I. Introduction
Filipino graduates who apply for employment, higher studies, professional licensure, immigration, credential evaluation, or residency abroad are often required to prove that their diploma, transcript, or degree was validly issued by a recognized educational institution in the Philippines. This process is commonly called diploma verification, although the exact requirement may also be described as education verification, credential verification, school records authentication, degree confirmation, academic document certification, or apostille of school records.
In the Philippine context, diploma verification is not a single uniform procedure. The proper process depends on the requesting foreign institution, the country of destination, the type of document required, and whether the applicant needs only school certification, verification by the Commission on Higher Education, authentication by the Department of Foreign Affairs, or an Apostille.
This article explains the legal and practical considerations for requesting diploma verification in the Philippines for overseas application.
II. Meaning of Diploma Verification
Diploma verification refers to the process of confirming the authenticity, issuance, and academic validity of a diploma or degree. It may involve one or more of the following:
- confirmation that the diploma was issued by a legitimate school;
- confirmation that the student graduated from the stated program;
- confirmation that the degree, course, or institution was recognized or authorized under Philippine law;
- certification of related academic records, such as the Transcript of Records;
- authentication or apostille of school documents for use abroad; and
- direct communication between the Philippine school and a foreign employer, university, licensing board, embassy, immigration agency, or credential evaluation body.
Diploma verification should not be confused with equivalency evaluation. Verification confirms whether the document or degree is genuine. Equivalency evaluation determines how the Philippine qualification compares with the educational standards of another country.
III. Legal Basis and Institutional Framework
Education in the Philippines is regulated through several government bodies depending on the level and type of education involved.
For higher education, colleges and universities are generally supervised by the Commission on Higher Education. For basic education, including elementary and secondary school records, the relevant authority is generally the Department of Education. For technical-vocational education and training, the relevant agency is generally the Technical Education and Skills Development Authority.
For overseas use, academic documents may also pass through the Department of Foreign Affairs, especially when an Apostille or authentication is required.
The legal importance of verification arises from the need to protect the integrity of public and private records, prevent fraud, and ensure that foreign institutions can rely on Philippine-issued academic documents. False academic credentials may have consequences under school rules, employment policies, immigration rules, professional regulations, and, in serious cases, criminal laws on falsification or use of falsified documents.
IV. Common Overseas Situations Requiring Diploma Verification
Diploma verification is commonly required in the following situations:
A. Overseas Employment
Foreign employers may require confirmation that an applicant truly completed the degree stated in the resume, employment application, or visa documents. This is especially common for teachers, nurses, engineers, accountants, IT professionals, healthcare workers, seafarers, and other regulated or skilled occupations.
B. Foreign University Admission
Universities abroad often require verified academic records before admitting a Philippine graduate to a master’s degree, doctorate, professional program, or transfer program.
C. Credential Evaluation
Some countries require educational credential assessment by a recognized evaluation agency. These agencies may ask that the school send records directly or that the applicant submit certified, sealed, apostilled, or authenticated documents.
D. Professional Licensure Abroad
Foreign licensing boards may require verified diplomas, transcripts, course descriptions, clinical hours, internship records, or proof that the program was recognized in the Philippines.
E. Immigration and Permanent Residency
Some immigration programs award points or eligibility based on educational attainment. The immigration authority or its designated evaluator may require formal verification of the applicant’s degree.
F. Embassy or Consular Requirements
Some embassies or consulates may require authenticated or apostilled school records as part of a visa, study, work, or family reunification application.
V. Documents Commonly Required
The required documents vary, but the usual academic documents include:
- diploma;
- Transcript of Records;
- certificate of graduation;
- certificate of enrollment or attendance;
- special order number, where applicable;
- certificate of medium of instruction;
- course descriptions or syllabus;
- certificate of good moral character;
- certification of grading system;
- certificate of school recognition, accreditation, or program authority;
- board examination results or professional license, if relevant;
- sealed school envelope containing records; and
- authorization letter allowing the school to release records to a third party.
