The Hague Apostille is an official seal that authenticates a public document (such as a notarial power of attorney, a judicial sentence, or a birth certificate) so that it has legal validity in the countries that are signatories to the Hague Convention of 1961.
Without Apostille, a Spanish public document would need to go through a consular legalization process in the destination country (much slower and more expensive).
With Apostille: the document is directly recognized in more than 120 signatory countries without additional procedures.
Who issues the Apostille in Spain:
- The Ministry of Justice for notarial, judicial, and Civil Registry documents
- The Superior Courts of Justice of each autonomous community