How certified translation pricing works in Germany
Certified translation pricing in Germany can seem opaque. Some services charge per word. Some per page. Some per ‘standard line’ of 55 characters. Some add hidden fees at checkout. Transzlate uses a flat-rate per-document model — you see the full price before you confirm.
Per-word vs per-document pricing: what’s the difference?
| Pricing model | How it works | Pros | Cons |
|---|---|---|---|
| Per word | Count the words, multiply by rate | Reflects complexity in long documents | Unpredictable for standard civil documents |
| Per ‘standard line’ | Based on 55-character lines in the translation | Traditional German translator standard | Very difficult for customers to estimate |
| Per page | Fixed fee per page of source document | Predictable if page count is known | Penalises dense documents |
| Per document (Transzlate) | One fixed price for the complete document | Fully transparent — you know the total before ordering | May not reflect very unusual multi-page documents |
Transzlate price list by document type
| Document type | PDF only | PDF + printed original |
|---|---|---|
| Birth certificate | €44.90 | €54.90 |
| Marriage certificate | €56.50 | €66.50 |
| Divorce certificate | €54.90 | €64.90 |
| Death certificate | €53.90 | €63.90 |
| Passport / ID card | €44.90 | €54.90 |
| Driving licence | €53.90 | €63.90 |
| Diploma / Degree | €53.90 | €63.90 |
| Transcripts | €44.90 | €54.90 |
| Legal document | €59.90 | €69.90 |
| Medical document | €56.50 | €66.50 |
| Financial document | €47.90 | €57.90 |
| Employment reference | €69.90 | €79.90 |
Add-ons and optional extras
| Add-on | Price | What it does |
|---|---|---|
| Express 24h delivery | +€20 | PDF next business day (EN↔DE, ES↔DE, IT↔DE) |
| Notarisation | +€35 | Notary stamp for court proceedings |
| Apostille service | +€49 | Hague apostille for international use |
| Second-reviewer check | +€25 | Additional quality review by second sworn translator |
Why cheaper is not always better for certified translations
A €25 certified translation from an unverified online marketplace may look attractive. But if the translator is not court-sworn, the translation will be rejected by German authorities — and you will need to order again from a legitimate provider. The second cost makes the total far higher than if you had ordered correctly the first time.
When evaluating a certified translation service, the minimum requirements are:
- Translations produced by court-sworn translators (vereidigt / ermächtigt by a German Landgericht)
- The translator’s official stamp on every page
- A signed certification statement confirming completeness and accuracy
- A copy of the original attached to the translation
Frequently asked questions
Are prices per document or per page?
When do I pay?
Do prices change based on language pair?
What drives certified translation prices
| Factor | Effect on price | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Document type (standard) | Base price per type | Birth certificate: €44.90 |
| Language pair rarity | +€5–€20 for rare languages | Amharic, Swahili — higher than EN/DE |
| Document complexity (multi-page) | +per page beyond standard | 10-page notarial deed vs 1-page birth cert |
| Express delivery | +€20 (EN/ES/IT↔DE only) | Next business day PDF |
| Notarisation | +€35 | For court proceedings |
| Apostille service | +€49 | For international use |
Stripe secure payment: the complete flow
What if I am not satisfied and do not want to pay?
Value comparison: certified translation vs the cost of rejection
The most important pricing consideration is not finding the cheapest translation — it is understanding the total cost of getting it wrong. A rejected translation costs:
| Cost of rejection | Estimated impact |
|---|---|
| Second translation (correct this time) | €44.90–€69.90 — the full price you avoided the first time |
| Rescheduled Ausländerbehörde appointment | 4–8 weeks additional waiting time |
| Missed visa or permit deadline | Potentially months of delay, with knock-on effects for work and residence rights |
| Rescheduled Standesamt appointment for marriage | Depends on venue and planning — can be months |
| Stress and time | Unquantifiable but real |
When a legitimate certified translation costs €44.90 and a rejected low-quality translation costs €44.90 plus weeks of delay, the maths is straightforward. The correct approach is to pay for a genuinely court-sworn certified translation the first time.
Transzlate’s 100% acceptance guarantee means that if your translation is rejected due to any fault on our part — incomplete translation, missing stamp, or any error we made — we redo it at no charge and process it as Express. This guarantee is possible because all translations are produced by court-sworn translators to the same high standard.
Summary: getting the most from your certified translation budget
Certified translation is not a commodity where all providers are equal. The sworn translator’s court appointment is the non-negotiable element that makes the translation legally valid. Within that constraint, here is how to optimise your translation spending:
- Order standard delivery unless you have a genuine time constraint — save the €20 Express surcharge
- Add multiple documents to one order — single shipping charge covers all
- Use PDF-only delivery if the authority accepts digital — save the printing and posting time
- Pay via Stripe pay-after-delivery — no upfront capital required, 14-day interest-free payment window
- Order from a service with an acceptance guarantee — any rejection and redo is covered at no charge
The total cost of a correct, accepted certified translation from Transzlate — from €44.90 for a birth certificate — is almost always less than the cost of a rejected cheap translation plus the time and stress of rescheduled appointments.