With COVID restrictions easing for some regions and summer vacations just around the corner, Notaries may encounter requests to notarize permission forms for children traveling abroad.
Here's what you need to know about these forms.
According to U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP), if a child is traveling abroad with one parent, the other parent must supply a letter granting permission. If the child is traveling with an adult other than her parents, both parents must provide written permission.
It's strongly recommended that the permission form be notarized. While the U.S. customs officials do not always ask for this documentation, many countries do, and the “failure to produce notarized permission letters” could result in being denied entry.
When you need to notarize permission forms for summer travel with children, remember these tips:
1. We need to Follow State Requirements.
A parent who needs their signature notarized must personally appear before the Notary. Many parents aren’t familiar with notarial rules and procedures, and may ask to notarize an absent spouse’s signature, not realizing it’s against the law.
If a permission form requires either an acknowledgment or a jurat in California, the signer must provide satisfactory proof of identity to the Notary because personal knowledge cannot be used to identify signers in California.
2. Notaries are not allowed to Give Advice.
Requirements for a child’s permission letter may vary depending on the destination and the rules of the airline or cruise ship line. As a Notary, we cannot give legal advice regarding the contents of a permission letter or how a document must be completed. If you have questions, you will need to contact the company or agency requiring the document for further instructions.
3. Have proper identification.
International travelers often rush and panic at the last minute to make sure the necessary paperwork is in order prior to imminent departure. Parents who need notarized permission for a child to travel at the last minute may get flustered if their signatures cannot be notarized due to lack of acceptable ID or another issue.
Notaries can’t notarize anything without the signer’s personal appearance, so please make sure to have proper identification.