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About Deed Polls
What is a Deed Poll?
Why is it called a Deed Poll?
What is the purpose of a Deed Poll?
Who can apply for a Deed Poll?
Can I change my children's names?
Are there any restrictions on names?
Is a Deed Poll registered anywhere?
Can a birth certificate be changed?
Why do people change their name?
Answers to other FAQs
Changing your name by Deed Poll
How to apply
Services available and fees
Services for previous clients
Apply for a copy of your archived Deed Poll
Apply for a replacement Deed Poll
General name change information
Introduction
A woman's rights upon marriage
A man's rights upon marriage
A couple's rights upon a civil partnership
A woman's rights upon separation
A woman's rights upon divorce
A woman's rights upon being widowed
A child's rights upon adoption
Changing your name on your passport
Obtaining a copy of your lost Deed Poll
Who to advise after changing your name
UK Deed Poll Service
Contact us
What our clients say about us
What the media says about us
Privacy policy
Terms and conditions and your rights
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General name change information
Obtaining a replacement or copy of your
lost Deed Poll or Statutory Declaration
This article will explain how you can obtain a
replacement or copy of your lost Deed Poll (also known as a Change of Name
Deed) or Statutory Declaration (if originally issued in the United Kingdom).
1.
Obtaining a replacement or copy of your Deed Poll
If you require a replacement or copy of your
Deed Poll, please read the following three subsections to determine which
applies to you.
1.1 If we
issued your Deed Poll AND you subscribed to our Legal Copy and Archive Service™
If you ordered your Deed Poll direct from us and
you returned your Deed Poll to us for our Legal Copy and Archive Service™ (available since May
2000), we can provide you with a legal copy (certified copy) of your
original Deed Poll document from our archives. To order a legal copy
of your archived Deed Poll, please
click here.
1.2 If we issued your Deed Poll and you DID
NOT subscribe to our Legal Copy and Archive Service™
If you did not order our
Legal Copy and Archive Service™, we do not have a copy of your Deed Poll.
This is because you did not return your signed Deed Poll for us to place a
scan of it into our archives. All you can do is order a replacement
Deed Poll, for which you will receive a fee reduction as a previous client.
However, before you apply for your
replacement Deed Poll, please read section 4 below, which tells you how to
complete your online application form.
1.3 If your Deed Poll was not issued by us
If you had your Deed Poll prepared elsewhere in
the United Kingdom (at
a solicitors for example), a copy of your Deed Poll will only be available
if you had your Deed Poll entered in the Enrolment Books of the Supreme
Court of Judicature, which is located within the Royal Courts of Justice in
the Strand, London. Enrolled Deed Polls are held for about five years
at the Royal Courts of Justice and then moved to the National Archives in
Kew, Richmond, Surrey.

Please note, if you paid less than about £200 for your Deed Poll, you would
not have paid to have your Deed Poll enrolled. In which case, no copy
of your Deed Poll will exist and all you can do is order another Deed Poll
to act as a replacement. Even if your Deed Poll was enrolled, the
expense of obtaining a copy (you have to physically attend and search for
your Deed Poll at either the Royal Courts of Justice or The National
Archives) usually means it is much cheaper to order a replacement. We
issue many Deed Polls every day to people who have lost their original -
this is the accepted practice.

Before you apply for your replacement Deed Poll, please read
section 4 below, which tells you how to complete your online application
form.
2.
Obtaining a replacement or copy of your Statutory Declaration
Statutory Declarations are usually issued by
solicitors. The signed and stamped document issued to you would have
been the one and only original, so no copy will exist. Furthermore,
there is no central register of Statutory Declarations so if you have lost
your original Statutory Declaration, you have no alternative but to pay for
a new one. However, a Deed Poll is a perfectly adequate replacement
for your lost Statutory Declaration. In fact, the Deed Poll process is
far more popular and a much more well known method of changing a person's
name. The problems some people experience with the acceptability of
Statutory Declarations do not occur with Deed Polls because of their
popularity.

Before you apply for a Deed Poll to replace your Statutory Declaration, please
read
section 4 below, which tells you how to complete your online application
form.
3.
Obtaining a copy of someone else's Deed Poll
We can only issue a legal copy of a Deed Poll
from our archives to the person named thereon. However, for a child's
Deed Poll, we can issue a legal copy (if the Deed Poll is in our archives)
to anyone with parental responsibility for the child or to the child (but
only of the child is now 16 years of age or over). If you are not the
parent that applied for your child's Deed Poll, we will need to see
documentary evidence that you have parental responsibility e.g. your child's
birth certificate, marriage certificate or a court order. We suggest
you call our Helpline to determine what documentary evidence will prove you
have parental responsibility. Alternatively, click on the following
link to read section 3 of our article about changing children's names, which
will enable you to determine if you have parental responsibility for your
child. Please
click here (opens new window) to go to section 3 of the article.

If you are researching your family history and you are looking for evidence
of a family member's past name change, please click on the following link to
read the answer to question 10 on our Other Frequently Asked Questions page.
Please
click here to go to our Other FAQs page.
4
How to complete your application form
(when applying for a Deed Poll to replace
your lost Deed Poll or Statutory Declaration)
When you enter your name details on the online application
form, you should enter your former name in the current name boxes and your
current name in the new name boxes. The idea is to replicate the name
change shown on your lost Deed Poll document.

Because you are ordering
a replacement Deed Poll, which cannot be back-dated, we can modify your new
Deed Poll to include a declaration that says you have been using your
current name for all purposes since a particular date. This
modification explains to those you show your new Deed Poll to that it is not
for a recent name change. If you would like this modification made,
which we recommend, please complete section 5 of the online application form.

If you have changed your name since you changed your name by Deed Poll (the
one you require a copy of), please do not complete an application form.
Instead,
email us
with the details of all your name changes since birth
including when and how your name was changed. We will then advise you how to
apply for a Deed Poll, which will be drafted by our Complex Deed Poll Team to suit your
circumstances.

To order a your Deed Poll, please
click here.
Last updated: 5 July 2008
| Whilst every care has been taken in the
compilation of the information provided on this website, UK Deed
Poll Service will not be held liable or responsible for any loss,
damage or other inconvenience caused as a result of any inaccuracy
or error within the pages of this website.
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