UK Birth Certificate Legalisation for Use in Nigeria (FCDO + Nigerian High Commission)

If you need to use a UK birth certificate in Nigeria — for citizenship / passport matters, school registration, family documentation, inheritance, or property — the document usually needs formal legalisation, not just a scan or a certified copy.

A key point many people miss:

Nigeria is not listed as a Contracting Party to the 1961 Apostille Convention on the official HCCH status table (last updated 5 November 2025). hcch.net

That means a UK “apostille-only” approach (as used for Hague countries) is not the right mental model for Nigeria.

This guide explains the correct, practical route:

  • Get the right UK birth certificate
  • Legalise it with the UK FCDO
  • Then submit it for Nigerian High Commission attestation (London)

When a UK Birth Certificate is commonly needed in Nigeria

A UK birth certificate is often used to prove identity and parent–child relationship, for example when you need to:

  • support Nigerian passport / citizenship-related documentation
  • register a child for school or formal processes in Nigeria
  • prove family relationship for administrative or legal matters
  • handle inheritance / estate documentation
  • handle property matters involving family proof

Full (long-form) vs short UK birth certificate

For cross-border use, authorities usually want the full birth certificate (the version that includes parents’ details). A short certificate often causes avoidable back-and-forth.

Practical rule: if the Nigerian side needs to see parents’ names, you want the full certificate.


Step 1 — Order an official replacement UK birth certificate (if needed)

UK birth certificates must be obtained from the official registry authority.

Depending on where the birth was registered:

  • England & Wales: order via the UK government guidance / GRO route GOV.UK+1
  • Scotland: National Records of Scotland (NRS) certificate ordering National Records of Scotland
  • Northern Ireland: GRONI ordering via nidirect nidirect

Important: use an official certified copy / original certificate (not a scan, printout, or screenshot).


Step 2 — UK FCDO legalisation (often called an “apostille”)

Even though Nigeria is not a Hague Apostille country, the UK still issues an FCDO legalisation certificate for UK public documents.

The UK government’s legalisation service lists fees and service types (paper-based and e-apostille). GOV.UK

Current FCDO fee reference (paper-based): £45 per document (plus postage/courier). GOV.UK

Do you need notarisation first?

Usually, for an official UK birth certificate, you can often legalise the certificate directly via the FCDO (because it is already a public document). If you’re unsure, we’ll tell you the safest route before you spend money.


Step 3 — Nigerian High Commission attestation (London)

Because Nigeria is outside the Apostille Convention framework, the process typically requires an extra consular step: attestation/legalisation by the Nigerian High Commission.

The Nigerian High Commission in London’s address and consular submission hours are published on their official site (consular submissions typically 9:00am–1:00pm). nigeriahc.org.uk

Practical expectation: consular submissions usually require the physical document and supporting copies, and payment methods can be restrictive (often postal order).

Note: fee schedules and exact submission requirements can change. If you’re sending by post vs in-person, requirements may differ. We recommend confirming the current checklist right before submission.


Correct preparation order (avoid rejections)

  1. Order the correct birth certificate (usually full / long-form)
  2. Check names carefully against passports (spelling, middle names, order)
  3. FCDO legalisation (paper-based is the safest default for consular workflows) GOV.UK
  4. Nigerian High Commission attestation (final step for Nigeria) nigeriahc.org.uk+1

If you change the order (for example, you do translation too early, or you legalise the wrong version), you often end up paying twice.


Common mistakes (and how to avoid them)

  • Using a short certificate when parents’ details are required
  • Sending scans / printouts instead of official certificates
  • Name mismatches between certificate and passport
  • Assuming “apostille-only” is enough for Nigeria (Nigeria is not on the HCCH Apostille Convention contracting party list as of the last update shown) hcch.net
  • Choosing e-apostille without checking acceptance: the FCDO offers e-apostilles, but consular/overseas workflows often still expect paper originals GOV.UK

FAQs

Is Nigeria an Apostille Convention country?

As of the HCCH Apostille Convention status table last updated 5 November 2025, Nigeria is not listed as a Contracting Party. hcch.net

Do I need embassy / consular attestation after FCDO legalisation?

For Nigeria, often yes — the Nigerian High Commission attestation is commonly the step that makes the document usable in Nigeria. nigeriahc.org.uk+1

How much does UK legalisation cost?

The UK government lists £45 per document for standard paper-based legalisation (plus postage/courier), with other service options available. GOV.UK


How Ginkgo Advisory can help

We help clients prepare UK birth certificates for use in Nigeria by:

  • arranging replacement UK birth certificates (England & Wales / Scotland / Northern Ireland routes)
  • handling UK FCDO legalisation correctly (paper-based vs e-apostille where appropriate) GOV.UK
  • guiding the Nigeria attestation workflow so you don’t waste time and re-file

If you tell us where the birth was registered (England & Wales / Scotland / Northern Ireland) and what the certificate will be used for in Nigeria, we can map the safest preparation route immediately.

Contact Us

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+44 7388 833283

Address

167-169 Great Portland Street, 5/F, London

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