Last updated: June 2025
TL;DR: If you’re low-income, reach out the the Name Change Project (applications resume later in summer of 2025). Otherwise and also, you can reach out to private pro-bono lawyers like Stefan Dann or Liz Taylor.
If you don’t already have one, you can still get a PA Name Change Order. You can change your name and gender marker on your PA documents (driver’s license, birth certificate, etc). You can change your name on your social security card but not your gender marker. Do not update your passport unless it will expire soon, and carry a copy of your name change order with you when you do travel/use legal documents.
There isn’t just one copy of your legal name and gender that the government has, but several versions of it across multiple federal, state, and private institutions.
Federal
- Social security card
- Passport
State, i.e Pennsylvania
- Birth certificate
- Driver’s License / State ID
- Voter registration
Private institutions
- A bank (credit cards, bank accounts)
- A university (even if you went to a state school)
- Lenders (student loan providers, mortgage servicers, etc)
- Scores of other businesses, like frequent flier accounts, your utilities company…
As of January 20th, 2025, Executive Order 14168 now prevents you from changing your gender marker on all federal documents, including passports and social security card. You can still update your name on federal documents. You can still update your gender marker on PA state documents.
Recommendation: How to get this done efficiently
There’s a lot of waiting in this process, but ideally, if you start multiple processes at the same time you should be able to expedite this. As soon as you’re able to:
- Reach out to pro-bono lawyers/legal aid organizations to help you with this process.
- Ask your gender affirming care provider to write you a letter stating you’ve undergone transition
- Get your fingerprint card; and then,
- If you’re able to pay the $170.25 filing fee yourself, file your name change petition. If you cannot afford this, fill out the In Forma Pauperis form, or wait for a lawyer/legal aid organization to process your request.
Once you’ve done the above, you’re waiting for various groups — lawyers, your provider, the court — to get back to you. You can then proceed by scheduling your hearing yourself, or receiving help in this step if you need it. All of the above steps are explained later in this guide.
Where to start: Getting a legal name change order
Changing your name at all of these varying institutions and levels of governments requires a name change order. This is a notarized document signed by a judge that confirms your legal name change. This is the first and longest step in your name change process. Once you have your order, you purchase and send notarized copies of it to the places where you want to update your legal name, along with some paperwork.
While you can do all of this yourself, we recommend you find a pro-bono lawyer who will help you for free. If you’re low-income, reach out the the Name Change Project (applications resume later in summer of 2025). Otherwise and also, you can reach out to groups like Hugh Lane who also helps with fees, and private pro-bono lawyers like Stefan Dann or Liz Taylor.
The steps for this are as followed, and are expanded upon below:
- Download/request forms (Petition for Name Change, optional IFP form)
- Obtain a fingerprint card
- File completed petition and submit fingerprint card
- Schedule the petition to be heard by the court / Advertise your Name Change Petition Hearing
- Obtain your Judgment Search
- Attend name change hearing
- Obtain Certified Copies of official documents
Download/request forms
Typically you request these forms from the City-County building. You can call them at 412-350-5729, email them at civilnamechanges@alleghenycounty.us, or visit them in person at 414 Grant Street (Department of Court Records, Civil/Family Division). You can also download them from us, which might save you some hassle. These forms were last copied June 2025:
- Petition for Name Change: Contains instructions and forms for filing your petition.
- Petition for Leave to Proceed In Forma Pauperis: Optional. Request to have the court waive filing fees. Must provide your income.
We recommend you use our instructions below, in addition to referring to the Petition for Name Change document — assume information we provide is more current/correct.
The Petition for Name Change form has all of the instructions you need. It costs $170.25 to file, but if you are unable to pay, download and fill out the In Forma Pauperis form to waive fees.
Obtain a fingerprint card
If you’re 13 or older, you must provide fingerprints for a background check to be conducted by the PA State Police, and you must have a physical copy of your fingerprints in ink. This means physically going someplace, paying for the service, and leaving with a card with your fingerprint stamped into it.
Options (we called all of these locations in June 2025):
- Pennsylvania State Police Barracks
- Cost: Free
- Contact: (412) 299-1607
- Location: 449 McCormick Road, Moon, PA 15108 (by the PIT airport)
- Hours: Monday through Friday, 9am to 2pm (but call ahead)
- UPS Store in Oakland
- Cost: $50
- Contact: (412) 621-6261
- Location: 3945 Forbes Ave, Pittsburgh, PA 15213
- Hours: Monday through Friday, 9am to 5:30pm
- John Godelwski (premierfingerprinting.com)
- Cost: $45-50 in Pittsburgh
- Contact: (412) 337-6004
- Location: Mobile service.
