Authenticating documents means making U.S. documents legally valid in Israel, or Israel documents valid in the United States. The process depends on whether Israel is a Hague Apostille Convention signatory.
Israel consulates processing authentications
Atlanta
Consulate General of Israel Atlanta
View details โBostonConsulate General of Israel to New England
View details โChicagoConsulate General of Israel
View details โHoustonConsulate General of Israel
View details โLos AngelesConsulate General of Israel
View details โMiamiIsraeli Consulate
View details โNew YorkConsulate General of Israel
View details โSan FranciscoConsulate General of Israel to the Pacific Northwest
View details โWashingtonThe Embassy of Israel to the United States
View details โWhen do you need authentication?
You need authenticated documents to:
- Marry abroad (FBI background check, divorce decree)
- Work or study in Israel (diplomas, academic transcripts)
- Conduct business (corporate documents, powers of attorney)
- Inherit property or settle legal affairs
- Adopt a child or claim citizenship by descent
Required documents
- Original U.S. document (vital records, court orders, FBI check, etc.)
- Notarization by a U.S. notary (if not from a government agency)
- Authentication by the Secretary of State of the issuing state
- Apostille (Hague Convention) or consular legalization (non-Hague)
The authentication chain
For Hague Convention countries (apostille):
- Get the document notarized (if private)
- Submit to Secretary of State for apostille
- Done โ apostille is recognized internationally
For non-Hague countries (consular legalization):
- Get the document notarized (if private)
- Authenticate at Secretary of State
- Authenticate at U.S. Department of State (sometimes)
- Legalize at the Israel consulate
Costs and processing times
Consular legalization fee at Israel consulates: typically $30-$100 per document. Total processing chain: 2-6 weeks.