Country document routing

Argentina document help starts with the document source and destination.

If you are in Argentina, the useful comparison is often your local notary, lawyer, commissioner, or embassy route versus an eligible Florida online-notary route. Notary Geek may be able to help with signer-created documents, U.S.-source records, notarized affidavits, POAs, copy statements, authentication/legalization review, scan-back, and shipping when the facts fit. Official Argentine records still belong with the proper Argentine authority.

Corrected scope

Important limitation

This page should not be read as a promise that Notary Geek can obtain an apostille from Argentina's local authority just from an upload. The proper route depends on the issuing authority, document type, signer facts, destination country, recipient instructions, whether notarization comes first, and whether the request includes separate signer-created or U.S.-source documents.

Live messaging starts after form intake.

Use the request form, support answers, document intake, identity-document check, and booking paths on this site.

Country-page scope: If the only document is a foreign government-issued record, such as a Brazil birth certificate that needs a Brazil apostille or local authentication, Notary Geek usually cannot help with that record itself. We can often help when the package also needs an eligible notarized signer-created document, translator statement, affidavit, power of attorney, copy statement, U.S.-source apostille route, scan-back/shipping question, or document-route review after the foreign record has been handled by the proper foreign authority.

These pages are meant to compare the local notary, lawyer, commissioner, or embassy route against the Florida online-notary route for eligible non-U.S. signers and international document packages. If the local route is cheap, close, fast, and accepted, use it. If it is slow, expensive, unavailable, unclear, or likely to create rejection risk, start with document review before assuming the local route is mandatory. Do not assume every international document needs apostille; some recipients accept notarization only, some need apostille, and some non-Apostille destinations may need authentication or legalization.