MOFA Attestation
Definition
Final UAE Ministry of Foreign Affairs stamp on a foreign document. Combined with embassy legalisation so the certificate has official effect across the UAE.
Also known as
- Ministry of Foreign Affairs Attestation
- UAE Final Attestation
What it is
MOFA Attestation is the final UAE-side step in legalising a foreign document for use inside the country. After a document is notarised in its country of origin and stamped by that country's foreign ministry, the UAE embassy abroad legalises it; the UAE Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation (MOFAIC) then applies the final attestation in the UAE. The completed chain gives the document full evidentiary weight before UAE courts, ministries, free-zone authorities, banks, and educational regulators.
The process is required for personal documents (degrees, transcripts, marriage and birth certificates) and corporate documents (parent-company Certificate of Incorporation, board resolutions, shareholder POAs) issued in non-Apostille-Convention countries. For documents from Hague Apostille Convention member states, the chain is shorter — apostille in the origin country, plus MOFA attestation in the UAE.
Key characteristics
- Authority
- Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation (MOFAIC)
- Position in chain
- Final UAE-side stamp
- Prerequisites
- Origin-country notarisation + UAE embassy legalisation (or apostille)
- Validity
- Generally lifetime, except where issuing authority sets expiry
- Channels
- MOFAIC service centres, online portal, authorised typing centres
How it works
- Notarise the document in the country of issue.
- Get the origin country's foreign ministry stamp (or apostille for Hague Convention countries).
- Submit to the UAE embassy in that country for legalisation.
- Translate to Arabic via a UAE Ministry of Justice–licensed Legal Translation provider, if not already in Arabic.
- Submit the legalised + translated document to MOFAIC for the final attestation stamp.
Examples
A degree certificate from a UK university for a Dubai work-permit application: UK solicitor notarisation → FCDO apostille → UAE embassy in London → MOFAIC Dubai. A US parent company's incorporation certificate for a UAE branch: US notary → US Secretary of State → US apostille → MOFAIC UAE.
Why it matters
Without MOFA attestation, a foreign document has no legal weight in the UAE. License authorities reject incorporation files, MOHRE rejects work permits, and courts treat the document as inadmissible. Attestation is the gatekeeper to almost every cross-border process.
Common misconceptions
Misconception
An apostille alone is enough to use a document in the UAE.
Reality
The UAE accepts apostilles only when paired with MOFAIC's final attestation. Apostille shortens but does not replace the UAE-side step.
Misconception
All documents must be re-attested every year.
Reality
Most attestations are lifetime. Only a few document types (police clearance, medical certificates) carry their own short-term validity.
FAQs
- How long does MOFA attestation take?
- If the document already carries the embassy or apostille stamp, MOFAIC issues the final attestation within 1–3 working days through a service centre, or 24 hours via the online portal. The full origin-country chain typically adds 1–3 weeks, depending on the country.
- How much does MOFA attestation cost?
- The MOFAIC fee is AED 150 per document for the standard service. Service-centre handling, courier, and translation costs are additional. Express channels with same-day turnaround run AED 250–400 per document.
- Do I need to translate the document into Arabic?
- Yes for documents being submitted to courts, ministries, and most free-zone authorities. Translation must be done by a UAE Ministry of Justice–licensed legal translator. The translated copy is attached and itself attested where required.
See also
- Apostille
- Legal Translation
- Notary Public
- Document Clearing
- MOFA Attestation(Best Solution service)
For better understanding, see also
Sources
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