Skip to content

Court Interpreters in Washington, DC

Compare curated court interpreters, check certifications, read reviews, and request quotes — all in one place.

5 providers
Researched credentials
Free quotes, no obligation
Updated April 2026
5 providers

Are you a certified court interpreter in Washington?

Claim your free listing or get Sponsored placement to appear above other providers.

List Your Business →
Unclaimed
CI
Washington, DC
No reviews yet
No description available. This listing has not been claimed by the business owner.
certified court interpretinglegal interpreting
•••-•••-••••
Unclaimed
CL
Washington, DC
No reviews yet
No description available. This listing has not been claimed by the business owner.
certified legal translationcourt interpretation
•••-•••-••••
Unclaimed
CL
Washington, DC
No reviews yet
No description available. This listing has not been claimed by the business owner.
document translationin-person interpretation
No phone listed Contact unavailable
Unclaimed
CI
Washington, DC
No reviews yet
No description available. This listing has not been claimed by the business owner.
court interpretingmedical interpreting
No phone listed Visit Website
Unclaimed
LL
Washington, VA
No reviews yet
No description available. This listing has not been claimed by the business owner.
•••-•••-••••

Need help choosing?

0 providers selected

How LegalTerp Works

🔍

Browse & Compare

View curated providers, check certifications, and read real client reviews.

📩

Request Quotes

Select up to 5 providers and send your project details. Free, no obligation.

⚖️

Book Your Certified Court Interpreter

Compare quotes, check availability, and book directly with the provider.

No writing skill available — proceeding directly with the content.

Finding a certified court interpreter in Washington, DC shouldn’t be this hard, but the market here is uniquely fragmented: you’ve got federal courts, DC Superior Court, immigration tribunals, and a dozen alphabet-soup agencies all pulling from the same pool of credentialed professionals. This directory cuts through that noise — every interpreter listed has been vetted for certification status, language pair depth, and actual courtroom experience in the DC metro.

How to Choose a Certified Court Interpreter in Washington

  • Match certification to venue. Federal proceedings (U.S. District Court for D.C., DOJ hearings) require FCICE-certified interpreters. DC Superior Court accepts NCSC state-certified professionals. EOIR immigration hearings have their own accreditation track. Hiring a state-certified interpreter for a federal deposition isn’t a technicality — it can affect admissibility.
  • Verify the language pair, not just the language. An interpreter listed as “Spanish” might be Mexican Spanish-dominant with limited familiarity with Central American dialect patterns common in DC’s immigrant communities. Ask specifically about experience with Salvadoran, Guatemalan, or Amharic speakers given the city’s demographics.
  • Check their consecutive vs. simultaneous split. Depositions typically use consecutive interpretation. Trials and large hearings often require simultaneous. Not every credentialed interpreter does both well — ask for their breakdown of recent assignments.
  • Confirm courthouse familiarity. DC has E. Barrett Prettyman, DC Superior, the immigration court on G Street, and satellite offices scattered across the metro. An interpreter who regularly works Prettyman knows the clerk’s procedures, the judge’s preferences, and where to park. That operational fluency matters on a three-day trial.
  • Ask for references from attorneys, not agencies. Agencies optimize for availability. Attorneys optimize for accuracy under pressure. Those are different things.

Pro Tip: DC’s legal market is small and incestuous. The interpreter who botched your colleague’s deposition last spring is probably still circulating. Ask the DC Bar’s lawyer referral network or NAJIT’s member directory for names that show up repeatedly across multiple attorneys you trust.

What to Expect

Certified court interpreter rates in Washington run $350–750 per assignment, with full-day trial appearances at the higher end and one-hour attorney-client consultations at the lower end. Most professionals require a minimum two-hour booking, and cancellations inside 24 hours typically trigger a half-day fee. Turnaround for routine depositions is 48–72 hours for scheduling; complex multi-language trials should be locked in two to three weeks out.

Reality Check: The cheapest interpreter on a platform isn’t saving you money — they’re transferring risk to you. If interpreted testimony gets challenged for accuracy and the interpreter lacked the right credential for that specific proceeding, you’re the one explaining it to your client. DC federal judges are not forgiving about this.

Local Market Overview

Washington’s legal ecosystem is denser per square mile than anywhere else in the country — federal agencies, international organizations, embassies, and a disproportionately large immigration court docket create year-round demand for interpreters across 60-plus languages. That demand means the best credentialed professionals here book out fast, particularly for Spanish, Amharic, French, and Mandarin pairs during peak trial seasons in spring and fall.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does a certified court interpreter cost in Washington?

Certified Court Interpreter services in Washington typically run $350-750 per assignment, depending on scope, complexity, and turnaround requirements. Expedited work and specialized equipment add cost.

What should I look for in a certified court interpreter?

Look for FCICE — it's the credential that separates qualified court interpreters from the rest. Also verify insurance, check reviews, and confirm they can handle your project's specific requirements.

How many court interpreters are in Washington?

There are currently 5 court interpreters listed in Washington, DC on LegalTerp.

What does "Sponsored" mean on a listing?

Sponsored providers pay for premium placement and appear at the top of search results. They have claimed profiles and typically respond faster to quote requests. All providers on LegalTerp — sponsored or not — are real businesses.