March 26, 2026

How to Request Certified Translation Revisions: Know Your Rights as a Customer

You Paid for an Accurate Translation — You Have the Right to Get One

Receiving a certified translation that contains errors can be alarming, especially when that document is tied to an immigration application, a legal proceeding, or an official government submission. You have a deadline. You have expectations. And you have rights as a paying customer that most translation companies never fully explain.

Whether you've noticed a misspelled name, a missing date, or an entire section that seems to have been translated incorrectly, understanding how to formally request a revision — and what you're entitled to — is essential knowledge for anyone navigating the certified translation process. This guide walks you through everything: what revision rights typically look like, when you're entitled to a free correction versus a new order, how to escalate a dispute, and what protections USCIS-approved providers should offer you.

If you're unsure whether your translation is even accurate in the first place, it helps to start by reviewing how to assess translation quality and the key factors to consider before filing a revision request. But if you already know something is wrong, read on.

What Counts as a Revision in Certified Translation?

A revision in certified translation refers to any correction or update made to an already-delivered translation document. These corrections can range from minor typographical errors and formatting issues to substantive linguistic mistakes that change the meaning of the original content. Knowing the difference matters — because the type of error you've identified will affect how your translation provider responds.

Types of Errors That Qualify for Revision

  • Typographical errors: Misspelled names, incorrect dates, transposed numbers, or punctuation mistakes that do not affect meaning but could cause rejection by a government agency.
  • Omissions: Sections, fields, stamps, seals, or handwritten notes from the original document that were not included in the translated version. USCIS requires that every word of a document be translated — including stamps and annotations.
  • Linguistic inaccuracies: Words or phrases that have been incorrectly translated, altering the factual meaning of the original document.
  • Formatting errors: The translated document should mirror the layout of the original. Missing fields, incorrect section headers, or structural mismatches can trigger rejections from agencies like USCIS or federal courts.
  • Certification statement errors: The translator's signed certification must include their name, a statement of competence, signature, contact information, and the date. Any missing element can invalidate the certification and cause a rejection.

Understanding certified translation requirements and what agencies expect can help you identify whether the error in your document is one the provider is legally and professionally obligated to correct.

Your Rights as a Certified Translation Customer

Most reputable certified translation services — particularly those that are ATA-certified and USCIS-approved — are obligated to correct errors that are the result of translator mistakes at no additional charge. Here is what you should be able to expect from any professional provider.

1. The Right to Free Corrections for Translator Errors

If the error in your translation was caused by the translator — meaning it was a mistake in interpretation, a typo, an omission, or a formatting problem that existed in the delivered document — you are entitled to a free revision. This is a basic professional standard and is explicitly outlined in the service terms of most reputable translation companies.

According to the American Translators Association's quality definition framework, a high-quality translation must demonstrate accuracy and fluency appropriate for the audience and purpose, and comply with all negotiated specifications. When a delivered translation fails to meet this standard due to a provider's error, correction is a professional and ethical obligation — not a courtesy.

2. The Right to a Timely Revision

You should not be left waiting indefinitely for a corrected document, especially if you are working against an immigration deadline, a court date, or a visa application window. A responsible provider will give you a clear timeline for when the revised translation will be delivered. If your original order was fulfilled on a rush or express basis, your revision should receive comparable priority.

3. The Right to Escalate Your Complaint

If the provider disputes that an error was made, or if they are unwilling to correct the translation, you have the right to escalate the matter. This can include requesting a supervisor or quality assurance review, filing a complaint with the Better Business Bureau, or — in cases of significant harm — pursuing a chargeback through your credit card company or filing a small claims dispute.

4. The Right to a Refund in Cases of Gross Negligence

If a translation is so defective that it cannot be corrected, or if the provider fails to make corrections in a reasonable timeframe, you may be entitled to a refund. Providers that offer a USCIS acceptance guarantee — meaning they promise to correct or re-translate any document rejected by USCIS — should honor that guarantee in full. Failure to do so is grounds for a formal dispute.

Knowing your rights begins with knowing what kind of service you hired. Before escalating any dispute, it is worth understanding what certified translation is and why it matters for official procedures, so you can articulate exactly what standard was not met.

How to Request a Revision: A Step-by-Step Process

If you've identified an error in your certified translation, follow these steps to request a correction professionally and effectively.

Step 1: Document the Error Precisely

Before contacting your translation provider, create a written record of the exact error. Note the page number, the field or line where the error appears, the incorrect text in the translation, and the correct text as it appears in the original document. If you have a third-party expert or a bilingual individual who can confirm the error, have them provide a written statement as well.

This documentation protects you throughout the dispute process and makes it far easier for the provider to locate and correct the issue quickly. Vague complaints like "the translation seems wrong" are much harder to act on than specific, evidence-backed corrections.

Step 2: Review Your Service Agreement

Check the terms of service or service agreement you agreed to at the time of your order. Look specifically for language around revision policies, turnaround times for corrections, refund eligibility, and any satisfaction or acceptance guarantees. Reputable providers will have these policies clearly stated. If the company offers a USCIS acceptance guarantee or 100% satisfaction guarantee, that language is your most powerful tool in a dispute.

