Notice on the Abolition of Consular Authentication Services by The Chinese Embassy and Consulates-General in the U.S. After China's Accession to the 1961 Hague Convention
2023-10-25 04:58

1. On March 8, 2023, China acceded to the 1961 Hague ConventionAbolishing the Requirement of Legalization for Foreign Public Documents (hereinafter referred to as the Convention). On November 7, 2023, the Convention will enter into force between China and the United States. The Convention will continue to apply to the Hong Kong SARof China and the Macao SAR of China.

2. Starting from November 7, publicdocuments within the scope of the Convention issued by the U.S.only need to apply for a U.S. apostille before they can be sent to Chinese mainlandfor use. There is no need to apply for consular authentication bytheU.S. andtheChinese Embassyand Consulates-Generalin the U.S.

3. Starting from November 7, the ChineseEmbassy and Consulates-General in the US will ceaseconsular authentication services. For documents issued by the U.S.intended to be sent to Chinese mainland, please apply forapostillesfrom the U.S. competent authorities(For contact information, please log on to https://www.hcch.net/en/states/authorities/details3/?aid=353).

4. According to the provisions of the Convention, an apostilleissued by a country isused to prove the authenticity of the signature on the publicdocument, the identity of the signatory of the document at the time of signing, and to confirm the authenticity of the seal on the document when necessary. The completion of theU.S. apostille does not guaranteethe acceptance of the publicdocument by the relevant user in China. It is recommended tocheckin advancewith the relevant party in Chinaabout specific requirements for format, content, time limit, translation, etc. before going through the relevant procedures.