Moradi Neufer Family Law is an award-winning California family law firm with an office in Oakland, CA, providing name change legal services to Alameda County residents. The firm assists individuals and families with court-ordered name changes for marriage, divorce, gender identity, and personal reasons, filing petitions at the Alameda County Superior Court. Moradi Neufer guides clients through every step of California’s name change process, from initial petition preparation to post-decree document updates, ensuring accurate and efficient court filings.
Changing your name is one of the more personal legal decisions you can make. Maybe you recently got married and want to share the same last name as your spouse. Maybe your divorce is final and you’re ready to reclaim your identity. Or maybe you’ve been living as a different person for years, and you’re finally ready for your legal name to match who you truly are.
Whatever your reason, we understand and we’re here to make the process as smooth and stress-free as possible.
If you’re looking for a name change attorney in Oakland who genuinely understands your situation and handles the details so you don’t have to, you’ve found the right team.

Oakland is one of the most vibrant, diverse cities in California and its residents deserve legal representation that reflects that energy and respect. We’ve worked with clients from Rockridge to Fruitvale, from Temescal to the Dimond District, and from the hills of Montclair to the flats of West Oakland.
Here’s why Oakland families trust us with their name change matters:
We also understand that Oakland’s communities have unique circumstances. Whether you’re a transgender resident in Temescal seeking a gender-affirming name change, a recently divorced parent in the Dimond District wanting to restore your birth name, or a Fruitvale family seeking to update your child’s name after a custody change we’ve seen it before, and we know how to handle it right.
California law provides a clear process for legally changing your name. While it’s technically possible to handle a name change yourself, the process involves specific court filings, publication deadlines, and procedural requirements that can trip up even detail-oriented people. Here’s what the process looks like when we guide you through it.
Most adults and minor children can petition for a name change in California. To be eligible, you generally must:
There are no residency duration requirements if you live in Oakland, you can file in Alameda County.
The name change petition is filed at the Alameda County Superior Court, René C. Davidson Courthouse, located at 1225 Fallon Street in Oakland. The filing package typically includes:
Once filed, the court sets a hearing date typically 6 to 10 weeks out. The legal notice must be published once a week for four consecutive weeks in a newspaper of general circulation in Alameda County, such as the Oakland Tribune or the Daily Review.
In most uncontested name change cases, the court hearing is brief and straightforward. A judge reviews your petition, confirms there are no objections, and signs the Decree Changing Name. In many cases, you won’t even need to say much your attorney speaks on your behalf and handles the procedural formalities.
Once the decree is signed, you’ll receive certified copies, which you can then use to update your Social Security card, California driver’s license, passport, bank accounts, and other documents.
For individuals seeking a gender-affirming name change, California AB 218 (effective January 1, 2019) provides a simplified procedure that eliminates the publication requirement and allows petitions to be sealed protecting your privacy throughout the process.
Oakland is one of the most vibrant, diverse cities in California and its residents deserve legal representation that reflects that energy and respect. We’ve worked with clients from Rockridge to Fruitvale, from Temescal to the Dimond District, and from the hills of Montclair to the flats of West Oakland.
Here’s why Oakland families trust us with their name change matters:
We also understand that Oakland’s communities have unique circumstances. Whether you’re a transgender resident in Temescal seeking a gender-affirming name change, a recently divorced parent in the Dimond District wanting to restore your birth name, or a Fruitvale family seeking to update your child’s name after a custody change we’ve seen it before, and we know how to handle it right.
California law provides a clear process for legally changing your name. While it’s technically possible to handle a name change yourself, the process involves specific court filings, publication deadlines, and procedural requirements that can trip up even detail-oriented people. Here’s what the process looks like when we guide you through it.
Most adults and minor children can petition for a name change in California. To be eligible, you generally must:
There are no residency duration requirements if you live in Oakland, you can file in Alameda County.
The name change petition is filed at the Alameda County Superior Court, René C. Davidson Courthouse, located at 1225 Fallon Street in Oakland. The filing package typically includes:
Once filed, the court sets a hearing date typically 6 to 10 weeks out. The legal notice must be published once a week for four consecutive weeks in a newspaper of general circulation in Alameda County, such as the Oakland Tribune or the Daily Review.
In most uncontested name change cases, the court hearing is brief and straightforward. A judge reviews your petition, confirms there are no objections, and signs the Decree Changing Name. In many cases, you won’t even need to say much your attorney speaks on your behalf and handles the procedural formalities.
Once the decree is signed, you’ll receive certified copies, which you can then use to update your Social Security card, California driver’s license, passport, bank accounts, and other documents.
