Verified only interpreters

Verified & Credentialed Interpreters

The trust tier — identity-verified by Remoto

All interpreters identity-verified by Remoto adminsHIPAA / BAA available for medical workLive + scheduled calls, in 60 seconds
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About verified only interpreting on Remoto

Every interpreter shown here has been identity-verified by Remoto's onboarding team and confirmed against the documentation they submitted (government ID, professional credentials, signed contractor agreements). Many also display verified certifications from independent registries — FCICE for federal court, CCHI / NBCMI for medical, AIIC for conference, RID for ASL — that buyers can independently check by clicking through to the issuing body.

The verified filter is the right starting point when you're contracting with an interpreter for the first time, when the work is high-stakes (legal, medical, government), or when your organization has compliance requirements that need provable interpreter qualifications.

First-time interpreter hire

Start with verified interpreters so you know who you're working with — identity-checked, credentials confirmed.

Compliance-required work

Healthcare, legal, government, and enterprise procurement often require provable interpreter qualifications.

High-stakes single sessions

When the call really matters — a deposition, a clinical trial consent, a board negotiation — start verified.

Frequently asked questions

What does 'verified by Remoto' mean?
Remoto's onboarding team reviewed the interpreter's submitted government ID, confirmed identity via selfie-with-ID, and approved them for the platform. The 'Identity verified by Remoto' badge appears on their profile once this is complete.
How do I verify a specific credential?
When an interpreter publishes a registered credential (FCICE, CCHI, NBCMI, AIIC, RID, etc.), the credential card includes a deep link to the issuing registry's public lookup. Click through to verify the certificate ID directly against the source.
Are non-verified interpreters not trustworthy?
Non-verified interpreters may still be excellent — they simply haven't completed the Remoto identity-verification step. For lower-stakes conversational work, ratings and reviews from real calls are also a strong signal.