BOLIVIAN DOCUMENT TRANSLATION
Bolivian Single Status Certificate Translation for USCIS
A certified translation of a Bolivian single-status certificate (Certificado de Soltería / Libertad de Estado Civil) for USCIS costs about $15–25 and is delivered in 24–48 hours, with a signed Certificate of Accuracy that meets 8 CFR 103.2(b)(3). Translation HelpDesk uses native Spanish (Castellano) and Quechua-speaking specialists, and if USCIS rejects our translation we fix it free and cover your resubmission fee.
Updated July 11, 2026 · Reviewed by Victor Luján, Founder — certified translations since 2018
WHAT WE TRANSLATE
The Bolivian Single Status Certificate (Certificado de Soltería / Libertad de Estado Civil)
Bolivia's proof of eligibility to marry is the Certificado de Soltería, also framed as a Certificado de Estado Civil / Libertad de Estado Civil, issued by SERECÍ under the Tribunal Supremo Electoral. It certifies the inexistence of a registered marriage — and, importantly, of a registered unión libre (free union), which Bolivian law treats as a civil-status bond — so the wording is a negative-record attestation rather than a positive fact. The fee is roughly 23 bolivianos and validity runs about three months. For a K-1 fiancé(e) petition or to marry in the U.S., USCIS and consular officers rely on this to show the person is free to marry. The translation nuance is fidelity to the 'certifies that no marriage record is found' phrasing, plus the searched jurisdiction (nationwide versus a single department) and the exact validity window, because an expired or narrowly scoped certificate invites questions. We render SERECÍ's seal and verification code as [SEAL] and certify the English to USCIS standard.
WHO ISSUES IT
Where Your Bolivian Single Status Certificate Comes From
In Bolivia, civil-status records come from the Servicio de Registro Cívico (SERECI) — Civil Registry Service, an arm of the Órgano Electoral Plurinacional (Plurinational Electoral Organ / Supreme Electoral Tribunal). Bolivia has been a party to the Hague Apostille Convention since it entered into force on May 7, 2018, so Bolivian public documents are authenticated with a single apostille — an electronic apostilla issued by the Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores (Cancillería) — with no US embassy or consular legalization required. Full Bolivia apostille & authentication guidance →
USCIS REQUIREMENTS
How USCIS Wants Your Bolivian Single Status Certificate Translated
For your Bolivian single-status certificate, USCIS requires a complete English translation of everything on the page — the issuing office’s details, seals, and any marginal notes included — plus a signed certification of accuracy under 8 CFR 103.2(b)(3). Machine translation cannot sign that certification. We reproduce the document's exact layout so an officer can compare it line by line against your Bolivian original.
WATCH OUT FOR
Common Bolivian Single Status Certificate Pitfalls
Bolivian single-status certificates vary in scope — in some countries they attest only to the issuing registry's own records, while countries with a centralized national register cover the whole country — so the English wording must state your certificate's actual scope precisely, and name romanization must match the passport.
Native Bolivian Specialist
A native speaker of your document's language handles it — not a generalist or a machine.
Format-Matched to the Original
The original layout, seals, and stamps reproduced in position.
USCIS Acceptance Guaranteed
If USCIS rejects it citing the translation, we fix it free and cover your resubmission fee.
FAQ
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does Bolivian single status certificate translation cost?
A standard Bolivian single-status certificate is typically $15-25 total, certified and formatted, delivered in 24-48 hours. Pricing is $0.05 per word; longer or multi-page documents are quoted exactly before you pay.
Is your Bolivian single status certificate translation accepted by USCIS?
Yes. Every translation includes a signed Certificate of Accuracy meeting 8 CFR 103.2(b)(3). If USCIS rejects it citing the translation, we correct it free and reimburse your resubmission fee.
What does a Bolivian document translation cost and how fast is it?
Our flat rate is $0.05 per word, so a typical Bolivian birth or marriage certificate runs about $15–25 with 24–48 hour turnaround. Every order is backed by our USCIS Rejection Pledge — if a formatting issue with our translation causes a rejection, we fix it free and cover the resubmission fee — and you can start with a free 250-word sample.
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