I was hoping you could all help clarify something for me. I need a 'notarized employment contract' as well as a notarized copy of my degree. I am outside Canada and I was wondering if I needed to get this done by a Notary Public ? or are any of those people listed in the guide (eg7000) able to do so too ?
People authorized to certify copies include the following:
Outside Canada:
•a judge
•a magistrate
•a notary public
•an officer of a court of justice
•a commissioner authorized
administer oaths in the country
which the person is living
In other words is there a difference between a certified copy and a notarized copy ?
I'm interested in the answer to this question also. I'm living in Thailand, where U.S./Canadian-style Notary Publics are rare and expensive, and I'll probably end up using the one at the U.S. embassy, which will cost over $200. Would CIC accept a Thai version of this? It would be FAR cheaper.
I was hoping you could all help clarify something for me. I need a 'notarized employment contract' as well as a notarized copy of my degree. I am outside Canada and I was wondering if I needed to get this done by a Notary Public ? or are any of those people listed in the guide (eg7000) able to do so too ?
People authorized to certify copies include the following:
Outside Canada:
•a judge
•a magistrate
•a notary public
•an officer of a court of justice
•a commissioner authorized
administer oaths in the country
which the person is living
In other words is there a difference between a certified copy and a notarized copy ?
If it is mentioned in your Visa office specific list then you can get the copies certified as True Photocopy attested/or the process followed in your country, by any of the above mentioned.
I notarized all the copies of my documents in my country before coming to the US. I just went to a regular notary public. Here in the US I notarized the rest at the regular notary public as well. I don't see the difference. As long as the notary public signs the copy stating that it is a true copy of the original I think there should be no problem. Well, if they have doubts at the embassy I guess they will ask you to provide more substantial proof.