If you live in Texas and receive a pension from Peru — whether through the public ONP system or a private AFP fund — you will periodically have to prove you are still alive to keep the payments coming. And if a Peruvian relative has passed away and you are entitled to a survivor's benefit, you may need to send a US death certificate to Peru in a form the pension administrator will accept. In both cases, a Texas document usually has to be apostilled before it carries legal weight in Peru.
This page explains when an apostille is required, how the Texas process works, and what Peru generally expects for proof-of-life and survivor claims.
What an apostille is
An apostille is a certificate that authenticates a public document — a notary's signature, a court seal, a registrar's certification — so it will be accepted by authorities in another country. For countries in the Hague Apostille Convention, the apostille is the finish line. For countries outside it, the same Texas certificate is the first step in a short legalization chain.
Does an apostille work in Peru?
Yes. Peru is a member of the Hague Apostille Convention. A single apostille issued by the Texas Secretary of State is recognized throughout Peru without any further consular legalization. The apostille certifies that the Texas notary or official who signed your document is genuine, so the ONP or your AFP will accept it as authentic.
Keep in mind that the apostille only authenticates the signature. Any document issued in English will still need an official Spanish translation before a Peruvian institution will act on it.
How the Texas Secretary of State apostille works
Texas apostilles come from a single office: the Secretary of State's Authentications Unit in Austin. There is no county-clerk step — a document notarized by any Texas notary, in any of the 254 counties, goes straight to the state. Since October 2023 Texas issues one Universal Apostille (Form 2102) that works for every destination, whether or not the country belongs to the Hague Apostille Convention.
The state fee is $15 per document. Mailed requests can take up to 25 business days; in-person and appointment service in Austin is same-day for up to 10 documents, and a bulk drop-box handles larger batches in 24–48 hours. There is no online submission — every request is handled by mail or in person. Certified copies of vital records (birth, death, marriage, divorce) must be less than five years old.

