Certified Dzongkha Translation Services in the USA

Prism Linguistics provides certified Dzongkha translation for clients across the United States. Our certified Dzongkha translations are prepared in the format USCIS officers, US federal and state courts, university registrars, and credential evaluators expect to see: a complete word-for-word translation accompanied by a signed Certificate of Translation Accuracy on company letterhead with the translator's signature, our corporate seal, and the date.

Trusted by immigration attorneys, law firms, US universities, hospitals, and individual USCIS applicants nationwide.

For a free, no-obligation quote, call +1 833 282 8883 or email info@prismlinguistics.com. We confirm certification format, pricing, and turnaround within one business hour.

Filing for USCIS, a US court, or a US university? Send your Dzongkha document first. We confirm the exact certification format the receiving institution requires before any work starts, so you don't get an RFE on a technicality.

Certified Dzongkha Translation Services — Quick Answer

Prism Linguistics provides certified Dzongkha to English and English to Dzongkha translation across the United States for USCIS immigration applications, federal and state courts, US universities, credential evaluators, the Department of State, state DMVs, and US hospitals. Every certified Dzongkha translation is produced by a human native Dzongkha translator, reviewed by a second linguist for accuracy and terminology, and delivered with a signed Certificate of Translation Accuracy on company letterhead with the translator's signature, our corporate seal, and the date.

Need it faster? Same-day certified Dzongkha translation is available for urgent USCIS deadlines, court filings, and university applications, including weekends. Submit before 2pm EST for same-business-day delivery.

What Is a Certified Dzongkha Translation?

A certified Dzongkha translation is a complete, word-for-word translation of an official Dzongkha document into English (or English into Dzongkha), accompanied by a signed Certificate of Translation Accuracy from the translator or translation company. The certificate confirms the translator's competence and the completeness of the translation. USCIS, US federal courts, US universities, credential evaluators, banks, and most state agencies require certified translations for any non-English document submitted in an official process.

The most common reason USCIS issues a Request for Evidence (RFE) on a translation is a missing or incorrectly formatted Certificate of Translation Accuracy. Every certified Dzongkha translation we deliver includes the certificate on Prism Linguistics letterhead with the translator's signature, our corporate seal, and the date: the format USCIS officers, court clerks, and university registrars expect to see.

What a Certified Dzongkha Translation Includes

Every certified Dzongkha translation we deliver includes:

  • Complete word-for-word translation of every element on the source document
  • Faithful reproduction of stamps, seals, signatures, and document layout
  • Signed Certificate of Translation Accuracy on Prism Linguistics letterhead
  • Translator name, signature, qualifications, and contact information
  • Statement of translator competence in Dzongkha and English
  • Date of translation and corporate seal
  • Notarisation on request, where required by the receiving institution

Dzongkha Documents We Certify

Our certified Dzongkha translators handle the document types most commonly required for US immigration, legal, academic, medical, and personal use, including clinical records and patient consent forms through our healthcare translation team:

  • Birth certificates
  • Marriage certificates
  • Divorce decrees
  • Death certificates
  • Passports and national ID cards
  • Police clearance certificates
  • Academic diplomas and transcripts
  • Professional licenses
  • Court orders and judgments
  • Affidavits and declarations
  • Powers of attorney
  • Wills and probate documents
  • Contracts and business agreements
  • Medical records and vaccination records
  • Tax returns and financial statements
  • Articles of incorporation

Who Accepts Our Certified Dzongkha Translations?

Our certified Dzongkha translations are commonly accepted by:

  • USCIS — for green card, citizenship, naturalisation, asylum, and other immigration applications
  • US Department of State — for visa applications and consular services
  • US federal and state courts — for evidence, filings, and depositions
  • US universities and colleges — for admissions and credential evaluation
  • Credential evaluation agencies such as WES, ECE, IEE, and Educational Perspectives
  • State DMVs — for foreign driver's license conversion
  • US hospitals and medical institutions — for international patient records
  • Banks and financial institutions — for foreign income, identity, and tax documentation

Acceptance ultimately depends on the receiving institution. We recommend confirming any institution-specific certification requirements with your attorney, university, or credential evaluator before submission.

How Our Certified Dzongkha Translation Process Works

  1. Submit your document. Email a clear scan or photo of the Dzongkha document, or upload through our secure quote form.
  2. Receive a free quote. We confirm certification format, pricing, and turnaround within one business hour.
  3. Translation by a native Dzongkha translator. A qualified linguist with USCIS, court, or academic experience translates the document word-for-word, preserving stamps, seals, signatures, and layout.
  4. Second-linguist quality review. An independent reviewer checks accuracy, terminology, and name transliteration before the certification is issued.
  5. Certification. We attach a signed Certificate of Translation Accuracy on company letterhead, with the translator's signature, our corporate seal, and the date.
  6. Delivery. Digital PDF delivered the same day, with hard-copy mailing, notarisation, and apostille support available on request.

