Finally passed my Oregon notary exam after two failed attempts — here's what worked

by Amanda H. 4 views3 replies
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Amanda H.OP
May 27, 2026

Okay so I have to share this because I was seriously ready to give up. Failed the Oregon notary exam twice — first time I only got a 74% (you need 80% to pass) and the second time a 76%. I'd been just kind of skimming the Oregon Notary Public Guide and figured that'd be enough. Spoiler: it was not enough.

What finally worked for me was actually drilling with an OR NOTARY practice test consistently for about two weeks. Like 20-30 questions every morning before work. The stuff that kept tripping me up was acknowledgment vs. jurat wording, journal requirements for electronic notarizations, and the rules around notarizing documents for family members. Turns out those edge cases show up constantly on the real exam.

I also found a really solid OR NOTARY study guide that broke down the fee schedule and prohibited acts section in plain English — that section alone probably accounts for 15-20% of the questions. Took me about 12 total hours of focused prep and I passed with an 88%. If you're stuck, just keep going. The exam is genuinely passable once you know where to focus.

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Sarah M.
May 28, 2026
This is so encouraging, thank you for posting. I'm scheduled for my first attempt next Thursday and the journal requirements section has been killing me. I keep mixing up when a principal has to sign vs. when a credible witness is acceptable. Did your study guide cover that? Also — did they test much on the notarial certificate wording itself or was it more situational questions?
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Brian Y.
May 28, 2026
Those exam tips about family member notarizations are gold — I bombed a practice set on that exact scenario. Set a reminder to re-read ORS 194.300 before your exam. That statute basically covers what you can and can't do, and seeing the actual statutory language made it click for me way faster than any summary.
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Tom W.
May 28, 2026
I passed on my first try last year but the acknowledgment vs. jurat distinction is exactly what I'd warn people about too. A lot of folks think they're interchangeable and the exam absolutely tests that you know the difference in practice. The electronic notarization rules were newer when I took it and felt pretty heavily weighted. Worth spending real time there if you haven't already.

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