Family and Civil Status (Binational Families)
This area is for binational and cross-border family-status documentation—marriage, children, custody-adjacent paperwork, and recognition steps that often touch immigration and apostille paths—not guaranteed outcomes from a static page.
Bilingual handling, privacy-aware intake, and urgency surfaced early when it matters—not promises from a static page.
Am I in the right place?
Who this is for For couples and parents who need a disciplined inventory of documents, legalization sequencing, and filing plans the packet supports when multiple countries are in play.
Why start here Start here to see scope, open the binational documentation packaging service when you are ready to move forward, use the family-disputes hub to compare services first, or use intake when facts are sensitive, incomplete, or you are unsure this category fits.
Signs this is the right place to start
- You are aligning birth, marriage, or custody-related records across more than one legal system
- You need a clear plan for apostille, translation, or filing order before the next official step
- You are weighing whether family documentation work should be sequenced with an immigration or notarial path
What this area covers
The catalog today centers on one sub-area—family disputes and documentation—with a single retained binational packaging offering; use the hub tile to orient, or jump ahead when you already know you need that service page.
Inventory and sequencing for cross-border recognition and civil-status documentation
Coordination thinking for legalization, filings, and handoffs when multiple jurisdictions apply
Packet-backed guardrails—not a substitute for every court proceeding, custody dispute, or safety plan where those apply
Which situation sounds most like yours?
Pick the closest match to continue—or start intake and describe relationships, countries involved, and what you already hold in your own words.
No legal advice / no attorney-client relationship
Information on this site is general and not legal advice. Submitting an intake request does not create an attorney-client relationship. A relationship begins only after a signed engagement agreement (if accepted).