A PSA “No Record” or Negative Certification can feel alarming, especially when you already have a Certificate of Live Birth or an old local birth certificate. In many cases, it does not mean you were never born, your identity is invalid, or you must immediately go to court. It usually means one of two things: the birth was recorded at the Local Civil Registrar but was never transmitted or encoded in the PSA system, or the birth was never properly registered at the Local Civil Registrar in the first place. The right next step depends on which situation applies.
What “Live Birth Certificate but No PSA Record” Usually Means
In the Philippines, there are different documents people casually call a “birth certificate.” They are not always the same.
| Document you may have | What it may mean | Is it enough for PSA, passport, school, or legal transactions? |
|---|---|---|
| Hospital or clinic birth record | Proof that a child was delivered in a facility | Usually not enough by itself; it must still be registered with the Local Civil Registrar |
| Old Certificate of Live Birth with registry number | The birth may have been registered with the Local Civil Registrar | Useful, but many agencies still require PSA-issued copy |
| Certified True Copy from the Local Civil Registrar | The LCR has the civil registry record | Usually the basis for endorsement to PSA if PSA has no record |
| PSA Negative Certification | PSA searched its Civil Registry System and found no record as of the date issued | Often required for LCR endorsement or delayed registration |
| PSA-issued birth certificate on security paper or e-certificate | PSA has the record in its national system | Usually the document required for major government and private transactions |
The key question is: Does the Local Civil Registrar of your place of birth have your birth record?
If yes, you normally need LCR endorsement to PSA.
If no, you normally need delayed registration of birth.
Legal Basis: Why Birth Registration Matters in the Philippines
Civil registration in the Philippines is governed mainly by Act No. 3753, the Civil Registry Law. It created the civil register and requires births, deaths, marriages, legitimations, adoptions, acknowledgments, naturalizations, and changes of name to be recorded. Act No. 3753 also provides that birth declarations should be sent to the local civil registrar not later than 30 days after birth. (Lawphil)
A registered civil registry document is important because the civil register and related documents are considered public documents and are generally treated as prima facie evidence, meaning they are accepted as evidence of the facts stated unless properly challenged. (Lawphil)
The Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) now performs the national civil registration functions previously associated with the NSO. Under current PSA practice, when a person requests a PSA birth certificate and PSA cannot locate the record in its Civil Registry System, PSA issues a Negative Certification of Birth, which states that no birth record exists in the CRS database as of the date of issuance. (Philippine Statistics Authority)
This is why many people discover the problem only when applying for a passport, school enrollment, employment, marriage, visa, benefits, or Philippine National ID-related transactions.
First, Identify What Kind of “Live Birth Certificate” You Have
Before spending money on affidavits or filing anything, examine your document carefully.
Look for these details:
- Name of the city or municipality civil registrar
- Registry number
- Date of registration
- Signature of the civil registrar
- Civil registry book/page reference, if shown
- Annotation that the birth was registered late, if any
- Whether it is merely a hospital-issued form or a civil registry-certified copy
If the document has no registry number
It may only be a hospital, clinic, midwife, or barangay record. That can help prove the facts of birth, but it may not mean the birth was actually registered.
If it has a registry number
That is a strong sign that the birth may be recorded with the Local Civil Registrar. The next step is to verify directly with the LCR of the city or municipality where the birth occurred.
If it says “late registered”
That does not automatically make it invalid. A late-registered birth certificate can be valid, but agencies may scrutinize it more carefully, especially for passport, immigration, citizenship, pension, inheritance, or foreign visa matters.
Step-by-Step: What to Do If PSA Has No Birth Record
1. Get a fresh PSA Negative Certification of Birth
Request your PSA birth certificate through a PSA CRS outlet or authorized PSA online service. If PSA has no record, you will receive a Negative Certification.
Do not throw it away. It is often required by the LCR for endorsement or delayed registration.
As of PSA’s 2026 public advisory, a Negative Certification of Birth is valid only for six months from the date of issuance for delayed registration and other civil registry transactions. PSA explained that this certificate is time-sensitive because it reflects only the status of the PSA database at a specific point in time. (Philippine Statistics Authority)
2. Go to the Local Civil Registrar of the place of birth
Bring your Negative Certification and any birth-related documents to the Local Civil Registry Office (LCRO) of the city or municipality where the birth happened.
