Short answer first. A notary public is a public officer commissioned by a state government to serve as an impartial witness to the signing of important documents. The notary verifies the signer's identity, confirms the signer is acting willingly and aware of what they're signing, and then attests to that act using an official seal or stamp. That's it. That's the whole job at its core β though the rules around how it gets done fill entire state handbooks.
The word comes from the Latin notarius, originally meaning a clerk or secretary who took down shorthand notes for Roman officials. Over centuries the role narrowed. Today's notary doesn't draft contracts, doesn't give legal advice, and doesn't certify that the contents of a document are true. The notary certifies the act β the signing β not the content. That distinction trips up almost everyone the first time they walk into a bank for a notarization.
Here's something that confuses a lot of people. The plural of "notary public" is notaries public, not "notary publics." The adjective public modifies the noun notary, so the noun pluralizes β same grammatical pattern as "attorneys general" or "courts-martial." If you're looking for the notary public plural form on legal paperwork, that's the one to use. Most state notary handbooks spell it out explicitly because even seasoned officials get it wrong in casual writing.
A notary's commission comes from a state government β usually the Secretary of State's office, sometimes the governor, occasionally a county clerk. The commission is geographic. A Texas notary can't notarize in Oklahoma. A New York notary loses authority the moment they cross into New Jersey. Some states require an exam, others require only a background check and a sworn application. All require a bond, a fee, and a public oath. Once commissioned, the notary holds office for a set term β usually four years, sometimes longer in states like Florida or California.
The role exists because society needs a low-cost, decentralized way to verify that critical documents got signed by who they claim to be signed by. Real estate deeds. Powers of attorney. Wills (in some states). Affidavits. Loan documents. Vehicle titles. Without notaries, courts and county recorders would have no efficient way to trust signed paperwork. That trust function is why states regulate the role tightly and why penalties for notarial fraud are severe.
This guide breaks down the full services notary public framework β what they do, what they don't do, the legal weight of their signature, the difference between a regular notary and a signing agent, and the unusual case of civil-law notaries in Louisiana and Puerto Rico. By the end you'll know what a notary actually is, what their signature legally means, and when you need one versus when you don't.
Here's where most people get the legal weight wrong. When a notary signs a document and applies their seal, they are not vouching for the truth of what's written on the page. They are not saying the contract is fair. They are not approving the loan terms. They are not even confirming the document is legally enforceable.
The notary public signature means something much narrower. It means: a person who proved their identity to the notary appeared in front of the notary on this date and either acknowledged signing the document, swore to its contents under oath, or signed it in the notary's presence. That's the entire scope of what the signature attests to.
People often hand a notary a document and ask, "Is this legal?" or "Will this hold up in court?" The honest notary answer is always the same: I don't know, I'm not allowed to tell you, and that's not what my signature is about. Notaries who give legal opinions are committing the unauthorized practice of law β a serious violation that can cost them their commission and trigger criminal charges.
The narrowness is the point. By keeping the notary's job tightly limited to identity verification and willingness, the system stays trustworthy. Courts can rely on notarized signatures because everyone knows exactly what the notary did and didn't verify. Expanding the role would make notarizations less reliable, not more.
First: the signer personally appeared before the notary. In-person, not over the phone, not through email β unless the state allows remote online notarization with video verification. Second: the signer's identity was verified through acceptable identification (usually a driver's license, passport, or other government-issued photo ID). Third: the signer either acknowledged signing the document, took an oath about its contents, or signed in the notary's actual presence depending on the type of notarial act performed.
That third element changes based on what kind of notarization was requested. For an acknowledgment, the signer can have signed earlier and just be confirming the signature was theirs. For a jurat, the signer has to sign right then under oath. The certificate wording at the bottom of the document tells the notary which act is being performed. Reading that wording correctly is one of the most important parts of the job β and one of the most common places notaries make mistakes that void the notarization.
The signer must be physically present in front of the notary. No exceptions in traditional notarizations. Remote online notarization is a separate process with its own rules.
Government-issued photo ID β driver's license, passport, military ID. Some states allow credible witness identification. Expired ID is usually unacceptable.
Checks for blank fields, completed certificate wording, and whether the act requested is one the notary can legally perform in that state.
Brief conversation to confirm the signer understands what they're signing and isn't being coerced. Notary refuses to proceed if either is in doubt.
