How Much Does Certified Translation Cost in 2026?
Last updated: March 2026
If you need a certified translation for USCIS in 2026, the short answer is simple: Corpus Localization charges $19.99 per page. That is the real number most people want, and it is the number too many translation companies bury behind quote forms, minimum fees, or vague language about complexity.
The better question is what you actually get for that price and when it is worth paying more somewhere else. In most immigration cases, the answer is that you do not need to pay more. You need a complete English translation, a proper certification statement, and a provider that understands the filing context. That is it.
What certified translation usually costs in 2026
Certified translation pricing is still all over the map. Some agencies charge per page. Others charge per word. Some advertise a low base rate and then add rush fees, certificate fees, or formatting fees. Based on current market positioning in the immigration translation space, the common range for a one-page personal document is roughly $24.95 to $45 per page, with higher prices for same-day service or unusual file formatting.
| Provider type | Typical 2026 pricing | What to watch for |
|---|---|---|
| Corpus Localization | $19.99 per page | Clear flat pricing for standard personal documents |
| Budget competitors | $24.95 to $34.95 per page | May add certificate or rush fees |
| Premium agencies | $35 to $45 or more per page | Often priced for legal or enterprise workflows, not routine immigration documents |
| Per-word services | Often $0.08 to $0.20 per word | Can become expensive fast on dense records |
Why certified translation is required in the first place
This is not a made-up industry add-on. USCIS requires it. Under 8 CFR 103.2(b)(3), any document containing foreign language submitted to USCIS must include a full English translation and the translator’s certification that the translation is complete, accurate, and prepared by someone competent to translate it. USCIS repeats that evidentiary standard in its Policy Manual. That is why people applying for family petitions, adjustment of status, K-1 visas, removal of conditions, and naturalization end up needing translated birth certificates, marriage certificates, police records, court records, and financial evidence.
In other words, the price is not just for translated words. It is for a filing-ready package that matches what USCIS expects to see.
What affects the price
For straightforward immigration documents, pricing should stay simple. But a few factors still influence what agencies charge:
- Document type. A one-page birth certificate is easier to price than a packet of medical records or a handwritten court file.
- Word density. Two pages are not always equal. A sparse civil registry form is different from a packed legal affidavit.
- Formatting. Recreating tables, stamps, seals, side notes, and bilingual layouts takes time.
- Turnaround. Many companies charge extra for same-day or next-day delivery. We do not charge a rush fee for standard 24-hour delivery.
- Language pair. Common languages are usually priced more predictably than rare or highly specialized pairs.
- Volume. Multi-document family packets may be billed by page, by project, or with blended pricing.
What should be included for $19.99 per page
When you order a certified translation for USCIS, the service should include more than a translated page. It should include:
- The full English translation
- A signed certification statement
- The translator or agency’s contact details
- Delivery in a format you can upload or print
- Enough quality control to avoid obvious evidence issues
That is what we include at $19.99 per page. No mystery quote. No certificate surcharge. No separate formatting invoice for a standard civil document.
Cheap translation gets expensive when it causes delays
The obvious temptation is to buy the lowest possible translation. Sometimes that works. Sometimes it backfires.
USCIS handles enormous filing volume every year. Their own public materials consistently describe the agency as processing millions of applications, petitions, and requests annually. In a system that large, officers are not looking for reasons to be generous about incomplete evidence. If the translation is missing certification language, omits stamps or handwritten notes, or looks like a machine-generated shortcut, you risk an RFE, a delay, or a credibility problem you did not need.
That is why there is a practical difference between a low price and a careless price. A flat $19.99 per page works when the provider has a repeatable process. It does not work when the provider is simply underbidding and hoping nothing gets noticed.
Do you need notarization too?
Usually, no. USCIS asks for a certified translation, not a notarized translation. Those are different things. A certified translation proves the translator stands behind the accuracy and completeness of the English version. Notarization is a separate act where a notary witnesses a signature. If another authority later asks for an apostille or authentication certificate, the U.S. Department of State treats that as a separate document-legalization process.