- Notes: This is a cop. You have to call to schedule to meet with him, and work on his schedule. Prices vary if he can drive to Pittsburgh to meet you or not.
- Proof Positive
- Cost: $40 for two cards
- Contact: (724) 413-4553
- Location: Mobile service.
- Notes: Call to schedule a meeting + location.
- Paul McComb (Pittsburgh Fingerprinting Services)
- Cost: $40 for two cards
- Contact: (412) 965-4030
- Location: Mobile service.
- Notes: This is a (former?) cop. Prefers texts for communication.
Unverified Options: (i.e listed on the Pittsburgh documentation, but they didn’t call us back yet)
- IdentoGo Monreoeville
- Cost: ???
- Contact: 412-413-4553 / https://www.identogo.com/locations/pennsylvania
Have you had a positive or negative experience at any of these services? Want a buddy to come with you to do your fingerprints? Email theginkgocollective@proton.me and let us know!
File completed petition and submit fingerprint card
If you’re an adult, use Form 1 in the above Petition For Name Change document. Minors use Form 2. Go to the Department of Court Records Civil and Family Division in the City-County Building (414 Grant Street, downtown Pittsburgh). If you walk in from Grant Street, it’s all the way back, through metal detectors, at the end of the building.
Bring
- Your fingerprint card (if 13 or older)
- A completed Petition (Form 1 for adults, Form 2 for minors) and one copy
- Three stamped envelopes. You can find the sizes/addresses in the Petition form.
There is a $170.25 filing fee, payable to the Department of Court Records. You can pay in cash or in a money order. If you cannot pay the fill, fill out the In Forma Pauperis form to waive fees (you will provide information about your income and assets).
The clerk will give you a General Docket number. Hold onto this (take a photo of it) since you will track your case with it. Allegheny County has a case tracker you can use online with your docket number. The fingerprints will go to the State Police, and they’ll conduct a background check. Once that’s been done, you or your attorney will receive a letter with information on how to schedule your hearing date/proceed.
Have a criminal record? We spoke with the clerk who verifies background checks. Informally, he told us that he hasn’t seen anyone get turned away, and that he would only expect petitioners who have committed violent crimes or who are in prison to be denied.
In 2021, two transgender women with prior felonies were given their name changes by Christina Ward, the current judge until 2034.
Schedule the petition to be heard by the court
Until relatively recently, it was required that you legally advertised the date and time of your name change hearing in Pittsburgh Legal Journal ($150 fee), and one other newspaper — like the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette ($165 fee), the Pittsburgh City Paper ($105 fee). You can now likely get this waived by scheduling with Judge Christina ward.
Judge Christina Ward has waived the requirement to publish name change orders, and, with an IFP form filled out, has waived the fee to get five notarized copies of your certified order.
Obtain your Judgment Search
Make a list of all counties you have lived in for the past five years, and get judgment searches for all of them. For Allegheny County, this costs $25. You can do this in person by going to the same Civil and Family Division office in the Department of Court Records. Go to the second floor and speak with the clerk there. You’ll get a certified copy. Alongside judgment searches for the other counties you’ve lived in, send this to civilnamechanges@alleghenycourts.us no sooner than 10 days of your scheduled hearing.
Attend name change hearing
Having gone to these hearings before, we can say they’re actually pretty fun. They’re almost exclusively the first of the month. There’s snacks provided, everyone claps (it’s true!), people start happy crying.
Obtain Certified Copies of official documents
After attending your hearing, go downstairs to the same Civil and Family Division office to obtain certified copies of your orders. You’ll need these, which are stamped and signed, to change legal documents like your driver’s license and social security card. 3-5 is a good number (sometimes offices will return your certified copy to you after processing). The fee for each copy is $20.
Use your legal name change order to update your other documents
You should aim to update all of your documents at around the same time.
PA Driver’s License / PennDot ID
Why you need it changed: This is effectively your primary identification document, used for on-boarding you with new jobs, changing your birth certificate, and changing your social security card.
