No passport required
no
It depends on where you're coming from. Travel between Canada and USA for example, requires a passport or international travel document issued by your state.
No they can't. A birth certificate is not proof of identity unless accompanied by an official ID issued by the state or federal government, such as a drivers license, state identification card, or a passport.
Yes. The state ID doesn't need a drivers license. You just need a birth certificate and other ID such as a phone bill or something with your name on it.
go to your local courthouse and file a petition for the change, then you will see the judge to see if they will allow the order for changing your name, this way you will have all of the legal documentation to take with you to social security office and the drivers license bureau. Added: The answer given above will change your formal identification on all official documents -EXCEPT- for the name on your birth certificate. That is an 'unchangeable' document and the information contained on it will always remain.
Yes. In the United States there are some 14,000 different forms of birth certificates depending on where and when you were born. These certificates are all called "birth certificates" in common usage, but are frequently titled other ways such as "Certificate of Birth," "Certificate of Live Birth," "Birth Record," "Certification of Birth," "Birth Registration Notice," etc. As long as it is certified by the State that issued it then it is legally a birth certificate. Hospitals often offer souvenir certificates that contain the baby's footprints and other information, but these hospital certificates carry no legal weight and are not sufficient to get a drivers license or passport with. Only state issued and certified certified birth certificates carry any legal weight in the United States. ------- Maybe. If the Certificate of Live Birth originated in a hospital or governmental agency charged with recording births, then it would be the same. More often, however, a Certificate of Live Birth is NOT a Birth Certificate. The data from Birth Certificates or other documents generally prepared by hospitals but also from other governmental bodies is transcribed into a computer database and COLBs are generated from that information. While COLBs are generally accepted in lieu of the BC, it is not always the same thing.
NO, passport required
After June 1, 2009, you will need a passport. Until then, your drivers license and original birth certificate or certified copy will suffice.
Take the name from your birth certificate.
Your birth certificate will not help you. You can enter the US from Mexico with an "enhanced" US drivers license, but only if you are traveling by sea or land, not by air.
Yes, you don't need your drivers license for that. A birth certificate and some other papers will do.
Birth Certificate
Birth certificate or drivers license.
birth certificate
Birth certificate and social security number.
Most states do not require (or even accept) a birth certificate for a drivers license. Most states require a social security number and proof of residency to obtain a drivers permit.
This is not a problem. This happens when changing one's name upon marriage or petitioning for a court-ordered name change. You can show your marriage certificate or the court order. If not, then your drivers license will have to show the name shown on your birth certificate.
nope just identification (drivers license) that states your date of birth. duhhh