For overseas purposes, the Transcript of Records is often more important than the diploma because it contains the program, subjects, units, grades, graduation date, and other academic details.
VI. Determine First What the Foreign Institution Actually Requires
Before requesting documents from a Philippine school or agency, the applicant should carefully review the instruction from the foreign institution. The requirement may be one of several different things.
A. School-Issued Verification Only
Some institutions require only a letter or email from the registrar confirming that the applicant graduated from the school.
B. Certified True Copy
A certified true copy is a photocopy or reproduction of a document confirmed by the issuing office as a faithful copy of the original.
C. Sealed Envelope
Some foreign institutions require records to be placed in a sealed school envelope, signed or stamped across the flap, and sent directly by the school or carried unopened by the applicant.
D. Direct Verification
Some agencies require the Philippine school to respond directly to an email, online portal, or verification form.
E. CHED Certification, Authentication, or Endorsement
For higher education records, some applicants may need documents verified or endorsed through CHED before they are accepted for DFA Apostille or foreign use.
F. DFA Apostille
If the foreign country is a member of the Apostille Convention, an Apostille may be required to make the Philippine public document acceptable abroad without consular authentication.
G. Embassy Legalization
If the destination country does not accept Apostille or has additional rules, the applicant may need embassy or consular legalization after Philippine authentication.
The applicant should avoid assuming that “verification,” “authentication,” “apostille,” and “evaluation” mean the same thing. They are related but legally and procedurally distinct.
VII. Step-by-Step Process for Requesting Diploma Verification
Step 1: Identify the Exact Requirement
The applicant should first obtain written instructions from the foreign institution. The instruction should ideally state:
- which documents are required;
- whether originals or certified copies are needed;
- whether documents must be sealed;
- whether documents must be sent directly by the school;
- whether an Apostille is required;
- whether the school must complete a verification form;
- whether electronic verification is accepted; and
- the deadline for submission.
This step prevents unnecessary expense and delay.
Step 2: Contact the Registrar of the School
The registrar is usually the main office responsible for issuing diplomas, transcripts, certifications, and verification letters. The applicant should contact the registrar of the college, university, or school that issued the diploma.
The request should clearly state that the documents are for overseas application and identify the country, institution, and purpose.
A typical request may include:
- full name used while enrolled;
- student number, if available;
- degree or program completed;
- year of graduation;
- date of birth;
- contact details;
- copy of valid government ID;
- authorization letter, if a representative will process the request;
- specific documents requested;
- foreign institution’s instructions; and
- payment of school fees.
Step 3: Request the Appropriate School Documents
The applicant should request only the documents required. However, for overseas applications, it is often prudent to secure at least the diploma, Transcript of Records, and certificate of graduation.
Where the foreign institution requires direct confirmation, the applicant should ask the registrar whether the school can send records by email, courier, online portal, or institutional mail.
Step 4: Ask Whether CHED Processing Is Needed
For higher education documents, the school or registrar may advise whether CHED verification, certification, or endorsement is necessary before the document can be used abroad.
CHED-related processing is especially relevant when the applicant needs documents for DFA Apostille or where the foreign institution specifically requires government confirmation of the school records.
Step 5: Prepare Documents for DFA Apostille, If Required
If the documents will be used in a country that accepts Apostille, the applicant may need to submit the proper certified or endorsed school documents to the Department of Foreign Affairs for Apostille.
An Apostille does not certify that the contents of the diploma are academically equivalent to a foreign degree. It certifies the origin of the public document or the authority of the official signature or seal, depending on the document type.
Step 6: Submit to the Foreign Institution
The applicant should follow the foreign institution’s delivery instruction exactly. If the instruction says that records must come directly from the school, the applicant should not personally forward opened documents unless expressly allowed.