How much should common USCIS documents cost?
- Birth certificate: usually 1 page, so $19.99
- Marriage certificate: often 1 page, so $19.99
- Divorce decree: depends on length, often 1 to 3 pages
- Police certificate: often 1 page
- Academic transcript: varies widely, often several pages
- Bank statements or financial evidence: project-based if there are many pages
If a company refuses to give you even a rough page-based answer for routine civil documents, that is a red flag.
What about Google Translate or AI tools?
If the only thing you care about is rough comprehension, machine translation can be useful. If you are filing with USCIS, it is the wrong tool. A machine cannot honestly certify that it is competent, that it reviewed the final text, and that the translation is complete and accurate in the way USCIS expects from a human translator or agency representative. That is exactly why people who try to save money with DIY machine output often end up paying twice.
How to compare providers without wasting time
- Ask for the real per-page or per-word price
- Confirm whether the certification statement is included
- Ask about turnaround
- Check whether formatting and stamps are included
- Avoid providers that use immigration buzzwords without quoting the actual USCIS rule
The bottom line
In 2026, a fair price for a standard certified translation for USCIS does not need to be complicated. Our price is $19.99 per page. For most personal civil documents, that is enough to get a complete translation, a signed certification statement, and delivery fast enough to keep your filing moving.
If you are comparing offers, do not just compare the sticker price. Compare whether the translation is actually prepared the way USCIS requires.
How to estimate your cost before you order
A simple way to estimate cost is to count the actual pages that need translation, not the number of documents in your case. A family-based filing might involve one birth certificate, one marriage certificate, and one police certificate. That can still mean three or four translatable pages depending on front and back sides, registry notes, and attached apostilles. If you want the fastest estimate possible, line up the files in one PDF and count the pages containing foreign-language content.
This matters because many applicants underestimate the total. They remember the main certificate but forget the reverse side, handwritten amendment, or attached legalization page. If it is part of what you plan to submit, price it as part of the translation.
When a higher quote may actually be justified
There are situations where a provider charging more than $19.99 per page is not necessarily overpricing. Long narrative court records, dense medical records, handwritten affidavits, and multi-column academic transcripts take more time to translate and format correctly. The key is not whether the quote is higher. The key is whether the company can explain exactly why.
What you do not want is inflated pricing on routine one-page civil documents that follow a standard format. For those, transparency matters more than sales language.
Questions to ask before you pay
- Will every stamp, annotation, and handwritten note be translated?
- Is the certification statement included in the advertised price?
- Will you receive a signed PDF suitable for USCIS upload or printing?
- Is 24-hour delivery included or billed separately?
- Who reviews the final translation before delivery?
Those questions tell you more than a homepage slogan ever will.
Sources
- USCIS Policy Manual, Volume 1, Part E, Chapter 6
- USCIS Form I-485 page
- U.S. Department of State, Authenticate Your Document
- American Translators Association
FAQ
How much does a certified translation cost for USCIS in 2026?
At Corpus Localization, it costs $19.99 per page for standard personal documents.
Why do I need a certified translation for USCIS?
Because USCIS requires a full English translation and a signed certification for any foreign-language document submitted with an application or petition.
Is notarization included?
Usually notarization is not required for USCIS. Certified translation and notarized translation are different services.
Can I use Google Translate to save money?
Not if you want a filing-ready translation. USCIS expects a human-certified translation, not raw machine output.
About the Author
Written by the Corpus Localization Team — professional certified translation services specializing in USCIS immigration documents, legal translations, and academic credentials. All translations include a Certificate of Accuracy accepted by USCIS, courts, and government agencies nationwide.
About the Author
Corpus Localization Team - Our team of certified translation specialists provides professional document translation services accepted by USCIS and government agencies worldwide. With expertise in over 100 languages, we deliver accurate translations with 24-hour turnaround and comprehensive quality assurance.