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Sworn translation · Rbtv-registered

HebrewBackground, Culture and Documents

Background on the Hebrew language, its dialects and writing system, and the document requirements for sworn translations. Translations are made by Rbtv-registered, court-sworn translators and accepted by every Dutch authority.

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Summary of sworn Hebrew translation

Sworn translation between Dutch and Hebrew is official translation carried out by a translator entered in the Dutch Register of Sworn Interpreters and Translators (Rbtv). The translator's signed statement and stamp give the translation legal standing, which is why bodies such as the IND, gemeenten and courts accept it.

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Definition: sworn Hebrew translation

Sworn Hebrew translation: Sworn translation between Dutch and Hebrew is official translation carried out by a translator entered in the Dutch Register of Sworn Interpreters and Translators (Rbtv). The translator's signed statement and stamp give the translation legal standing, which is why bodies such as the IND, gemeenten and courts accept it.

Facts about Hebrew

Writing system
Hebrew alphabet
Number of speakers
9 million
Countries
Israël

About sworn Hebrew translations

International clients often use the words certified or notarised, while the Dutch system uses the term sworn (beëdigd). In the Netherlands the element that carries legal weight is the sworn, Rbtv-registered translator who signs and stamps the work; a notary is not involved in the translation itself. So if a Dutch body asks for a certified or official Hebrew translation, a sworn translation is what they mean.

Only a translator sworn before a Dutch district court and listed in the Rbtv for the Dutch–Hebrew pair, a register kept by Bureau Wbtv on behalf of the Ministry of Justice and Security. That registration is what authorities check, not the translator's qualifications alone.

Civil-status documents (birth, marriage, death and divorce certificates), academic documents (diplomas and transcripts), criminal-record extracts, and various legal and corporate documents are the most common.

Documents and requirements for Hebrew

Delivery time, apostille requirement and the destination authority per document type for Hebrew destinations. For prices, see our pricing page.

DocumentDelivery timeApostille requiredDestination
Geboorteakte (Teudat Leida — תעודת לידה)5-7 working daysYesMisrad HaPnim, Nederlandse gemeente
Huwelijksakte (Teudat Nisuim — תעודת נישואין)5-7 working daysYesMisrad HaPnim, Nederlandse gemeente, Beit Din
Diploma + cijferlijst5-7 working daysDependsIsraëlisch Ministerie van Onderwijs, NUFFIC, universiteit
Verklaring van ongehuwd zijn (Teudat Ravakut)5-7 working daysYesMisrad HaPnim, Nederlandse gemeente, Beit Din
Militaire dienstverklaring (Teudat Shichrur)5-7 working daysDependsWerkgever, IDF Personnel Directorate

Documents we translate into Hebrew

We translate every kind of official document to and from Hebrew. Below are the document types people request most often:

Is your document type not listed? See all 103 document types.

Apostille Convention countries where Hebrew is official

When you have a document sworn-translated for one of these countries, a Dutch apostille is enough, so consular legalisation is not required.

  • IsraelIL

Frequently asked questions about Hebrew translations

What is a sworn translation?
A sworn translation is made by a translator sworn before a Dutch court and entered in the Register of Sworn Interpreters and Translators (Rbtv). It carries the translator's signed statement and official stamp, which is why Dutch authorities accept it as an official translation.
Is a sworn translator the same as a certified translator?
In the Netherlands the official term is sworn (beëdigd) translator, registered in the Rbtv. Certified translation is the English label international clients use for the same thing, so for Dutch use they amount to the same document; what matters is the Rbtv registration.
Who can make a certified Dutch–Hebrew translation?
Only a translator sworn before a Dutch court and listed in the Rbtv, kept by Bureau Wbtv, for that language pair. We work with Rbtv-registered translators, so the translation meets the requirement of the authority that asked for it.
Do I need a sworn translation for the IND?
The IND requires foreign-language documents in a residence or naturalisation application to be translated by a sworn (Rbtv) translator into Dutch, English, French or German. A sworn translation meets that requirement, backed by our acceptance guarantee.

How we know this

This page is based on Dutch Wbtv legislation, the official Rbtv register and publications by De Rechtspraak and the Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Specific Hebrew document requirements were verified with the relevant authorities in the destination countries.

By: Beëdigde Vertaling Online. Last updated on .

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Sworn translation Hebrew

Rbtv-registered · accepted by every Dutch authority

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More about the work of a sworn Hebrew translator

Want to know what a sworn Hebrew translator does, which Rbtv/Wbtv requirements apply, and how Beëdigde Vertaling Online selects your translator? Read our full explanation, with the acceptance guarantee and a price indication.

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