If documents must be sealed, the applicant should not open the envelope. Opening a sealed school envelope may cause rejection.
Step 7: Keep Copies and Proof of Transmission
The applicant should keep:
- copies of all documents submitted;
- receipts;
- courier tracking numbers;
- email confirmations;
- reference numbers;
- screenshots of portal submissions; and
- written responses from the school, CHED, DFA, or foreign institution.
These records may be needed if the application is delayed or questioned.
VIII. Role of the School Registrar
The registrar is the primary custodian of student academic records. The registrar may issue:
- Transcript of Records;
- diploma replacement or certification;
- certificate of graduation;
- certificate of enrollment;
- certificate of medium of instruction;
- grading system certification;
- course descriptions;
- sealed academic records;
- verification letters; and
- direct responses to foreign credential evaluators.
The registrar may refuse to release records if the student has unpaid obligations, incomplete clearance, unresolved disciplinary matters affecting record release, or insufficient identification or authorization.
IX. Role of CHED
For college and university records, CHED may be involved when documents require government-level verification or endorsement. The exact process may vary depending on the region, the type of school, and the document involved.
CHED involvement may be relevant when:
- the foreign institution requires confirmation that the school or program is recognized;
- the document will be submitted for DFA Apostille;
- the applicant needs certification, authentication, or verification of higher education records;
- the school has closed and records have been transferred to a government custodian or another institution; or
- the applicant needs assistance confirming the status of the institution or program.
CHED does not replace the school registrar as the issuer of the student’s academic record. The original academic record ordinarily comes from the school.
X. Role of DFA Apostille
The Department of Foreign Affairs provides Apostille services for documents intended for use abroad, subject to applicable rules. For Philippine academic documents, the DFA generally requires documents to be in the proper form before they can be apostilled.
The Apostille is often required when submitting school documents to foreign governments, universities, employers, licensing boards, or immigration authorities. However, not every overseas application requires an Apostille. Some private employers or credential evaluators may prefer direct school verification instead.
The applicant should confirm whether the destination country accepts Apostille or requires a different legalization process.
XI. Apostille vs. Authentication vs. Verification
These terms are often confused.
A. Verification
Verification confirms that the diploma, transcript, or academic record is genuine and was issued by the proper school.
B. Authentication
Authentication confirms the authority of the signature, seal, or public official involved in the document process.
C. Apostille
An Apostille is a form of authentication used between countries that participate in the Apostille system. It simplifies the use of public documents abroad.
D. Credential Evaluation
Credential evaluation compares the Philippine qualification to the educational framework of another country. It is usually performed by a foreign credential evaluation agency, not by the Philippine school.
A diploma may be genuine but still evaluated differently abroad. For example, a degree may be verified as valid in the Philippines, but a foreign evaluator may assign a different equivalency depending on its own standards.
XII. Data Privacy Considerations
Academic records are personal information and may include sensitive personal information. Schools should not release records to third parties without proper authority. Applicants may therefore be required to submit:
- valid identification;
- signed request form;
- authorization letter;
- consent to release records;
- representative’s ID, if applicable; and
- details of the receiving institution.
Foreign employers, agencies, or evaluators that request verification may also require the applicant’s consent before the Philippine school will respond.
A school may legitimately decline to verify records by phone or informal email if it cannot confirm the identity or authority of the requesting party.
XIII. Requesting Verification Through a Representative
If the applicant is already abroad, a representative in the Philippines may process the request. The representative will usually need:
- signed authorization letter or special power of attorney, depending on the school’s rule;
- copy of the applicant’s valid ID;
- copy of the representative’s valid ID;
- completed school request form;
- payment for fees;
- claim stub or reference number; and
- courier authorization, if documents will be mailed.
Some schools accept online requests, digital payments, and courier delivery. Others still require in-person filing or claiming.
XIV. When the School Has Closed
If the school has closed, the applicant should determine where the academic records were transferred. In some cases, records of closed higher education institutions may be under the custody of CHED, a successor institution, or another designated records custodian.
