Northwest Territories Authentications
Once the NWT Birth Certificate and Registration of Live Birth are received from Vital Statistics, we need to have these two documents notarized by a Notary Public in and for the Province before Authentication Federally can take place. In the province of NWT, they do not authenticate the Birth Certificate or the Registration of Live Birth Provincially.
Find a local Notary Public or Lawyer in the Province to arrange to have your documents notarized and picked up or contact a notary/lawyer in your birth province, if you are out of province. Be sure to do your research for a reasonable cost and check with the province that the notary/lawyer has obtained an official Notary Public designation and have their Seals and signatures on file with the Department of Justice.
**When getting documents Notarized, make sure that the Notary Public has dated, signed, printed and stamped their name beneath their signature and sealed (embossed) the documents or the documents will be rejected for authentication.
Copy the notary cover letter template for yourself to use and edit your information into it, print out in blue ink and sign the document with just your First and Middle name- Grantee with a blue pen. Have your Witness also sign the document with a blue pen. Print it out to drop off or send with your certificates to be notarized and be sure to follow the mailing instructions provided at the bottom of this page before sending anything off.
Once your notarized certificates are returned back to you or picked up, they will need to be sent off to Global Affairs Canada for federal authentication.
Here is the link to the Federal Authentication page.
Mailing Instructions:
Your mailing packages will include:
- 10×15 white or brown envelopes: (sending & returning) 2x package
- Cover letter completed with your information
- Registered mail stickers: up to 2x package
- Birth Certificates/ROLBs
- Authentication fee money order
- Stamps for sending and return envelopes (check for what is needed for sending and returning envelopes when at post office)
- In the top left-hand corner of the Sending envelope in blue ink, write:
First Middle,
Near: Your home address,
[Postal code in square brackets]
- Put the correct sending address in the middle of the Sending envelope in blue ink (Authentication address).
- In the center of the Return envelope, in blue ink, write:
First Middle, Grantee
Near: Your home address,
[Postal code in square brackets]
(We want Global Affairs to rubber stamp their address into the top left-hand side of the return envelope, so do not put their address there, leave blank)
- Put the folded Return 10X15 or 9×12 return envelope into the sending envelope. – folding this 10X15 envelope so they do not have to fold your notarized/ Authenticated documents. If you can not find one, you can use a 9X12 envelope and they will fold the bottom 2 inches of your documents backwards in order to fit them into your return envelope.
- Put one of the long Registered Mail stickers on the top right hand side of your authentication cover letter, attach the other one to the receipt you get at the post office when sending and put the cover letter into the sending envelope.
- Include the correct fee in the sending envelope.
- Go to the Post Office and send Registered Mail.
- When your authenticated documents come back, keep that Return envelope! This will serve as evidence later.
Put the envelope and your new Federally authenticated documents in your long 8.5X14 Estate binder when you get it, in order to keep them in good shape!!
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