Scheduling my Ohio Notary Exam through the Secretary of State's office and trying to figure out where to focus my prep time. I've read through the Ohio Revised Code sections on notarial acts and the official handbook, but the material is pretty dry and I'm not sure which areas actually get tested heavily versus which ones are just background knowledge.
I've been working in real estate for two years so I'm familiar with the basic notarial acts — acknowledgments, jurats — but the electronic notarization and remote online notarization sections are new territory for me. Those parts of the law changed recently and the handbook covers them but my practice questions are all over the place on RON procedures specifically.
From what I've seen online the passing score is around 80% and the exam is 50 questions. I'm scoring 76-78% on practice tests right now, which means I need to pick up another 2-4% somewhere. Anyone know if there are particular topic areas where the state likes to test edge cases?
Also, can you use the handbook during the exam or is it closed-book? I've seen conflicting info on this and I want to make sure I'm preparing the right way.
It's closed-book — no materials allowed. I took mine last fall and the RON section had more questions than I expected. There were at least 8-10 questions specifically about electronic journal requirements and identity proofing procedures. Make sure you know those steps cold.
Two weeks of casual review was enough for me — maybe 15 hours total. The handbook is pretty straightforward once you've read it a couple times. I'd just drill practice questions and look up every wrong answer in the ORC. That's what got my score from 74% to 86%.
The signer identification requirements tripped me up. There's a specific list of acceptable ID types under Ohio law and the exam will test you on what's acceptable versus what isn't. Seemed like a small detail but it showed up multiple times in different question forms.
I scored 84% on my first attempt. Coming from real estate helped a lot on the acknowledgment questions but the prohibited acts section was harder than I expected. Know exactly what a notary cannot do — there were several scenario questions where you had to spot the violation.