The applicant may need to request assistance from the appropriate CHED Regional Office or the relevant education authority. Processing may take longer because the records must first be located.
The applicant should prepare identifying information such as:
- full name while enrolled;
- course or program;
- inclusive years of attendance;
- year of graduation;
- school campus or branch;
- student number;
- old copies of diploma or transcript; and
- any prior certification issued by the school.
XV. If the Diploma Was Lost or Damaged
If the original diploma was lost or damaged, the applicant should request a replacement diploma or a certification from the registrar. Many schools issue only one original diploma and may instead provide a certification of graduation or a certified true copy from school records.
The applicant may be required to submit an affidavit of loss, damaged original document, valid ID, request form, photographs, and payment.
For overseas applications, a certificate of graduation and Transcript of Records may sometimes be accepted even when a replacement diploma is not immediately available.
XVI. If the Name on the Diploma Differs From the Current Name
Name differences are common due to marriage, correction of clerical error, change of name, use of middle initials, or spelling variations.
The applicant should prepare supporting documents such as:
- birth certificate;
- marriage certificate;
- court order, if applicable;
- certificate of name correction;
- valid government IDs;
- affidavit of one and the same person; and
- school certification explaining the name used in the academic record.
Foreign institutions often scrutinize name discrepancies, so the applicant should address them before submission.
XVII. If the Foreign Institution Requires Direct School Verification
Some foreign institutions do not accept documents carried by the applicant. They may require the school to send documents directly. In that case, the applicant should coordinate with the registrar and provide:
- official email address of the receiving institution;
- mailing address;
- reference number;
- applicant ID number assigned by the foreign institution;
- verification form;
- deadline;
- consent to release academic records; and
- courier or mailing payment.
The applicant should ask the registrar whether the school can indicate the applicant’s reference number in the subject line, envelope, or cover letter to prevent misrouting abroad.
XVIII. If the Foreign Institution Requires an Online Portal Submission
Some credential evaluation agencies and foreign universities use online portals. The school may have to upload the Transcript of Records or answer a verification questionnaire.
The applicant should not attempt to upload school-only documents if the instruction specifically requires institutional submission. Doing so may cause rejection or delay.
The applicant should provide the registrar with accurate portal instructions and allow sufficient time for processing.
XIX. If the Foreign Institution Requires a Verification Form
Some agencies issue a form that must be completed by the registrar or authorized school official. The applicant should not fill out school-only sections unless instructed.
The form may require:
- confirmation of attendance;
- dates of enrollment;
- degree awarded;
- graduation date;
- medium of instruction;
- school seal;
- registrar’s signature;
- official title of signatory;
- school contact information; and
- direct mailing by the school.
A form signed by an unauthorized person may be rejected.
XX. Fees and Processing Time
Fees vary by school and agency. Possible costs include:
- transcript fee;
- diploma replacement fee;
- certification fee;
- sealing fee;
- CHED processing fee, if applicable;
- DFA Apostille fee;
- courier fee;
- representative service fee; and
- bank or online payment charges.
Processing time also varies. Applicants should account for school processing, CHED processing, DFA processing, courier delivery, and foreign institution review.
Applicants should begin the process early, especially when deadlines are connected to visa filing, scholarship admission, professional licensure, or immigration intake periods.
XXI. Common Reasons for Delay or Rejection
Diploma verification may be delayed or rejected because of:
- incomplete request forms;
- unpaid school obligations;
- mismatch in names or dates;
- unclear copies;
- missing authorization;
- unsigned or unstamped documents;
- opened sealed envelopes;
- wrong receiving address;
- failure to include reference number;
- use of personal email instead of official school email;
- foreign institution requiring direct school submission;
- lack of Apostille where required;
- submission of diploma without Transcript of Records;
- records from a closed school being difficult to locate; or
- suspected falsification or alteration.