Do not go only to the LCR where you currently live unless you are asking about out-of-town reporting or migrant filing procedures. For ordinary birth registration and verification, the controlling office is usually the LCR of the place of birth.
Ask the LCR to search its records using:
- Your full name
- Date of birth
- Place of birth
- Mother’s maiden name
- Father’s name, if acknowledged or listed
- Registry number, if shown on your document
- Approximate year of registration, especially if late registered
3. If the LCR has your record, request endorsement to PSA
If the LCR finds your birth record, ask for:
- A Certified True Copy of the Certificate of Live Birth from the LCR; and
- Endorsement of the record to PSA.
PSA’s own guidance for a “negative result or no record at PSA” is to request the LCR of the place where the document was registered to endorse a certified copy to PSA. (Philippine Statistics Authority)
In practice, the LCR usually prepares a transmittal or endorsement package to PSA. Depending on the city or municipality, this may be sent physically or electronically through PSA coordination channels.
4. Wait for PSA encoding and availability
Timelines vary widely. A simple LCR endorsement may take a few weeks to a few months, depending on:
- Whether the LCR record is clear and complete
- Whether the LCR has a digitized system
- PSA workload
- Whether the record is old, damaged, handwritten, or archived
- Whether there are spelling, date, parentage, or registry number inconsistencies
A practical follow-up rhythm is every 2 to 4 weeks. Keep copies of the LCR endorsement receipt, transmittal reference, and names of personnel who handled the request.
5. Request the PSA birth certificate again
After the LCR confirms endorsement, request the PSA birth certificate again. If PSA still issues a Negative Certification, bring it back to the LCR and ask for the endorsement status or transmittal proof.
If the LCR Also Has No Record: Delayed Registration of Birth
If both PSA and the LCR have no record, the remedy is usually delayed registration of birth.
Under the implementing rules of Act No. 3753, delayed registration of birth is filed with the civil registrar of the place where the birth occurred. The rules require documents such as accomplished copies of the Certificate of Live Birth, an Affidavit for Delayed Registration, supporting evidence, and affidavits of disinterested persons who witnessed or knew of the birth. (Philippine Statistics Authority)
The updated PSA-DILG guidelines describe delayed registration as registration after the 30-day reglementary period and confirm that it should be registered at the LCRO of the place where the birth occurred.
Basic requirements for delayed registration
The exact checklist can vary slightly by LCR, but the usual requirements include:
| Requirement | Purpose |
|---|---|
| PSA Negative Certification of Birth | Shows PSA has no existing birth record |
| Accomplished Certificate of Live Birth | Main registration form |
| Affidavit for Delayed Registration | Explains the facts of birth and reason for late registration |
| At least two supporting documents | Corroborates name, date/place of birth, and parents |
| Affidavit of two disinterested persons | Supports the fact of birth from people not directly benefiting |
| Valid IDs of applicant and requester | Confirms identity |
| Marriage certificate, if applicant is married | Required for adults who are married |
| SPA or authorization, if filed by another person | Allows representative to process the application |
For delayed registration where both parents are Filipino citizens, PSA-DILG guidelines list supporting documents such as baptismal certificate, school records, income tax return, insurance policy, medical records, and barangay captain’s certification. They also require a Negative Certification of Birth from PSA.
For an applicant who is already 18 years old or older, the person generally applies for late registration personally and submits the requirements for minors plus a marriage certificate if married.
Posting period and verification
Delayed registration is not automatic. The civil registrar may interview the applicant, examine the documents, verify affidavits, and in some cases coordinate with the barangay.
Under the PSA-DILG guidelines, a notice of pending delayed registration must be posted for 10 consecutive days in a conspicuous place at the civil registrar’s office. If no opposition is filed and the civil registrar is convinced that the birth occurred within the office’s jurisdiction, the delayed registration may be accepted and registered.
Fees
The PSA-DILG delayed registration guidelines state that LCRO fees for delayed registration should not exceed ₱200, and fees may be waived if the document owner or applicant is indigent as certified by the punong barangay.
Separate costs may still arise for PSA requests, photocopies, notarization, transportation, courier services, and securing old school, baptismal, medical, or barangay records.