Step 3: Submit a Formal Written Revision Request

Contact the translation provider in writing — by email is best, as it creates a time-stamped paper trail. Your revision request should include:

  • Your original order number or reference ID
  • The date of delivery
  • A clear, specific description of each error you have identified
  • A copy or photograph of the relevant section of the original document for comparison
  • Your required timeline for the corrected version, especially if you have a submission deadline
  • A reference to any guarantee the provider offered at the time of purchase

Keep all correspondence in writing. Do not rely on phone calls alone — always follow up verbal conversations with a written summary of what was discussed and agreed.

Step 4: Follow Up and Confirm Receipt

Give the provider a reasonable window to acknowledge your request — typically 24 to 48 hours for a business day response. If you do not hear back, follow up with a second email referencing your original request. If you have a hard deadline approaching, communicate this clearly and urgently.

Step 5: Review the Revised Translation Carefully

When the corrected translation arrives, do not assume all errors have been fixed. Compare it carefully against your original document and your list of identified errors. Verify that:

  • Every error you identified has been corrected
  • No new errors have been introduced in the revision process
  • The certification statement is still complete and accurate, including the date of the revision
  • The formatting and layout still match the original document

If the revised document still contains errors, return to Step 3 and repeat the process. Keep records of every version you receive.

What to Do If Your Translation Was Rejected by USCIS

A USCIS rejection is one of the most stressful situations a translation customer can face. Understanding what typically triggers a rejection — and what your provider is obligated to do about it — is critical to getting back on track quickly.

According to USCIS translation requirement guidelines, a Request for Evidence is commonly issued when a translation is incomplete, inaccurate, or lacks a proper certification statement. USCIS requires that every word of a document be translated — including stamps, seals, and handwritten annotations — and that the translation be accompanied by a signed certification from the translator attesting to their competence and the accuracy of the work.

If your translation was rejected, here is the process to follow:

  • Read the rejection notice carefully: USCIS Requests for Evidence typically specify exactly what was deficient. Use this language verbatim when communicating with your translation provider about the required corrections.
  • Contact your provider immediately: Provide a copy of the rejection notice and request a corrected translation that addresses each cited deficiency. Reference any USCIS acceptance guarantee the provider offered.
  • Note your response deadline: USCIS Requests for Evidence come with a response window — often 87 days, but sometimes shorter. Make sure your provider understands this deadline and commits to delivering the corrected translation in time.
  • Review before resubmitting: Before sending the corrected translation back to USCIS, verify once more that all cited issues have been addressed and that the certification statement is complete and properly signed.

Providers that are genuinely USCIS-approved and hold a 100% acceptance guarantee are professionally and contractually obligated to make these corrections at no additional charge. If a provider attempts to charge you for re-translation after a USCIS rejection caused by their errors, that is a clear violation of their guarantee and grounds for a formal complaint.

When and How to Escalate a Translation Dispute

Most revision requests are resolved quickly and professionally. But when a provider refuses to acknowledge errors, delays corrections unreasonably, or fails to honor stated guarantees, escalation becomes necessary.

Filing a BBB Complaint

If your translation provider is BBB-accredited, you have recourse through the Better Business Bureau's complaint resolution process. BBB-accredited businesses are required to respond to and attempt to resolve customer complaints in good faith. Filing a BBB complaint creates a public record, incentivizes the business to resolve your dispute, and can affect the company's accreditation status if the complaint is substantiated.

Visit the Better Business Bureau's website to file a complaint online. Include all documentation: your original order, the delivered translation, a list of identified errors, all correspondence with the provider, and any rejected submissions from USCIS or other agencies.

Initiating a Credit Card Chargeback

If the provider has refused to honor a stated guarantee or has delivered a service so deficient that it is effectively unusable, you may be entitled to initiate a chargeback with your credit card company. Chargebacks are typically governed by the card network's dispute resolution policies and may require you to demonstrate that you made a good-faith effort to resolve the issue directly with the merchant before escalating to your bank.

Consulting the ATA's Professional Standards

The American Translators Association's client assistance resources offer guidance on what constitutes professional standards in certified translation, what clients are entitled to expect, and how to evaluate whether a translation has met basic quality thresholds. This information can be used to substantiate your complaint if the provider disputes that an error was made.

How to Choose a Provider Who Respects Your Rights from the Start

The best way to protect your revision rights is to choose a provider whose policies make those rights explicit before you place your order. Here is what to look for:

  • A written USCIS acceptance guarantee: This means the provider commits to correcting any translation that USCIS rejects at no additional cost to you.
  • ATA certification: ATA-certified providers have met rigorous professional standards and are bound by a formal code of ethics that includes accuracy and competency requirements.
  • BBB accreditation: BBB-accredited businesses are held to accountability standards and have a documented complaints process, giving you formal recourse if something goes wrong.
  • Clear, written revision policy: Look for explicit language on what errors are covered, what the turnaround is for corrections, and whether revisions are free.
  • A rigorous QA process: Providers who perform multi-stage quality reviews before delivery are far less likely to produce translations with errors in the first place.