For individuals seeking a gender-affirming name change, California AB 218 (effective January 1, 2019) provides a simplified procedure that eliminates the publication requirement and allows petitions to be sealed protecting your privacy throughout the process.
There’s no single “right” reason to change your name. Here are the most common circumstances we see among our Oakland clients.
When you get married, you may want to take your spouse’s last name, hyphenate both names, or even create an entirely new family name together. While a marriage certificate gives you the right to update your name on most government documents, you’ll still need to go through an official process and we can make sure everything is done correctly from the start.
Many of our clients come to us after a divorce is finalized, wanting to restore their birth name or a previous surname. California allows you to request a name change as part of your divorce proceeding or separately after the fact. We help divorce clients in Alameda County handle both scenarios, whether they come to us during their divorce or years later.
Oakland is proudly one of California’s most LGBTQ+-affirming communities, and our firm has deep experience helping transgender and nonbinary individuals legally change their names and update their gender markers. We understand the importance of this process and we treat every client with dignity, respect, and confidentiality. California’s simplified procedure for gender-affirming name changes (no publication required, record can be sealed) makes this process more accessible than ever.
Some Oakland residents want to take a stepparent’s last name, reconnect with a family name they’ve always felt closer to, or align their legal name with their cultural heritage. These changes matter deeply, and we help families complete them properly.
Changing a child’s name is a separate legal process from changing an adult’s name. Both parents generally must consent, or the petitioning parent must provide notice to the other parent and allow an opportunity to contest. The court evaluates whether the name change serves the child’s best interests.
We’ve helped Oakland parents navigate contested and uncontested minor name change petitions, including situations where one parent is absent, incarcerated, or has had their parental rights terminated. This is a nuanced area of law, and having experienced representation makes a real difference.
You don’t need to explain yourself to anyone and you certainly don’t need a “special” reason to change your name. Many Oakland residents simply want a fresh start, or their given name never felt like theirs to begin with. California law respects your autonomy, and so do we.
Is it legally required to hire an attorney for a name change? No. Can you do it yourself? Technically. Should you? That depends on your situation but here’s the honest truth we tell every client who asks:
The name change process in Alameda County has specific procedural steps, filing deadlines, and publication requirements. Missing any one of them can mean starting over from scratch paying another filing fee, waiting another two months for a new hearing date, and re-publishing in the newspaper. That wasted time and money often far exceeds what you would have paid an attorney in the first place.
Beyond the administrative headaches, there are situations where the legal complexity genuinely calls for professional guidance:
We handle all of this and we do it every day. Our team is efficient, experienced, and genuinely invested in getting your petition approved the first time.
Even in seemingly straightforward cases, unexpected complications arise. Here are some issues we commonly resolve for Oakland clients:
| Challenge | How We Help |
| Publication errors | We coordinate directly with Oakland-area publishers to ensure correct publication and obtain a valid proof |
| Contested minor name changes | We prepare legal arguments based on the child’s best interests and manage court appearances on your behalf |
| Criminal record complications | We analyze whether your prior record restricts name change eligibility and advise accordingly |
| Incomplete documentation | We prepare your entire filing packet to ensure nothing is missing when submitted to Alameda County Superior Court |
| Gender marker updates | We guide you through the combined name change and gender marker update process, including sealing your record |
| Prior petition denials | We review what went wrong and prepare a corrected re-petition |
| Name matching on federal documents | After court approval, we advise on the exact order for updating SSA, DMV, passport, and other agencies |
We’ve been serving Bay Area families since 2009, and our Oakland office puts us right in the community where you live. Here’s what our name change representation typically includes:
We don’t just file paperwork. We make sure the whole process goes smoothly from the first phone call to the day you walk out of court with your new name.
This might sound like a small thing, but it genuinely matters: having attorneys who know Alameda County’s courts, clerks, and local procedures can save you weeks of unnecessary delays.
We know that the Alameda County Superior Court’s Family Law Division processes name change hearings efficiently but only when petitions are filed completely and correctly. We know which Oakland-area newspapers qualify for the required legal notice publication. We know the current Alameda County filing fee schedule and what fee waivers are available for income-qualifying residents.
We also understand Oakland’s communities on a human level. From the longtime residents of the Laurel District to newly arrived families in Fruitvale, from the LGBTQ+ community in Temescal to the professionals in Uptown we’ve served Oakland residents from every walk of life, and we bring that understanding to every case.