Certified Dzongkha Translation for USCIS Immigration

When applying for a green card, US citizenship, asylum, work permit, or any other USCIS benefit, every non-English supporting document must be accompanied by a certified English translation. That includes Dzongkha birth certificates, marriage certificates, divorce decrees, foreign police clearances, and military records. Prism Linguistics provides certified Dzongkha translations prepared to meet the USCIS translation requirements for documents submitted with immigration applications. Learn more about our dedicated USCIS translation services and immigration translation services.

Certified Dzongkha Translation for US Universities

US universities and credential-evaluation agencies require certified English translations of foreign academic credentials, including diplomas, academic transcripts, syllabi, and course descriptions. Our certified Dzongkha translations are commonly accepted by US universities and by every major credential evaluator: WES (World Education Services), ECE (Educational Credential Evaluators), IEE (International Education Evaluations), and Educational Perspectives. Dzongkha is widely spoken across Bhutan, and we translate academic records from every Dzongkha-speaking jurisdiction in that region.

Certified Dzongkha Translation for US Courts

For US court proceedings — civil, criminal, family, immigration, and probate — we provide certified Dzongkha translations of evidence, contracts, court orders, affidavits, and supporting documents. Notarisation and apostille support are available on request. See our broader legal translation capabilities for litigation, contracts, and discovery, and our Dzongkha interpreter service for depositions, hearings, and court appearances.

Certified vs Notarised vs Sworn Dzongkha Translation

These three terms are often confused, especially by clients used to European or Latin American legal systems. In the United States the distinctions are:

  • Certified translation — the standard US format. A word-for-word translation accompanied by a signed Certificate of Translation Accuracy from the translator or translation company. This is what USCIS, US courts, US universities, and credential evaluators require.
  • Notarised translation — a certified translation whose certificate has been signed in front of a notary public. Required in some state-court matters, certain visa categories, and as a precursor to an apostille.
  • Sworn translation — a concept used in many European, Latin American, and Asian jurisdictions, where the translator is appointed by a court. The US does not maintain a sworn-translator registry, so USCIS and US courts accept the certified-translation format described above.

If you are submitting a Dzongkha document to a foreign embassy, court, or government body, request a sworn or notarised version explicitly when you ask for your quote.

Why Choose Prism Linguistics for Certified Dzongkha Translation?

Translation quality matters most when documents are used for immigration, court, academic, or medical decisions. Our process is shaped by what US institutions actually reject: missing certification statements, inconsistent name transliterations, and translator credentials that don't appear on the document. We address all three on every certified project.

  • Certified to meet USCIS requirements — signed Certificate of Translation Accuracy on company letterhead with the translator's signature, our corporate seal, and the date.
  • Native Dzongkha linguists with documented subject-matter experience in legal, medical, immigration, and academic content.
  • Human translation only. Every certified Dzongkha translation is produced by a qualified human linguist and reviewed by a second human linguist. We do not deliver raw machine output.
  • 24 to 48-hour standard turnaround, with same-day rush available, including weekends.
  • Confidential handling with secure document transfer, NDAs available on request, and documents deleted from active systems 30 days after delivery.
  • Free correction policy. If a receiving institution requests a clarification or correction, we revise and re-issue at no additional cost.
  • Notarisation and apostille support on request, for state court submissions and documents destined for use abroad.
  • Hard-copy mailing for institutions that require an original signed certification.
  • 24/7 support for urgent immigration, court, and university deadlines.
  • Memberships and certifications: ATA Corporate Member, ISO 17100:2015 certified, BBB A+ rated.

Certified Dzongkha Translation Pricing

Standard one-page civil documents (birth certificates, marriage certificates, divorce decrees, diplomas) are charged on a flat per-page basis from $30 per page, including the signed Certificate of Translation Accuracy.

Longer legal, medical, and technical documents are quoted by word count from $0.12 per word, with a minimum charge of $50 per project.

Optional add-ons: notarisation ($25 flat fee), hard-copy mailing within the US ($15 standard, $35 overnight), same-day rush turnaround (+50% of base price), and apostille coordination (quoted per state).

We confirm the full price in writing before any work begins. Request a free quote for your Dzongkha document and we will confirm exact pricing and turnaround within one business hour.

