High Court Apostille Pretoria & Johannesburg
Same-Day High Court Apostille
Need your documents apostilled urgently for international use? Notarial Services by Global Apostille provides fast and reliable High Court Apostille services in Pretoria and Johannesburg for individuals, businesses, and legal professionals. Our team manages the complete process, including notarisation where required, ensuring your documents are legally recognised in Hague Convention countries.
What Is a High Court Apostille?
A High Court Apostille is an official authentication certificate issued by the High Court in South Africa.
This certificate confirms that the Notary Public who signed and sealed the document is properly registered and authorised to act as a Notary Public in South Africa. The High Court does not verify the contents of the document itself. Instead, it verifies the authenticity of the Notary Public’s signature and official seal attached to the document.
Once the apostille certificate is attached, the document becomes legally recognised in countries that are members of the Hague Apostille Convention. This process is commonly required for: Affidavits, Powers of Attorney. Certified copies, Contracts, Commercial agreements and Notarised documents
What Is Document Legalisation?
Document legalisation is the formal process used to verify that a South African document is authentic and legally valid for use outside South Africa.
When a foreign government, embassy, university, immigration department, or overseas company receives a South African document, they usually cannot automatically verify whether the document is genuine. Legalisation provides official confirmation that the document was properly issued, signed, certified, or notarised by an authorised South African authority.
This process is especially important because every country has different legal requirements regarding foreign documents. Some countries require apostille certification under the Hague Convention, while others require embassy legalisation.
Many people only discover these requirements after their visa, immigration, work permit, or overseas marriage application is delayed. In some cases, foreign authorities refuse to process applications completely until the documents have been correctly legalised.
At Notarial Services by Global Apostille, we help clients avoid these problems by carefully assessing every document before submission.
Depending on the destination country and document type, this may involve:
- Notarisation
- High Court Apostille
- DIRCO Apostille
- Embassy authentication
Without proper legalisation, foreign authorities may reject your documents.
When Is A High Court Apostille Required?
High Court Apostille
A High Court Apostille is generally required when a document has first been notarised by a Notary Public. For example, if you are authorising someone overseas to manage property, sign documents, or represent you legally, your Power of Attorney will usually need notarisation followed by High Court Apostille. Similarly, many foreign banks, immigration departments, and legal institutions require notarised certified copies of passports, IDs, or agreements to be apostilled before acceptance.
Documents We Legalise
Corporate Documents
- Company registration certificates
- Board resolutions
- Shareholder agreements
- Commercial contracts
Legal Documents
- Powers of Attorney
- Affidavits
- Court orders
- Certified copies
Our High Court Apostille Process
01.
Step One
Send us copies of your documents.
02.
Step Two
We confirm whether notarisation is required.
03.
Step Three
Your documents are notarised and submitted to the High Court.
04.
Step Four
Completed apostilled documents are collected and delivered.
Why Notarisation Is Important
Many foreign authorities require South African documents to be notarised before they can be accepted internationally. For example, if you are buying property overseas, applying for residency, opening a foreign bank account, getting married abroad, or appointing someone to act on your behalf internationally, your documents will often need notarisation and apostille certification.
Incorrectly prepared documents are one of the main reasons international applications are delayed or rejected. Our team ensures everything is completed correctly before submission.
Nationwide Assistance
Our notarisation services is intended for clients based in Pretoria, Johannesburg, Sandton, Centurion, Midrand, and surrounding Gauteng areas.
International Compliance
We ensure your documents comply with international legalisation requirements and Hague Convention standards.
Fast Turnaround Times
We offer some of the quickest turnaround times for selected all services. Priority services is at the core of our process.
Frequently Asked Questions
Find answers to common questions about our notary public services, including requirements, turnaround times, and what to expect during the notarisation process.
Yes, in most cases the document must first be notarised.
Yes, once certified and notarised.
Yes, in Hague Convention countries.
Most standard notarisation services are completed within one to two working days.