Special Situations That Commonly Cause Problems
Your birth was registered locally but never forwarded to PSA
This is one of the most common scenarios for older records. The LCR may have the book entry, but PSA does not have a digitized or archived copy. The usual fix is LCR endorsement, not delayed registration.
Your “live birth certificate” came only from the hospital
A hospital document is helpful evidence, but it is not always a registered civil registry document. If there is no registry number and no LCR certification, confirm with the LCR. If the LCR has no record, delayed registration may be needed.
You were born at home with a midwife or hilot
Act No. 3753 and its implementing rules recognize that when a birth does not occur in a hospital or clinic, the attendant at birth, or in default the parents, may be responsible for causing the registration. The older the case, the more important it is to gather supporting records such as baptismal, school, medical, barangay, and witness affidavits. (Philippine Statistics Authority)
You live far from your birthplace
If you cannot travel easily, ask the LCR of your birthplace whether they allow processing through an authorized representative. If another person files on your behalf, PSA-DILG guidelines require a Special Power of Attorney or authorization letter, valid IDs of the document owner and requester, and an affidavit if the document owner is deceased explaining why the owner cannot personally file.
For out-of-town reporting, Administrative Order No. 1, Series of 1993 recognizes a process where the Certificate of Live Birth is presented to a civil registrar outside the place of birth for forwarding to the civil registrar where the birth occurred. The rule requires an affidavit explaining the facts of birth and why the birth was not recorded in the proper place, together with copies of the Certificate of Live Birth and supporting documents. (Philippine Statistics Authority)
One parent is a foreigner
Delayed registration involving a foreign parent may require additional documents. PSA-DILG guidelines list requirements such as the parents’ certificate of marriage if the child is legitimate, parents’ birth certificates, passports of both parents, and, for certain non-marital children, an Affidavit of Admission of Paternity or Affidavit to Use the Surname of the Father under RA 9255.
If a foreign document will be submitted in the Philippines, expect the LCR or PSA to require proper authentication, apostille, consularization where applicable, and certified English translation if the document is not in English.
The child was born abroad to a Filipino parent
If the birth occurred abroad, the usual document is a Report of Birth filed with the Philippine Embassy or Consulate having jurisdiction over the place of birth. Philippine foreign service posts generally require the child’s foreign birth certificate, parents’ passports, proof of Filipino citizenship of the Filipino parent, and other supporting documents. (Philippine Embassy)
After consular registration and transmittal, PSA availability can take time. Some Philippine embassies advise that PSA issuance after Report of Birth registration may take around 6 months to 1 year. (Philippine Embassy)
When Correction, Not Endorsement, Is the Real Issue
Sometimes the birth record exists, but PSA or the LCR refuses simple processing because the record has serious inconsistencies.
Common examples:
- Wrong spelling of name
- Wrong sex
- Wrong day or month of birth
- Wrong year of birth
- Missing first name
- Wrong mother’s maiden name
- Father listed without proper acknowledgment
- Two birth records with different details
- Late registration that conflicts with school or passport records
Minor clerical or typographical errors may be corrected administratively under RA 9048, as amended by RA 10172, which allows certain corrections by the civil registrar or consul general without a court order. RA 9048 covers clerical errors and change of first name or nickname, while RA 10172 expanded administrative correction to certain errors involving sex and day or month of birth. (Lawphil)
But substantial changes usually require a court proceeding under Rule 108 of the Rules of Court. The Supreme Court has explained that clerical corrections may proceed summarily, while substantial corrections affecting civil status, citizenship, or nationality require an adversarial proceeding where the relevant parties can be heard. (Supreme Court E-Library)
Practical Checklist Before You Go to the LCR
Bring originals and photocopies where available:
- PSA Negative Certification of Birth, preferably issued within the last 6 months
- Any Certificate of Live Birth you have
- Certified True Copy from the LCR, if already obtained
- Valid government-issued ID
- Baptismal certificate
- School records, especially Form 137, diploma, or early enrollment records
- Medical or immunization records
- Barangay certification
- Old IDs, employment records, SSS/GSIS/PhilHealth/Pag-IBIG records
- Passport or immigration records, if any
- Parents’ marriage certificate, if applicable
- Parents’ birth certificates, if requested
- Affidavits of two disinterested persons
- Special Power of Attorney or authorization letter if someone else will process
- Foreign documents with apostille/authentication and English translation, if applicable
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Filing delayed registration when the LCR already has a record
This can create duplicate records and bigger legal problems. Always ask the LCR to search first.