About the Dzongkha Language

Dzongkha is the national language of Bhutan, with around 600,000 speakers. It's a Tibetic language closely related to Tibetan, written in a variant of Tibetan script (Uchen). The US Dzongkha-speaking community is small — most Bhutanese-Americans actually speak Nepali (Bhutanese-Nepali refugees), not Dzongkha — so Dzongkha translation requests are uncommon and typically tied to specific civil-document needs for Bhutanese nationals. The vast majority of US Bhutanese paperwork is therefore Nepali rather than Dzongkha.

  • Primary regions: Bhutan
  • Language origin / family: Bhutan
  • Estimated speakers: 0.17 million

To start your certified Dzongkha translation today:

Call: +1 833 282 8883
Email: info@prismlinguistics.com
Online: Get a free certified translation quote

Client Reviews

Prism Linguistics is rated 4.6 / 5 based on 67 client reviews. Read more on our Clients page.

“Fast and professional translation service. USCIS accepted our certified translation without any issues.”

— Rachel Jones, Immigration Client, New York · Verified Google review, March 2026

“Excellent communication, quick turnaround and accurate legal translation.”

— Mark Anthony, Anthony Law Firm Client, California · Verified review, February 2026

Frequently Asked Questions

Will your certified Dzongkha translation be accepted by USCIS without an RFE?

Yes. Our certified Dzongkha translations are prepared in the format USCIS officers expect to see. Each translation includes a signed Certificate of Translation Accuracy on company letterhead with the translator's signature, our corporate seal, and the date. The most common cause of a USCIS Request for Evidence on a translation is a missing or incorrectly formatted certificate; that is the specific failure mode we engineer against.

What does a certified Dzongkha translation cost in 2026?

Standard one-page civil documents (birth, marriage, divorce, school certificates) are charged on a flat per-page basis starting from $30 per page, including the signed Certificate of Translation Accuracy. Longer legal, medical, and technical projects are quoted by word count from $0.12 per word with a $50 minimum. Notarisation is a $25 flat add-on, hard-copy mailing within the US is $15 standard or $35 overnight, and same-day rush is +50% of the base price.

How fast can I get a certified Dzongkha translation?

Standard turnaround for short documents like birth or marriage certificates is 24 to 48 hours. Same-day rush is available for urgent USCIS deadlines, court filings, and university applications, including weekends. Submit before 2pm EST for same-business-day delivery.

Do you provide notarised Dzongkha translations?

Yes. Notarisation is available on request at a $25 flat fee and is sometimes required for state court submissions, certain visa categories, document recording, and international Apostille processes. Notarisation can be included with same-day delivery.

Will the certified translation be accepted by my US university or credential evaluator?

Yes. Our certified Dzongkha translations are commonly accepted by US universities and by every major credential evaluation agency, including WES, ECE, IEE, and Educational Perspectives. Acceptance ultimately depends on the receiving institution, so we recommend confirming any institution-specific requirements before submission.

Can you translate from English to Dzongkha with certification?

Yes. Our native Dzongkha translators handle both Dzongkha to English and English to Dzongkha certified translations. English to Dzongkha certifications are commonly used for sworn translations submitted to foreign consulates, courts, and Dzongkha-speaking government agencies.

What is the difference between certified, sworn, and notarised translation?

In the US, a certified translation is a word-for-word translation accompanied by a signed Certificate of Translation Accuracy from the translator or translation company. A notarised translation is a certified translation whose certificate has been signed in front of a notary public. A sworn translation is a concept used in many European, Latin American, and Asian jurisdictions where the translator is appointed by a court; the US does not maintain a sworn-translator registry, so USCIS and US courts accept the certified-translation format.

Do you provide an apostille on certified Dzongkha translations?

We provide apostille support on certified Dzongkha translations destined for use abroad. The apostille is issued by the relevant US state Secretary of State, typically following notarisation. We handle the notarisation and coordinate the apostille submission on your behalf where required.

Is my Dzongkha document handled confidentially?

Yes. Every certified Dzongkha translation is handled under strict confidentiality. Documents are transferred over secure channels, accessed only by the assigned translator and reviewer, and deleted from our active systems 30 days after delivery on request. Signed Non-Disclosure Agreements are available for legal, medical, and corporate clients.

What happens if the receiving institution asks for a correction?

If USCIS, a court, a university, a credential evaluator, or any other receiving institution requests a clarification or correction to a certified Dzongkha translation we produced, we revise and re-issue the document at no additional cost. The same translator and reviewer are reassigned where possible so the corrected version stays consistent with the original.

Reviewed by Rachel Jones, Senior Dzongkha Translation Editor, Prism Linguistics. Last updated: 2026-05-06. Feedback on this article? Email editor@prismlinguistics.com.

Related Dzongkha Services

Certified Dzongkha Translation in Major US Cities

We provide certified Dzongkha translation to clients in every major US city. Choose a location below for more on Dzongkha translation in that city:

Request a callback

Get a quote