Looking to legally change your name, or legally change the name of your minor child(ren(s)) name in California? Here is the complete overview & guide that provides procedural, cost and the tips and tricks to get you through the process from start to finish. This California name change guide also includes general timelines, estimation of costs, required court appearance information and some tips to help someone looking to change a name understand the name change process in total. Also included are local resources that can assist with the process in full, or just certain requirements. After reading, and getting familiar with this California Name Change Guide, you should be able to navigate the name change process in California Civil Courts without a hitch.
Name Change Disclaimer - This article does not cover certain variables of California name changes such as name changes when a guardian is petitioning for a minor or name changes related to gender identity petitions or confidential name changes. Those name changes in California, require different forms and the process will differ as well. The overall process, forms, costs and timelines may match to some degree; however Petitioners wishing to pursue those types of name changes in California should complete further research to integrate other aspects of procedure and regulations to successfully complete a name change.
Change Your Name in California – A Quick Reference
For those who want a quick overview of the California name change process we have a quick reference which provides top level overview to quickly identify requirements, timelines, costs and more for your name change in California. In case you don’t want to know about each and every aspect of a California Name Change Cases as provided below, you can quickly see a the top level overview right here. If you want to learn more about any of the aspects listed in the quick reference with regards to a name change in California, you will find them all in this article.
Name Change for Yourself:
Name Change for Minor(s) – Both Parents Petitioning:
Name Change for Minor – One Parent Petitioning – Other Parent is Served:
Name Change for Minor – One Parent Petitioning – Other Parent Unknown:
Name Change for Minor – One Parent Petitioning – Other Parent Contesting:
If you found the type of name change case you fall into above, then you can continue on and learn all the important details about name change cases in California. Our guide includes requirements for the name change, average costs start to finish, timelines and more information about the special requirements in those unusual name change cases.
How Long Does it take to Change a Name in California?
In most name change cases in California, and the same holds true throughout each of the 58 counties, from initial filing of the petition, until the court appearance, the process takes about 6 weeks to have a decree for change of name in your hands. Within this process there are two (2) name change requirements that have direct bearing on the name change timeline in the court.
The first requirement for the name change that has a time related requirement is the scheduling of the court date in the local civil court. Upon filing the petition, the court typically sets your court date appearance about 5-6 weeks later. These court dates for name change are set this length of time based on court calendaring availability, and also to give time for the required newspaper publication. Some courtrooms and court calendars may have a backlog or a large workload which can push your court date scheduling beyond this in some cases.
The second requirement in name change cases that dictates the general timeline is the newspaper publication. As a requirement of any name change in California, a local adjudicated newspaper (local newspaper, approved by the court to publish legal notices) must run a legal notice describing your petition and notifying the general public of the court date. The court requirement for this name change legal notice is that the advertisement must be published for 4 consecutive weeks, and then a proof of publication or affidavit from the publisher must be entered into the court system (filed). You will learn more about the required newspaper publication for name change below.
So essentially, in most name change requests in California, you will have a “Decree for Change of Name”, or Order, in your hands 45 days later.
How Much Does it Cost to Change Your Name in California?
There are several costs that will need to be either paid, or waived to obtain your court filed Decree for Change of Name in the California Civil Courts. Due to the nature of the timeline and requirements, all these costs are paid upfront so understanding the costs to change a name are important so any financial planning can be done to not hold up your process. Court fees and newspaper fees apply to all name change cases, but the process serving, additional court documents/request, document preparation services, and or attorney’s fees do not. Those costs are variables and would be paid if you elect to use those services in your name change case.
Where Are Name Changes Filed in California?
Petitions for name changes are filed with the local County Courts, in the civil division. The documents are provided to the court filing clerk where they will process, file and return filed copies to the Petitioner or filer. Because every court in California handles different matters or types of cases, a person filing a Name Change Petition needs to confirm 3 main factors to determine they are filing in the correct court. If not, it will be a wasted trip to a court and after standing in line, the clerk will direct you to the proper filing court.
The first qualifying factor to determine what court in California you are required to file your name change in is County of residence. There are 58 Counties in California and Petitioners, for the most part will file in the County that they reside in. Family law and other civil cases have other factors which could push filings into other courts, but with name changes, it is almost always within the County you live in. Here is a list of the California County Courts websites as reference.
