Embassy legalization is the process of validating documents (like degrees, marriage certificates, or commercial papers) so they are legally recognized abroad. It ensures the document complies with the destination country's regulations. It applies primarily to countries that are not part of the Hague Apostille Convention.
The 3-Step Legalization Process
To get a document legalized, you generally need to follow this sequence before visiting the embassy:
1. State/Local Authentication
Depending on the document type, it must first be authenticated by the local governing body. Educational certificates typically require State Human Resource Department (HRD) authentication, while personal documents might require State Home Department or Chamber of Commerce approval.
2. Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) Attestation
After your state validates the document, it must be submitted to the Ministry of External Affairs (e.g., the CPV Division in New Delhi). The MEA verifies the state-level signatures but does not evaluate the document's contents.
3. Final Embassy Legalization
Once stamped by the MEA, the document is submitted to the Embassy or Consulate of the destination country located in India for the final legalization stamp.