Requires: notarized name change order, visit to the DMV (🤮)
Cost: Getting a new ID card is a $40.50 fee
How to update:
- Bring your notarized name change order and a completed form to the DMV. Additionally, fill out and bring Form DL-32 to update your gender marker — M)ale, (F)emale, (X)nonbinary
- Non-Commercial Driver’s License: use Form DL-80 if it doesn’t expire in next six months, DL-143 otherwise
- Non-commercial learner’s permit: use Form DL-31
- More info on name change | More info on gender marker change
PA Voter Registration
Why you might want it changed: If you want to vote with your new name
Requires: Just a photo ID. Can be your Driver’s License / State ID, a student ID, an employment ID. Does not require a name change order.
Cost: Free
How to update: You can update your registration online, or download and mail a paper form.
Birth Certificate
Why you might want it changed: Your birth certificate is possibly handy in three places:
- Establishes employment authorization in an I-9. You don’t need your birth certificate though if you have a passport, or a social security number.
- Proves citizenship to get a state driver’s license. You cannot use a social security number for this. You can use a passport. You can still use a birth certificate with your deadname, and provide your name change order to get a state driver’s license with your updated name.
- Proves citizenship to get a passport. If you do not have a U.S passport, you need a birth certificate to get one.
If you have a Puerto Rico birth certificate dated before July 1, 2010, it has been invalidated, and you would need to update it. If this applies to you, the information in this guide may be incomplete. More info.
Requires:
- To change your name: legal name change order
- If you have a PA birth certificate, to change your gender marker you need a letter from your gender affirming care provider.
Cost: For a PA birth certificate, it’s $20
How to update in PA: Fill out a Request to Modify Birth Certificate Form, and mail this, a check/money order for $20, your notarized name change order, and a letter from your care provider asserting that you’ve undergone gender transition to the following address:
Pa. Department of Health
Bureau of Health Statistics and Registries
ATTN: Birth Registry
555 Walnut St., 6th Floor
Harrisburg, PA 17101-1934
How to update in another state: Every state is different. Find yours on the CDC’s Where to Write for Vital Records, and see what your requirements are.
Personal experience: Having already had a passport, a driver’s license, and not being born in PR, I have never needed to use my birth certificate for anything. I was able to update all of my other identifications without updating my birth certificate.
Social Security
Why you need it changed: If you want to use your updated name for taxes/onboarding with new employers (ie, filling out a W-4 form), you need an updated social security card. Your social security card can also be used for employment authorization (I-9 form).
Requires: notarized name change order, Driver’s License / State ID with updated name
Cost: Free
How to update: You can start to update your social security card online. Within 45 days of completing the online form, you must go in person to the a Social Security Office with your driver’s license / state ID, and your notarized name change order. Hours are 9am to 4pm Monday to Friday.
- Downtown Location: 700 Grant St, Pittsburgh, PA 15219
- East Liberty Location (by Home Depot): 6117 Station St, Pittsburgh, PA 15206
As of January 2025 you cannot change your sex with social security. When applying for Medicare, Medicaid, or Obamacare health insurance through the marketplace, use the sex that matches Social Security. Private health plans not purchased through the marketplace generally do not match their information with Social Security.
More information: https://transequality.org/documents/know-your-rights-social-security
Personal experience: Filling out an I-9 or W-4, but don’t have your updated social security card? You can request a receipt of your name change/updated card at an in person office, which you can get day-of before they mail you the new card. My employer accepted that as proof for employment.
Passport
Currently, based on the informal advice of Pittsburgh lawyers we’ve reached out to, we do not recommend you update your passport unless it is expiring soon. Carry a copy of your name change order with you while traveling. More information.
You can still change your name on your passport, but know that it must match the name on your travel tickets. We’re reaching out to lawyers to see if doing this and using your old gender marker is advisable.
Various Private Businesses/Groups (Banks, Universities, etc)
Airlines: To travel internationally, you must travel with an unexpired passport with a name that matches the name on your travel tickets. Changing frequent flier accounts typically requires a legal name change order.
Banks
- For PNC and Chase we can confirm you may just show up to any branch location in person with a notarized name change order. Other banks are likely the same.
Universities
- CMU: Fill out this form and upload your name change order.
- Pitt: Follow these instructions
Other Guides and Thanks
- Hazel’s How to Legally Change Your Name in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
- Advocates for Trans Equality (TLDEF) (the Physician Letter template and legal information comes from here!)
- All the lawyers who have helped facilitate name changes!