Experience Certificate

Document master guide

Experience Certificate

Use this master guide to understand what experience certificate is for, when it is requested, which evidence usually supports it, and when to move from the global explanation to a country-specific page.

Global guideEmploymentCountry routing included

What this document usually proves

Experience Certificate is normally used to support a file by proving a specific fact: identity, status, authority, address, income, relationship, registration, compliance, payment, study, work or travel information. The exact proof value depends on the requesting institution.

Do not use a generic template blindly

Use the global guide to understand the file, then verify country rules and the requester’s checklist before submitting anything.

Common submission risks

Wrong authority

The document may need to come from a bank, registry, employer, tax office, school, court, notary, insurer or government body.

Wrong format

A screenshot, old PDF, uncertified copy, unsigned letter or unofficial translation may be rejected even when the information is correct.

Wrong country route

Some documents look similar across countries but use different issuing authorities, fees, timings, forms or certification rules.

Experience Certificate by country

Open the country-specific page when the document depends on a local authority, local evidence format or local filing route.

Country Detailed guide Category
Australia Experience Certificate in Australia Employment
Canada Experience Certificate in Canada Employment
India Experience Certificate in India Employment
Ireland Experience Certificate in Ireland Employment
New Zealand Experience Certificate in New Zealand Employment
Singapore Experience Certificate in Singapore Employment
United Kingdom Experience Certificate in the United Kingdom Employment
United States Experience Certificate in the United States Employment

Browse by country

If you are not sure which detailed page to use, start with the country hub. It lists all available document guides for that country.

Before you submit

  • Match the document name to the requester’s wording.
  • Check whether the document must be recent, certified, translated, notarized, apostilled or issued by a specific authority.
  • Keep names, dates, addresses, account numbers, registration numbers and file references consistent across the whole application.
  • Use the detailed country page when local rules matter.