority under Article 6 is accepted by all signatory states without further verification. Article 9 of the Convention prohibits member states from requiring legalisation in addition to the apostille.

The apostille (apostilla) is a standardised certification — prescribed in Annex to the 1961 Convention — that authenticates the origin of the signature, the capacity in which the person signing the document acted, and where appropriate, the identity of any seal or stamp affixed to the document. The apostilla does not certify the content (contenido) of the document — it certifies only its formal authenticity and the authority of the person who signed or issued it. A Mexican apostilled birth certificate (acta de nacimiento apostillada), notarial deed (escritura pública apostillada), court order (resolución judicial apostillada), or professional title (título profesional apostillado) is accepted as authentic in signatory countries without further verification of the issuing authority's credentials.

In Mexico, the competent authorities to issue apostilles are determined by document type and jurisdiction. Federal documents — including those issued by federal courts (Poder Judicial de la Federación), federal agencies (dependencias federales), and documents signed by federal officials — are apostilled by the SRE through its Dirección de Legalización y Apostilla. State-level documents — including birth, marriage, and death certificates (actas del Registro Civil), state court orders (resoluciones de juzgados locales), notarial instruments authorised by state notaries (escrituras de notarios del estado), and state agency documents — are apostilled by the Secretaría General de Gobierno or equivalent authority of the corresponding state (entidad federativa).

The electronic apostille (e-Apostilla or apostilla electrónica) has been introduced progressively in Mexico — the SRE and several state governments issue digital apostilles that include a QR code or verification link enabling the receiving authority in the foreign country to verify the apostille's authenticity online through the HCCH e-APP (e-Apostille Programme) platform without requiring a physical paper apostille stamp. As of 2025, the majority of Mexican federal apostilles are issued electronically through the SRE's online portal (portal.sre.gob.mx), while state apostille practices vary by entity.

The legal framework governing apostilles in Mexico also intersects with Mexican notarial law. When a Notario Público authorises a poder notarial (power of attorney) or escritura pública (notarial deed) intended for use abroad, the notary's signature and official seal are the elements that the apostille certifies — confirming that the Notario is a duly licensed public official whose signature is registered with the state's competent apostille authority. The Ley del Notariado of each state requires Notarios to register their specimen signatures and seals with the state government, which maintains these records for apostille verification purposes. A Mexican escritura pública that has not been properly signed and sealed by a licensed Notario Público cannot receive an apostille — making the quality of the notarial act the foundation of the entire authentication chain. The SRE's Dirección de Legalización y Apostilla publishes updated lists of federal issuing authorities whose signatures are registered, and property owners and business operators regularly consulting these lists confirm their documents are prepared by properly registered officials before submitting the Solicitud de Apostilla.

When Do You Need a Apostille Application Mexico (Solicitud de Apostilla SRE)?

An Apostille Application Mexico is required whenever a Mexican public document must be presented in a foreign country that is a signatory to the Hague Apostille Convention of 1961, and the receiving country requires proof of the document's authenticity.

The apostille is needed for Mexican birth certificates (actas de nacimiento) presented abroad for purposes of nationality claims, dual citizenship applications, school enrolment in foreign countries, or inheritance proceedings in other jurisdictions. The acta de nacimiento must first be obtained from the Registro Civil of the corresponding state and then submitted for apostille at the competent state authority.

A Solicitud de Apostilla is required for Mexican notarial deeds (escrituras públicas) presented abroad — for example, a poder notarial (power of attorney) that will be used in a real estate transaction in Spain or the United States, a contrato de compraventa (sale deed) for an asset located abroad, or a testamento público abierto to be recognised in a foreign succession proceeding. The Notario Público who authorised the deed typically assists the client in obtaining the apostille through the competent state authority.

The apostille is necessary for Mexican professional titles (títulos profesionales) and academic certificates (certificados académicos) when a Mexican professional — physician, engineer, architect, attorney — seeks to have their credentials recognised abroad for employment, professional licensing, or postgraduate study applications. The Secretaría de Educación Pública (SEP) issues apostilles for federal-registered educational documents.

A Solicitud de Apostilla is needed for Mexican court orders (resoluciones judiciales) and notarial succession documents (declaraciones de herederos) when heirs residing abroad need to prove their inheritance rights to foreign banks, registries, or tax authorities holding assets of a Mexican decedent in a foreign country.

The application is required when a Mexican company (sociedad mexicana) needs to present its constitutive deed (acta constitutiva), powers of attorney, or corporate resolutions to foreign business partners, financial institutions, or regulatory authorities as part of a cross-border commercial transaction or regulatory compliance process.

