Birth Certificate Translation for INS
Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS), now operating as USCIS
Which one is the right immigration office that requires certified translation of your birth certificate?
Many new immigrants who want to get their Green Cards (Permanent Resident Visa) assume that Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) is the generic name for the U.S. Immigration. So, they ask for INS translator to translate their birth certificates and certified for the INS.
We translate your birth certificate and certify it for the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS, now U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services - USCIS) for the following languages: Afrikaans Albanian Amharic Arabic Assamese Azerbaijani Belarusian Bengali Bosnian Bulgarian Burmese Cambodian Chinese Croatian Czech Danish Dari Dutch Estonian Farsi Finnish Flemish French Georgian German Greek Gujarati Haitian Creole Hebrew Hindi Hungarian Indonesian Italian Japanese Kannada Kazakh Korean Kyrgyz Laotian Latvian Lithuanian Macedonian Maithili Malay Malayalam Marathi Moldovan Mongolian Norwegian Oriya Polish Portuguese Punjabi Pushto-Pashto Romanian Russian Singhalese Slovak Slovenian Spanish Swahili Swedish Tagalog Tajik Tamil Telugu Thai Turkish Turkmen Ukrainian Urdu Uzbek Vietnamese
INS is, now U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) after the establishment of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security. All functions of the INS were transferred to the USCIS. So, the right U.S. immigration office for the application for Green Card, marriage visa, finance visa, H1B and other visas is the USCIS.
Why do you need certified translation of your birth certificate for the U.S. immigration?
Your birth certificate is the most important civil registration document proving your identification. As your certificate of birth is in your native language, you need to have certified English translation of your birth certificate by professional translator so that the USCIS (formerly INS) can enter the place and date of your birth, the names of your father and mother along with other information and data in your immigration file.
