signed-documents
Does a JP replace a Notary Public?
Often no for overseas legalisation pathways. Many overseas or DFAT-linked routes specifically require an Australian Notary Public, not a JP-certified copy.
Detailed answer
A Justice of the Peace and a Notary Public do not play the same role in overseas document routes. Many private signed documents, notarised copies, and DFAT-linked private-document pathways rely on a notarial act. A JP-certified copy may be acceptable in some domestic contexts, but it commonly does not replace a notary where the overseas or receiving-side route requires notarial handling.
Common risks
- Client uses a JP copy where a notarial act is required.
- Assuming any certified copy is equivalent.
- Losing time and money on the wrong upstream certification.
What we usually need
- Document type and whether it is private, signed, or copy-based.
- Receiving-side wording if available.
- Whether the client already used a JP or another certifier.
Implementation note
This should be treated as a standard correction FAQ and as a route-check warning for copy-based and signed-document matters.
Compliance note
EGS is an independent administrative intermediary only. EGS is not a law firm, not a public notary, and not a government authority. Route suitability and document acceptance remain subject to review and to the receiving authority’s own requirements.