Understanding how to choose the right certified translation company is one of the most effective ways to protect yourself from ever needing to file a dispute. And if you've already placed an order and want to verify the provider's credentials, reviewing why ATA-certified translation services matter for legal documents can help you assess whether your provider meets the professional standard you deserve.

What Quality Standards Should Your Translation Meet?

Understanding what a high-quality certified translation looks like makes it easier to identify when something has gone wrong. Professional translation quality is governed by several recognized standards frameworks.

The ASTM F2575 standard, widely referenced in professional translation, establishes that quality begins with a clear, mutually agreed project description and requires that both the client and the provider define the purpose of the translation, the required quality level, and the acceptance criteria before work begins. According to translation quality assurance best practices, modern quality assurance combines human linguistic expertise with automated accuracy checks and bilingual comparisons to deliver measurable improvements in output quality.

The ISO 11669:2024 standard further establishes that both clients and language service providers share responsibility for defining project parameters — which means if you specified a particular quality level or use case such as immigration, legal proceedings, or academic enrollment, the provider is contractually obligated to meet those specifications. If they did not, you have legitimate grounds for a revision request regardless of what their standard revision policy states.

The ATA defines a quality translation as one that demonstrates accuracy and fluency required for the audience and purpose and complies with all other specifications negotiated between the requester and provider. This definition is deliberately client-centric: your stated purpose and specifications are the benchmark. A translation that fails to meet that benchmark — regardless of how technically proficient the language work is — falls short of the professional standard.

How ASAP Translate Handles Revision Requests

At ASAP Translate, we believe that getting your translation right the first time is the goal — but we also know that our customers need to trust that we stand behind our work unconditionally. Our approach to revisions reflects the commitment we make to every customer who places an order with us.

Every certified translation we deliver is backed by our 100% USCIS Acceptance Guarantee. If a translation we produce is rejected by USCIS, we will correct it at no additional charge — period. We are ATA-certified, BBB-accredited, and have processed more than 100,000 documents for over 10,000 customers across 60+ languages. That track record is built on accuracy, but also on accountability.

Before a translation is ever delivered, it passes through a rigorous multi-stage quality assurance process. Our team of 36 professional translators follows strict internal review protocols to catch errors before they reach you. But if something slips through and you identify an error after delivery, here is exactly what happens:

  • You contact us at support@asaptranslate.com or call +1 (888) 440-3902 and describe the error with your order number.
  • Our QA team reviews your translation against the original document within one business day.
  • If the error was ours, we issue a corrected translation at no additional charge, with the same priority level as your original order.
  • The revised translation includes an updated certification statement reflecting the date of revision, fully compliant with USCIS and legal submission requirements.

We don't make revision requests adversarial. We make them easy — because your documents matter and your time matters, and there is no version of this where an error on our end becomes your problem to absorb.

Preventing Translation Errors Before They Happen

While knowing your revision rights is essential, the best outcome is always a translation that requires no revision at all. Here are several proactive steps you can take to reduce the likelihood of errors in your certified translation.

Provide Clear, High-Quality Source Documents

Blurry scans, low-resolution photographs, or partially obscured documents make accurate translation significantly harder. Whenever possible, provide the highest quality scan or digital image available. If a document has handwritten sections, stamps, or seals, make sure they are clearly legible in the version you submit.

Specify the Purpose of Your Translation

Tell your provider exactly what the translation will be used for. USCIS immigration submissions have different formatting and certification requirements than court filings, academic enrollment applications, or employment verification. A provider who knows your intended use can tailor the translation accordingly and flag any potential compliance issues before delivery.

Work With a Provider That Has a Proven Process

If this is your first time ordering a certified translation, reading through a step-by-step beginner's walkthrough will help you understand what to expect at every stage of the process — and what to check for when you receive your completed translation.

Verify Your Provider's Credentials in Advance

Not all providers who advertise certified translation services are equally qualified or equally accountable. Before you place an order, confirm that the provider is ATA-certified, BBB-accredited, and has a documented USCIS acceptance record. These credentials are the clearest indicators that the provider operates at a professional standard and takes responsibility for their work.

Final Thoughts: Assert Your Rights, Protect Your Application

Errors in certified translation documents are more than inconveniences — they can trigger immigration delays, legal rejections, and significant personal stress. But they don't have to derail your plans. Knowing your revision rights, documenting errors carefully, and working with providers who stand behind their work with written guarantees puts you in control of the process even when things don't go as expected.

The most important action you can take is to choose a certified translation provider whose accountability is built into their service — not something you have to fight for after the fact. Look for ATA certification, USCIS acceptance guarantees, BBB accreditation, and a transparent revision policy before you place your first order.

If you already have a translation in hand and something looks wrong, don't wait. Document the error, reference your service agreement, and reach out in writing today. You paid for accuracy. You have every right to receive it.

Ready to order a certified translation you can trust? ASAP Translate delivers accurate, USCIS-accepted translations starting at $24.90 per page, with turnaround options as fast as 6 hours. Every order is backed by our 100% acceptance guarantee. Contact us at support@asaptranslate.com or call +1 (888) 440-3902 to get started.

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