Filed in person at the Florida Department of State
(850) 900-3443 · Mon – Fri · 9 AM – 7 PM

Divorce Decree Apostille for Mexico.

Start Online Order → 📞 (850) 900-3443
5–7
Business Days
From the day we receive your documents.
$190
Per Document
State fee and shipping included.
1995
Mexico Hague Member
Apostille (not legalization) required.
8
Document Types
All Florida-issued documents we apostille.

Why Mexican authorities require this.

A Florida-issued divorce decree heading to Mexico needs to be authenticated through the apostille process before Mexican authorities will accept it. The apostille is the international standard set by the 1961 Hague Convention for authenticating foreign documents — and Mexico has been a member since 1995, so the Florida apostille is the only authentication required (no consular legalization).

The Florida Department of State in Tallahassee is the only authority that can apostille a Florida-issued divorce decree. The state's standard mail-in processing time is 5–7 weeks. Our service walks every document in person to the FL DOS apostille counter — 5–7 business days from the moment we receive your divorce decree.

For Mexico-bound submissions specifically, additional requirements apply beyond the apostille itself. See the next section for Mexican-specific requirements — translation, document freshness, consular submission — that often catch applicants by surprise.

Beyond the apostille — Mexico's rules.

Mexico is a Hague Convention member since 1995, so a Florida apostille is the required authentication. Certified Spanish translation by an authorized Mexican translator (perito traductor) is required for nearly all document submissions. The translation is performed in Mexico, after the apostille is applied — most Florida translators are not recognized as peritos by Mexican authorities.

For property closings, the apostilled power of attorney is typically prepared in English, apostilled in Florida, sent to Mexico, and translated by a perito traductor for use by the Mexican notario. Mexican notarios are extremely particular about the wording of POAs — work with the closing attorney to draft the POA in language the notario will accept, then apostille the final version.

Common Mexican situations where this applies.

These are the most common Mexico-bound document situations we see.

Mexican Property Purchase

Apostilled, notarized power of attorney naming a Mexican attorney to sign at the notario's office. Required for U.S. buyers not attending the closing in person.

Mexican Residency (Temporal or Permanente)

Apostilled FBI/FDLE background checks, income documentation, and birth certificates for Mexican residency applications.

Marriage in Mexico

Mexican registros civiles require apostilled birth certificates and single-status declarations. Destination weddings in Tulum, Cabo, and Puerto Vallarta drive most of this demand.

Mexican Bank Accounts

Mexican banks opening accounts for non-resident U.S. clients typically request apostilled identity documents and proof of address.

Mexican Citizenship by Descent

Children and grandchildren of Mexican nationals can claim citizenship — apostilled U.S. birth and marriage certificates document the lineage.

Mexican Corporate Formation

Apostilled corporate resolutions, articles of incorporation, and certificates of good standing for U.S. companies establishing Mexican subsidiaries.

Pick the way that fits your life.

All three options end the same way — your apostilled documents back in your hands in 5–7 business days, filed in person at the Florida Department of State.

Office Drop-Off

$190
Per Document · WPB Office

Drop off in person at 500 S Australian Ave, Suite 6088B. Pay at the counter, pick up the finished apostille at the same office.

  • ✓ 500 S Australian Ave, Suite 6088B
  • ✓ Mon – Sun · 9 AM – 7 PM by appointment
  • ✓ Document review at drop-off
  • ✓ Pay in person — card, ACH, cash
  • ✓ No shipping required
See Drop-Off Details →

Online Order

$190
Per Document · Order Anywhere

Order from anywhere in the U.S. We email you a pre-paid FedEx QR code — drop your envelope at any FedEx location.

  • ✓ Order online 24/7
  • ✓ Pre-paid FedEx QR code emailed
  • ✓ No printer needed
  • ✓ FedEx return shipping included
  • ✓ Same 5–7 day turnaround
Start Online Order →

Four steps. One week.

The same procedure for every order — whichever option you choose.

— Step One —
01

Place Your Order

Choose drop-off, mobile pickup, or online — whichever fits your week. Pay $190 per document up front (online) or at the appointment.

— Step Two —
02

Send Documents

Hand them to us, give them to our pickup specialist, or drop your FedEx envelope. Same destination either way.

— Step Three —
03

We File in Person

Our Tallahassee back-office team walks your documents in person to the Florida Department of State counter.

— Step Four —
04

Apostille Returned

We return the finished apostille the same way you sent it. 5–7 business days, every order.

Common questions.

Yes. Mexican authorities almost universally require translation by an authorized perito traductor certified by a Mexican state court. Florida translators (even certified ones) are typically not accepted unless they also hold Mexican perito credentials. The translation is done in Mexico, after the apostille is applied.
You can't — Mexico apostilles Mexican documents. Florida apostilles U.S. documents being sent to Mexico. The Florida POA gets apostilled in Tallahassee, then translated and presented to the Mexican notario in Mexico. This is the standard cross-border POA workflow.
The original apostilled POA (not a copy), the certified Spanish translation by a perito traductor, and any specific identification or authority documents the notario has requested. Work with the closing attorney to confirm the exact list before flying down (or sending an authorized representative).
The main Mexican Consulate in South Florida is in Miami at 5975 SW 72nd Street. Additional consulates serve Orlando, Tampa, and Hialeah. The consulates process Mexican-citizen services but do not authenticate U.S. documents — that's the Florida Department of State.

More from My Florida Apostille.

Apostille your divorce decree for Mexico.

$190 per document. 5–7 business days. State filing fee and shipping included. Filed in person at the Florida Department of State.

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