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This site exists to help you obtain a Birth, Death or Marriage certificate as quickly and as easily as possible.
Certified Copy Birth Certificates
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All birth certificates supplied are full long form certified copies for England and Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland and include parents names. The certificate will normally include full name of child, mother's name, father's name (when registered) DoB, where born and registration district.
Order a Replacement Birth Certificate, suitable for both legal and family history uses. If you have lost your birth certificate, or need one for family history purposes, this replacement copy will help you.
Duplicate Birth Certificates are often essential to prove identity when applying for:
Passports
Bank accounts
Pensions
Social Security
Employer ID
Driving licence
Visas and Immigration
Divorce
Adoption
- Name at birth
- Date and time of birth
- Sex
- Birth registration number (NHS number in UK)
- Legal parent(s) (in some countries including parents' occupations, places of birth, and maiden name of the mother)
Certified Copy birth certificates are those countries within the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Norhern Ireland, namely England, Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales. If the event has been recorded in these countries, or the event occurred with a Brtitish national, then a certificate should be available.
Full Certified Copy duplicate birth certificates can also be known as unabridged certificates. Details provided include full name at birth, date of birth, place of birth and details of the parents. The abridged certificate, which is usually issued at birth, is also known as a short (or half) birth certificate and does not have the parents' details, and so do not help a genealogist for research purposes.
All births, marriages and deaths (in England and Wales) have been required by law to be registered. This law came into effect on July 1st, 1837. Following the "Births and Deaths Act 1874", to report a birth became a duty of those present at the event, with late or non-registration penalised and fined.
From 1969 onwards, the register records the child's surname and notes the gender as male or female, and the certificates are portrait format. Before 1969, the child's surname was not registered, and the gender was noted as boy or girl, and the format is landscape.
For UK citizens, a birth certificate is not always accepted as proof of identity. It is illegal to impersonate someone else by using birth certificates and is defined as identity fraud.
Certificates are often obtained for family history research, for naturalisation processes, genealogy, and passport applications.
Certificates are issued from the BMD (BM&D) indexes held at the register offices. The indexes hold the entries which occurred during the civil registration of a birth. The entry (transcript) of the birth will be used to create the certified copy of the certificate.
Obtaining a certificate is straightforward. To obtain, please use the links
below.