Using only the name you currently use
PSA and LCR searches may fail if you search only one spelling. Try variations of your name, your mother’s maiden name, and old spellings used in school or baptismal records.
Ignoring the place of birth
Birth registration is tied to the place where the birth occurred, not where you live now.
Submitting inconsistent documents without explanation
If your school record says one birth date but your baptismal certificate says another, prepare an explanation. Inconsistencies can delay registration or endorsement.
Letting the PSA Negative Certification expire
For civil registry transactions, PSA now treats the Negative Certification of Birth as valid only for six months from issuance. (Philippine Statistics Authority)
Assuming an old local copy is automatically accepted everywhere
RA 11909 gives permanent validity to birth, death, and marriage certificates issued, signed, certified, or authenticated by PSA, NSO, LCRs, and Philippine Foreign Service Posts, provided the document remains intact, readable, and still contains authenticity and security features. (Lawphil)
In practice, however, many agencies still require a PSA-issued copy for their own verification systems, especially for passports, immigration, overseas employment, marriage, benefits, and court-related transactions.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I get a passport if I have a live birth certificate but no PSA record?
Usually, you will need to resolve the PSA record issue first. For Filipino passport applications, the New Philippine Passport Act, RA 11983, recognizes proof of citizenship such as a Certificate of Live Birth, Report of Birth, or Certificate of Foundling authenticated by PSA for natural-born citizens. (Lawphil)
Is a PSA Negative Certification bad?
No. It is not a finding that you have no identity. It simply means PSA did not find a birth record in its Civil Registry System as of the date of issuance. It is often the document you need to begin endorsement or delayed registration. (Philippine Statistics Authority)
What if the Local Civil Registrar has my record but PSA does not?
Ask the LCR of your place of birth to endorse a certified copy of your birth record to PSA. This is the usual remedy when the local record exists but PSA has no copy. (Philippine Statistics Authority)
What if both PSA and the LCR have no record?
You will likely need delayed registration of birth at the LCR of the place where you were born. Prepare the PSA Negative Certification, Certificate of Live Birth form, affidavit for delayed registration, supporting documents, and affidavits of disinterested persons.
How long does LCR endorsement to PSA take?
There is no single fixed timeline. Simple endorsements may take several weeks, while older, unclear, damaged, or inconsistent records can take months. The best practice is to secure the LCR transmittal or endorsement reference and follow up with both the LCR and PSA.
Do I need a lawyer for delayed registration?
Many delayed registrations are handled directly with the LCR without court involvement. A court case may be needed if there are substantial corrections, disputed identity, duplicate records, citizenship issues, or changes affecting civil status or filiation.
Can my relative process this for me if I am abroad?
Yes, but the LCR will usually require authorization. For delayed registration filed by another person, PSA-DILG guidelines require documents such as a Special Power of Attorney or authorization letter and valid IDs of both the document owner and requester.
What if my birth certificate has the wrong first name, birthday, or sex?
Some errors may be corrected administratively under RA 9048 and RA 10172. More serious or controversial changes may require a Rule 108 court petition.
Is late registration suspicious?
Not automatically. Many Filipinos, especially older persons, home births, rural births, indigenous persons, persons born during disasters, and children of migrant families, have late registration issues. But late-registered records are often reviewed more carefully, so consistent supporting documents are important.
Key Takeaways
- A PSA “No Record” result does not always mean you were never registered.
- First verify whether the Local Civil Registrar of your place of birth has your record.
- If the LCR has the record, ask for endorsement of a certified copy to PSA.
- If the LCR also has no record, delayed registration of birth is usually required.
- Keep your PSA Negative Certification because it is commonly required, but remember that it is valid for only six months for civil registry transactions.
- Do not file delayed registration if an LCR record already exists; this may create duplicate records.
- For errors in the birth record, determine whether the issue is administrative under RA 9048/RA 10172 or judicial under Rule 108.
- Foreign-parent, overseas birth, and representative filing cases usually require extra documents, proper authentication, and more careful review.