One of the first questions clients ask us is: how long does this take? Here’s a realistic breakdown for an uncontested adult name change in Alameda County:
| Stage | Timeframe | Notes |
| Consultation & prep | 1–3 days | We gather info and prepare your filing packet |
| Court filing | Day 1 | Filed at Alameda County Superior Court |
| Court date assigned | 1–2 weeks | Typically 6–10 weeks from filing date |
| Newspaper publication | 4 weeks | Must run once/week for 4 consecutive weeks |
| Court hearing | 6–10 weeks | Usually brief and uncontested |
| Receive certified decree | 1–2 weeks post-hearing | Used to update all records |
| Document updates | 2–6 weeks | SSA, DMV, passport, banks |
| Total (typical) | 3–4 months | Less for gender-affirming changes (no publication) |
Speak With an Oakland Name Change Lawyer Today
Your name is a fundamental part of who you are. Whether you’re changing it after a marriage, reclaiming it after a divorce, affirming your gender identity, or simply making a fresh start you deserve legal support that is experienced, efficient, and genuinely on your side.
Moradi Neufer Family Law has been helping Oakland and Alameda County residents navigate life’s legal transitions since 2009. We’re not a general practice firm that handles name changes as an afterthought. Family law is all we do, and we do it well.
Our Oakland office at 1300 Clay Street, Suite 600, is conveniently located for clients throughout the East Bay, including Oakland, Berkeley, Emeryville, Piedmont, San Leandro, Alameda, Castro Valley, and beyond.
Call us at 415-872-1080 or fill out our online contact form, or stop by our Oakland office. We’ll listen, explain your options clearly, and outline exactly what we can do for you. No pressure, no jargon just straightforward answers from experienced Oakland family law attorneys who genuinely care about getting this right for you.
For an uncontested adult name change, the typical timeline is 3 to 4 months from filing to final decree. This includes the 4-week publication requirement and the court hearing. If you qualify for a gender-affirming simplified procedure, the process can move significantly faster since publication is not required.
In most uncontested cases, a brief court appearance is required at the Alameda County Superior Court. Your attorney can appear with you and handle the procedural aspects. In some cases, the court may approve the petition without a personal appearance if the paperwork is in perfect order. We will advise you based on your specific petition.
Generally, both parents must consent to a minor’s name change. If one parent objects, the court holds a hearing to determine whether the name change is in the child’s best interests. There are circumstances where the court may proceed without the other parent’s consent for example, if parental rights have been terminated or the parent cannot be located after diligent effort.
You’ll need to complete the NC-100 Petition for Change of Name, the NC-120 Order to Show Cause, and eventually the NC-130 Decree. After approval, you’ll update your Social Security card (bring the decree to an SSA office), California DMV, U.S. passport, and financial accounts. We prepare all court documents for you.
Yes. You can request a name change as part of your divorce judgment (the most seamless approach) or file a separate name change petition after your divorce is final. If your divorce decree already restores your former name, you can use it directly to update your ID documents without filing a new petition.
Yes. Under California law, transgender and nonbinary individuals can file using a simplified procedure that eliminates the newspaper publication requirement and allows the court record to be sealed. This protects your privacy throughout the process. Our attorneys have significant experience with gender-affirming legal name changes.
Name change petitions are filed at the Alameda County Superior Court, René C. Davidson Courthouse, located at 1225 Fallon Street, Oakland, CA 94612. Our team handles all filings on your behalf.
Yes, the process is available to self-represented individuals. However, errors in your petition, missed publication deadlines, or incomplete documentation can result in your petition being rejected or your hearing being postponed. Many clients find that the cost of an attorney is well worth avoiding these delays and complications.
Once the court signs your Decree Changing Name, you’ll receive certified copies. Use these to update your Social Security Administration records first, then your California driver’s license at the DMV, then your U.S. passport, employer records, financial institutions, and any other records. The order matters federal agencies typically require your updated SSA card before changing passport records.



























"*" indicates required fields

We are a full-service family law firm with experience litigating and negotiating complex divorces and domestic partnership dissolutions in California.
SAN FRANCISCO
50 California St.
Suite 1500
San Francisco, CA 94111
MAP
NEWPORT BEACH
620 Newport Center Dr.
Suite 1100
Newport Beach, CA 92660
MAP
SAN MATEO
3 E 3rd Ave
Suite 200
San Mateo, CA 94401
MAP
IRVINE
19200 Von Karman Ave
Suite 400
Irvine, CA 92612
MAP
OAKLAND
1300 Clay Street
Suite 600
Oakland, CA 94612
MAP
LOS ANGELES
2121 Avenue of the Stars
Suite 800
Los Angeles, CA 90067
MAP
Menlo Park
1300 El Camino Real
Suite 100
Menlo Park, CA 94025
MAP
Monday to Friday
(8am to 6pm)
"*" indicates required fields