XXII. Legal Risks of Fake or Altered Diplomas
Using a fake, altered, or misrepresented diploma may have serious consequences. These may include:
- rejection of employment or school application;
- revocation of admission;
- dismissal from employment;
- cancellation of visa or immigration application;
- professional disciplinary action;
- blacklisting by agencies or institutions;
- civil liability; and
- possible criminal liability for falsification, use of falsified documents, perjury, or misrepresentation, depending on the facts.
Applicants should never alter grades, dates, school seals, signatures, degree titles, or academic honors. Even minor changes can be treated as falsification if they misrepresent the original record.
XXIII. Practical Checklist for Applicants
Before requesting diploma verification, the applicant should prepare the following:
- written instruction from the foreign institution;
- copy of diploma;
- Transcript of Records;
- valid government ID;
- school student number;
- graduation details;
- authorization letter, if represented;
- representative’s ID;
- payment method;
- recipient’s official address or email;
- reference number from the foreign institution;
- verification form, if any;
- request for sealed envelope, if required;
- request for CHED or DFA processing, if required; and
- timeline and deadline.
XXIV. Sample Request Letter to School Registrar
Date: __________
The Registrar [Name of School] [School Address]
Subject: Request for Diploma and Academic Records Verification for Overseas Application
Dear Registrar:
I am writing to request assistance in verifying my academic credentials for overseas application purposes.
I graduated from [Name of School] with the degree of [Degree/Program] in [Year of Graduation]. My student number, if applicable, is [Student Number]. The foreign institution requiring verification is [Name of Foreign Institution/Agency], located in [Country].
I respectfully request the issuance and/or verification of the following documents:
- Diploma;
- Transcript of Records;
- Certificate of Graduation;
- [Other required documents].
The foreign institution requires that the documents be [sent directly by the school / placed in a sealed envelope / certified true copies / completed through an online portal / submitted with Apostille / other instruction].
For your reference, I have attached the foreign institution’s instructions, a copy of my valid ID, and the necessary authorization and supporting documents.
Kindly inform me of the applicable fees, processing time, and any additional requirements.
Thank you.
Respectfully,
[Full Name] [Contact Number] [Email Address] [Current Address]
XXV. Sample Authorization Letter
Date: __________
To Whom It May Concern:
I, [Full Name], of legal age, authorize [Name of Representative] to request, process, pay for, and claim my academic records from [Name of School] for purposes of diploma verification and overseas application.
This authorization covers the processing of my diploma, Transcript of Records, certificate of graduation, and related school certifications as may be required.
Attached are copies of my valid identification document and the valid identification document of my authorized representative.
Thank you.
[Signature] [Full Name] [Contact Number] [Email Address]
XXVI. Best Practices
Applicants should observe the following best practices:
- secure written instructions before processing;
- request documents directly from the registrar;
- avoid using unofficial fixers or third-party document processors;
- verify whether CHED or DFA Apostille is required;
- use the exact name and reference number required by the foreign institution;
- keep sealed envelopes unopened;
- allow sufficient processing time;
- keep all receipts and tracking records;
- address name discrepancies early; and
- never submit altered or unofficial documents.
XXVII. Conclusion
Requesting diploma verification for overseas application requires careful coordination between the applicant, the Philippine school, and, when necessary, CHED, DFA, the foreign institution, or a credential evaluation agency. The correct procedure depends on the purpose of the application and the rules of the receiving country or institution.
The safest approach is to first determine the exact foreign requirement, then request the appropriate documents from the school registrar, and finally secure CHED processing, DFA Apostille, direct school transmission, or embassy legalization only when required.
Diploma verification is not merely a clerical step. It is a legal and evidentiary process that protects the integrity of academic records and supports the applicant’s credibility abroad. Proper preparation can prevent delays, rejection, and legal complications in overseas employment, study, immigration, or professional licensing applications.