Are you looking for a translation agency in Munich or Bavaria?
Our translation agency offers to all private clients and companies from Germany and abroad advantageous translation solutions for English-German languages. Due to our presence online, we may take-over your documents smoothly from Munich or from the entire Bavaria land.
Documents translated for clients from Munich
If necessary, we may translate for you different documents such as: websites, manuals, user guides, medical booklets, offers, commercial or lease contracts, certificates of criminal records, study diplomas, birth certificates, passports, notarial documents etc.
Authorised translations
Do you need documents translated for certain institutions in Bavaria? We involve for you translators certified in Germany for English language.
Are you looking for a translator in Munich / Bavaria?
We chose for you experienced translators. The specialist English-German translators of our agency have received a qualified training in specialised academies or have graduated university studies and consequently are authorised to do perfect linguistic specialised translations.
How simple we can help you:
Upload documents
Upload your text files or scans, tell us the service you want and, if necessary, a delivery date.
Place Order
After the text analysis, consultation and agreement of the key data has been completed, the order is placed.
Livrare
After completion, you will receive the translation by email and, in the case of notarization, also by post.
Information about Munich
Munich is the capital of the federal state of Bavaria (Bayern) in Germany and the third largest city in Germany after Berlin and Hamburg, with a population of 1,526,056 inhabitants. It is located on the River Isar.
The name of the city (derived from Mönch, “monk”) is connected to a settlement of monks from the Schäftlarn monastery. The exact date of the settlement’s founding is not known. The first documentary attestation dates back to 1158 under the medieval Latin name villa Munichen, during the reign of Henry the Lion (Heinrich der Löwe), Duke of Saxony. Half a century later, the locality received the status of a fortified town.