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Farncombe

Newbie
Jan 10, 2016
5
0
Sorry to ask this but my wife is plaguing me - I am a Brit living in England applying for PR, sponsored by my Canadian wife.

I know I need to send copies of birth certificate, wedding certificate and passport along with about three thousand forms. The document guide does not say that I need to have these copies made/attested by a notary, but my wife feels sure that I do. Since this costs £200 per document, I would rather not !

Can anyone please advise on what needs to be notarised/attested from an applicant in the UK?

Thanks in advance!

mjf
 
You win. As stated in the guide:

Send originals of the immigration forms (items 1 to 5 below) and police certificates. Send photocopies of all other documents, unless instructed otherwise.

As the guide does not "instruct otherwise" for any documents, normal photocopies are all that is required.
 
Farncombe said:
Sorry to ask this but my wife is plaguing me - I am a Brit living in England applying for PR, sponsored by my Canadian wife.

I know I need to send copies of birth certificate, wedding certificate and passport along with about three thousand forms. The document guide does not say that I need to have these copies made/attested by a notary, but my wife feels sure that I do. Since this costs £200 per document, I would rather not !

Can anyone please advise on what needs to be notarised/attested from an applicant in the UK?

Thanks in advance!

mjf
The going rate for a solicitor to notarise a sheet is about £5. At £200, you are being ripped off. If you choose to have them done, a solicitor, acting as a commissioner for oaths will suffice. We did have ours done, just in case, but it's not mandated. Most people don't bother.
 
No never had anything notarized. Canadian Citizen/Welsh sponsoring a Brit . The only thing we sent that was original was the police certificate. Every thing else was photocopied.
 
Thanks chaps!! That's what I wanted to know

(we've had a lot of stuff notarised in the past for property purchases and usually pay £70 per document - the wife went tp the local archbishop's clerk or something like that)
 
The only reason you'd have to send a notarized copy of a document is if CIC specifically requests an original document but you are not able to submit it because you need it for something else.

You can find a notary for probably 5 quid on craigslist. The Canadian embassy also notarizes for 10