An FBI background check apostille is issued by the U.S. Department of State in Washington, D.C. — not by California. FBI Identity History Summary documents are federal records. Apostille San Francisco prepares the federal package for Hague destinations; non-Hague countries require federal authentication plus embassy legalization.
Four checks before you file
- ✓ You have an FBI Identity History Summary issued directly by the FBI CJIS Division or through an FBI-approved channeler. State-issued criminal history reports (California DOJ Live Scan) are different documents — not the same as the FBI report.
- ✓ The Identity History Summary is recent. Most foreign authorities require the report to be less than 3-6 months old at the time of submission abroad. The apostille step does not extend the document’s freshness.
- ✓ Destination is a Hague Convention party. If yes, the U.S. Department of State issues an apostille. If not, federal authentication is followed by embassy or consulate legalization.
- ✓ You understand the route is federal, not California. The California Secretary of State will reject an FBI report submitted to it.
FBI Identity History Summary — What It Is
An FBI Identity History Summary is the federal-level criminal background check issued by the FBI’s Criminal Justice Information Services (CJIS) Division. It is the document most foreign authorities mean when they ask for a “U.S. police clearance,” “U.S. background check,” or “criminal record certificate” for visa, residency, employment, or citizenship purposes.
The FBI report is distinct from state-level criminal history reports (e.g., a California Department of Justice Live Scan report). Foreign authorities generally require the federal FBI version because it covers nationwide federal arrest records, not just a single state.
How to Request an FBI Identity History Summary
Two routes accepted by the FBI:
- Direct from the FBI CJIS Division — submit fingerprint card (FD-258), application form, and fee directly to CJIS in West Virginia. Typical CJIS processing time runs weeks; verify on fbi.gov before applying.
- FBI-approved channeler — private services authorized by the FBI to process Identity History Summary requests, usually faster than direct CJIS. Apostille San Francisco coordinates channeler routing for clients who do not have an FBI report in hand.
Where the Apostille Is Issued — Federal, Not California
The U.S. Department of State Office of Authentications in Washington, D.C. issues the apostille for FBI Identity History Summary documents. Submission is by mail to the U.S. Department of State, Office of Authentications, with the required cover letter, fee (current rates posted at travel.state.gov/authentications), and self-addressed return envelope.
The California Secretary of State does not apostille federal documents. An FBI report submitted to the California SOS is returned to the sender, costing time and risking the document’s freshness window for the foreign authority.
Hague vs Non-Hague Destinations for FBI Reports
- Hague Convention members (Italy, Germany, Mexico, Spain, U.K., France, Brazil, China since November 2023, etc.) — U.S. Department of State issues the apostille on the FBI report. Single step.
- Non-Hague countries (UAE, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Vietnam, Egypt, others) — U.S. Department of State authenticates the FBI report, then the destination country’s embassy or consulate in the U.S. legalizes the State Department’s certification. Two-step chain. See embassy or consulate legalization.
Common Foreign Uses
- Italian visa / residency / dual citizenship applications.
- Mexican work and residency permits (FM3, residente temporal/permanente).
- U.K. settlement and Tier-2 visa applications.
- German residence permits.
- UAE employment visas (non-Hague — legalization route).
- Saudi Arabia work permits (non-Hague — legalization route).
- Foreign teacher / professor employment across all Hague destinations.
- Adoption proceedings requiring U.S. background clearance.
Common Rejections
- Submitted to California SOS instead of U.S. Department of State. Returned to sender.
- State-level criminal history report submitted in place of FBI Identity History Summary. The foreign authority typically rejects.
- Document too old at the time of foreign submission — most destinations require less than 3-6 months from issue.
- Apostille requested for a non-Hague destination — single-step apostille not accepted; legalization required.
- Missing fee or cover letter on U.S. Department of State submission.
How Apostille San Francisco Handles FBI Report Apostilles
- $35 Document Check verifies report type (federal FBI vs state DOJ), freshness, destination Hague status. Credited 100% to apostille service when you proceed; non-refundable if declined.
- FBI report request coordination — through FBI-approved channeler if you do not yet have the report.
- U.S. Department of State submission with correct cover letter, fee instrument, and return envelope.
- For non-Hague destinations: U.S. Department of State authentication followed by embassy/consulate legalization through the embassy or consulate legalization chain.
- Tracked return delivery to client or international forwarding.
FBI Background Check Apostille FAQ
Can California apostille an FBI background check?
What is the difference between an FBI background check and a California DOJ Live Scan?
How do I get an apostille on an FBI Identity History Summary?
How long does an FBI background check apostille take?
Does an FBI background check apostille work for the UAE or Saudi Arabia?
How fresh does the FBI report need to be?
Can I use an FBI report from years ago and just get a fresh apostille?
Does the FBI report need translation?
Related Paths
Start with the $35 Document Check
Apostille San Francisco verifies your documents are filing-ready before California Secretary of State fees are spent. The $35 Document Check is credited 100% to your apostille service when you proceed; non-refundable if the document is declined.
Apostille issuance is by the California Secretary of State. Apostille San Francisco is a private filing service; not a government agency; no legal advice. Outcomes are not guaranteed.