A Solicitud de Apostilla is also needed when Mexican citizens or residents apply for foreign visas, residency, or citizenship and the destination country's consulate or immigration authority requires apostilled supporting documents — for example, apostilled actas de nacimiento for a European Union long-term residency application, apostilled marriage certificates for a spousal visa application in the United States or Canada, or apostilled criminal background clearances (cartas de antecedentes no penales) for immigration purposes. The apostille guarantees that these Mexican civil registry and government documents are accepted by foreign authorities without the need for additional consular legalisation procedures, simplifying the immigration process significantly for Mexicans with international ties.

Finally, the apostille is required when a foreign investor or business acquiring assets in Mexico needs to present Mexican property documents, corporate certificates, or judicial records to foreign tax authorities, financial regulators, or courts — for example, presenting an apostilled escritura de compraventa to a foreign tax authority to demonstrate the cost basis of a Mexican real property investment, or presenting apostilled court judgments to a foreign financial institution as evidence of resolved litigation affecting a Mexican company.

What to Include in Your Apostille Application Mexico (Solicitud de Apostilla SRE)

A valid Apostille Application Mexico for submission to the SRE or state competent authority must contain the following essential elements and be accompanied by the required documentation.

Applicant Identification: Full name, CURP (Clave Única de Registro de Población) or RFC, official identity document (INE/IFE or passport), domicile, and contact information of the person or entity requesting the apostille. For applications submitted through an authorised representative (representante autorizado), a poder notarial (power of attorney) authorising the representative to act in apostille matters must accompany the application.

Document Identification: Full description of each document being submitted for apostille — document type (acta de nacimiento, escritura pública, resolución judicial, título profesional), issuing authority (Registro Civil, Notaría, Juzgado, SEP), date of issuance or authorisation, folio or instrument number, and the full name of the person to whom the document refers or who signed it.

Purpose and Destination Country: Statement of the country where the apostilled document will be presented and, where required by the SRE's online portal, the purpose for which the apostille is needed (e.g., trámite migratorio, sucesión en el extranjero, ejercicio profesional, transacción comercial). This information helps the SRE classify and process the application under the correct procedure.

Original Document or Certified Copy: Submission of the original document (original del documento) or, where the SRE or state authority accepts it, a certified copy (copia certificada) issued by the original issuing authority. Plain photocopies (copias simples) are not accepted for apostille purposes — the document presented must bear the original signatures, seals, and stamps of the issuing authority.

Verification of Issuing Authority: For the apostille to be valid, the signature, seal, or stamp on the document must be from an authority whose specimens are registered with the competent apostille authority (the SRE or state secretary). If the issuing authority is not registered, pre-legalisation steps may be required before the apostille can be affixed. The SRE publishes lists of registered issuing authorities on its website.

Payment of Fees: Payment of the applicable derechos (federal fees) as established in the Ley Federal de Derechos for apostille services, or state fees for state-issued documents. As of 2025, SRE apostille fees are established in the annual Ley de Ingresos and must be paid through the e5cinco portal or at authorised banking institutions before submission.

Apostille for Private Documents: A private document (documento privado) — such as a contract, letter, or private certification — cannot be apostilled directly because it lacks an official signature or seal from a public authority. To obtain an apostille for a private document, the document must first be notarised before a Notario Público (who certifies the authenticity of the signatures or the document's content), and then the notarial certification is submitted for apostille. The apostille then certifies the Notario's signature and capacity — not the content of the underlying private document. This two-step process (notarisation plus apostille) is commonly used for private commercial contracts and certificates of incorporation of foreign companies that need to be recognised in Mexico through the reverse process.

Forms-legal.com provides this Apostille Application Mexico template as a preparation guide. The actual apostille application must be submitted through the SRE's online portal (gob.mx/sre) for federal documents, or through the corresponding state secretary's office for state documents. Processing times typically range from 3 to 15 business days depending on the issuing authority and document type.

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Reference this free template in an article, syllabus, or research note:

APA

Forms Legal. (2026). Apostille Application Mexico (Solicitud de Apostilla SRE) (Mexico) [Legal document template]. Forms Legal. https://forms-legal.com/mexico/government/declarations/apostille-application-mexico

MLA

"Apostille Application Mexico (Solicitud de Apostilla SRE) (Mexico)." Forms Legal, 2026, https://forms-legal.com/mexico/government/declarations/apostille-application-mexico.

BibTeX
@misc{formslegal-apostille-application-mexico,
  author       = {{Forms Legal}},
  title        = {Apostille Application Mexico (Solicitud de Apostilla SRE) (Mexico)},
  year         = {2026},
  howpublished = {\url{https://forms-legal.com/mexico/government/declarations/apostille-application-mexico}},
  note         = {Free legal document template}
}

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Statute-referenced template — Template last modified June 2026

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