1. hmm nung pina anak n anak namin(dito n ako sa riyadh wla me sa tabi nya that time) surname ko po ginamit....
kaso d po mkha ang b.c. ng bata kc kylngan ng affidavit of paternity galing sa akin, dko kc masikaso dito sa riyad malayo embasy,, ngyn kng ppalitan ng surname ng bata at ggmtn ng gf surname nya mkkha agad b.c. ng bata...
2. 11 mnths n cia .. tpos nxt month sasabay sa binyag at bday nya ... ang req. ng simbahan is b.c. ng bata pra mbnyagan
3.hmmm if ever na surname ng ina ang nagamit ... pag nkauwi n ako ng pinas pplitan dn namin ung surname ng bata ung akin n ggamtn
ask ko lng kng magkano mggastos po at katagal
salamat po sa nagreply
ok... it's clearer now ts... there are several steps to do to transfer the surname of your child to you...
What you’ll need to prepare:
1. Affidavit to Use the Surname of the Father (AUSF) - an affidavit to be executed by the father of the child, acknowledging paternity and allowing the child to use his surname
2. Affidavit of Admission of Paternity or the Affidavit of Acknowledgment, executed by the father, admitting and acknowledging paternity over the child
3. Certified True Copy of the Certificate of Live Birth of the child
4. Valid identification for both parents
Where to File:
The AUSF, together with the other documents, shall be filed at the Local Civil Registry Office (LCRO) where the child was born, if the birth occurred within the Philippines. If the child was born outside the Philippines, the AUSF shall be filed at the Local Civil Registry Office (LCRO) of Manila.
When to File:
The AUSF shall be registered within twenty (20) days from the date of its execution, otherwise the procedures of late registration shall be applied.
The LCRO will register the documents (the AUSF and the Affidavit of Admission of Paternity), and annotate them on the Certificate of Live Birth. Afterwards, the Birth Certificate will now bear the annotation: “ "The surname of the child is hereby changed from (original surname) to (new surname), pursuant to RA 9255."
Be prepared to pay around P1,000-1,500 in fees at the LCRO. The processing time usually takes about a week or so at the LCRO, but the processing at the NSO after it has been forwarded to them by the LCRO can take up to two months at the most. But not to worry, the LCRO will already issue the certified copies of Certificate of Live Birth with annotations, and this should be enough for the application for your child’s Philippine passport.
hope this helps ts... this had also happened to me... if you're from qc let me know so i may help you personally...