The second factor to determine is which our your county courts handles civil cases. California County Courts handle all types of cases and have different Judges to preside over those specific types of law. Name Changes in California are handled by the civil court so initially you can look at the civil courts which will narrow your possible filing courts down well in half. Once you have just the civil courts in your county as an option for your case filing, you need to find which of those civil courts handle name changes. There may be a separation of case types even within the civil division, meaning not all civil courts handle name changes. In smaller counties in California, there may only be one mail courthouse, so finding the proper filing court for your name change is easy. On the contrary, large counties like Los Angeles, Riverside, San Diego… may have 15+ court locations.
The third factor in determining the court to file your name change documents, after finding the civil courts that process name change filings, is location. After budget cuts in California beginning 2009 to present, many County courts are no longer consolidated (allow filing in any court). This means that just because there are 3 civil courts in your County, based on your zip/postal code, you are designated a single court for your civil filings. In most cases, it would be the court closest to your residence, but sometimes to even workflow across courts, the court can shift certain zip codes to different courts.
Overall, the proper court to file your name change in California can change. To be safe and save time, contact the civil court nearest you, and simply ask the civil clerk if you can file at that court based on your zip code.
Documents Required for Changing a Name in California
Petitioning the California County Court for a Change of Name is a process which is facilitating by a series of documents that makes the official request all the way to the final order the Judge of the Court will sign completing the process. While most of these forms for the name change are mandated through California, there are sometimes specific forms that vary from County to County. Here is an overview of the required forms to change a name in California.
For help with document preparation for your name change view our Legal Document Assistants in California here. Name change petitions with the court are not usually contested, but if you expect that you may want to first consult with a civil attorney first to talk about what they can do to represent you in the courtroom.
Legal Publication for California Name Change
The California Court requires a Newspaper Publication to be ran and completed before your court date in order to have the Judge sign your name change order. The court requires that the Legal Publication be completed by an Adjudicated Newspaper, meaning a newspaper that has been approved by the court to do such notices. The newspaper will either mail you the Proof of Publication to take to your court date, while some more accommodating newspapers will file the proof/affidavit for you. Be sure to ask so you know how this important and required documents will get to the court as no orders for name change are made without it.
Possible Process Serve for Name Change Cases in California
As covered in different areas of this name change guide, a process server may be required to meet requirements of notification for the Judge in California’s civil courts to grant a name change decree (order).
For the name change of minors the court requires both natural parents be part of the court case in some manner. In cases where both parents are filing the petition for name change the court does not require the other parent be notified since they are one of the petitioners. In cases where only one parent is filing the petition for name change the court requires serve or consent of the other parent. The consent is a form that can be completed and then signed by the other parent, and filed at the court. If the other parent won’t sign the form a process server can serve the filed name change documents on the other parent and file a proof of service (form addressed above) at the court. While it is not a requirement that a process server complete this task (anyone over 18 and not a party to the case can do it), process servers are familiar with the nuances of serving such notices and can make sure it is done in accordance to all state requirements.
Court Appearance: If you show up at your date and all requirements have been completed, and no one has contested the name change, you will almost always walk out with your name change order. Getting a few certified copies from the clerk is always a good idea. Those certified orders are usually required by the Social Security Administration, Department of Motor Vehicles, and other agencies to confirm the name change. While there may be many cases being heard the day of your court date, a typical name change proceeding from when the Judge calls your name until you’re done, less than 5 minutes.
Name Change Order from a California Court – Now What?
After your court date, and a California Civil Judge has provided the Decree for Name change, you may not be done. The court simply makes the order, but does not go much further than that. It is up to the petitioner to then take the order to any place the name change should be in effect. Commonly DMV for driver license, Social Security Administration for new Social Security Card and often times and mailed copy to California Department of Vital Records to amend birth certificates. After updates have been made at these common places, those new identification documents should allow you to update name at the remaining places like banks, schools, and employer and so on.
As always, the information provided is not legal advice but rather procedural overviews of a process. Some information may vary from court to court if they have specific local procedures that go further than statewide procedures. Listings provided in the directory are not endorsed by our site, but rather compiled to provide local resources for consumers seeking professional legal services.
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