For jurat or signature witnessing: signer signs in the notary's presence. For acknowledgment: signer confirms the signature is theirs.
For jurats and sworn statements, the notary administers a verbal oath or affirmation about the truth of the document's contents.
Fills in venue (state/county), date, signer's name, and any required wording. Errors here can invalidate the notarization.
Notary signs their name as commissioned and affixes the official seal or stamp. Ink color and seal type often state-regulated.
Most states require the notary to log the act in a bound journal β date, document type, signer's name, ID type, signer's signature. The journal is the notary's evidence record if the act is ever challenged.
The legal authority granted by a state allowing a person to perform notarial acts. The commission is issued for a fixed term β typically 4 years β and carries a unique commission number. Notaries must display the commission number and expiration date on their seal.
A commission can be revoked for misconduct. Common causes: notarizing without the signer present, notarizing for family members where prohibited, failing to maintain a journal, or being convicted of a crime involving dishonesty.
The official mark a notary applies to documents. Older notaries used embossed seals that pressed an impression into paper. Modern notaries mostly use rubber stamps with ink β required to include the notary's name, commission number, expiration date, and the state of commission.
Color rules vary by state. California requires black ink. Texas requires the seal to be photographically reproducible β most other states are similar. The seal must be clear enough that a county recorder or court can verify the notary's authority from the impression alone.
A bound book β usually with sequentially numbered pages β where the notary records every notarial act. Required in most states. Typical entries: date and time, type of notarial act, document title, signer's printed name, ID used, signer's signature, and fee charged.
The journal is the notary's protection. If a notarization is ever challenged in court, the journal entry is primary evidence that the act was performed properly. Loose-leaf or electronic journals are allowed in some states; many require a bound paper book.
An insurance-like guarantee that protects the public from financial harm caused by notary misconduct or errors. Required in most states. Common amounts: $5,000 in California, $10,000 in Texas, $15,000 in Florida.
The bond protects the public, not the notary. If a notary makes an error that costs someone money, the harmed party can claim against the bond β and the notary then owes the bond company that amount back. For real protection, notaries buy a separate Errors & Omissions (E&O) insurance policy.
The job sounds simple, but the responsibilities run deeper than most people expect. Notary public duties break into five core obligations, and failing any one of them can void the notarization or expose the notary to liability.
This is the single most important duty. A notary must positively identify every signer using state-approved identification before notarizing anything. Acceptable IDs almost always include current government-issued photo ID β driver's license, passport, state ID card, military ID. Some states accept credible witnesses who personally know the signer and can swear to their identity.
What's not acceptable: expired IDs (in most states), employee badges, student IDs without state issuance, anything without a photo. Knowing the signer personally usually doesn't replace the ID requirement β the standards are written for documentation, not familiarity.
The notary must confirm the signer is acting voluntarily and understands what they're signing. This isn't a legal opinion β it's a brief observation. If the signer seems coerced, intoxicated, confused, or unable to communicate in a language both parties understand, the notary must refuse to proceed.
This duty matters most with elderly signers, hospital signings, and any situation where vulnerability is possible. A notary who proceeds despite obvious signs of coercion can be held liable in a later challenge to the document.
Depending on the type of notarization, the signer either signs in the notary's presence (for jurats and signature witnessings) or acknowledges a prior signature (for acknowledgments). The notary watches and confirms. Skipping this step β notarizing a document the signer wasn't there for β is the most common notarial offense and the one that most often costs notaries their commissions.
Every notarization requires a certificate β wording that describes what the notary did. Acknowledgment certificates, jurat certificates, and signature-witness certificates each use different language. The notary fills in venue, date, signer's name, and signs and seals. Incorrect or missing certificate wording can void the notarization, even if the rest of the act was performed properly.
Most states require notaries to keep a bound journal β a chronological record of every notarial act. The journal entry is the notary's only contemporaneous evidence if the notarization is later challenged. Notary public jobs increasingly demand strong journal discipline, especially in real estate signing roles where any sloppy record-keeping can derail a loan closing.
A regular notary public and a notary signing agent are not the same job, though every signing agent must first be a commissioned notary. The signing agent role is a specialty within the broader notary profession β focused almost entirely on real estate loan closings.
A standard notary handles any document that needs notarization: powers of attorney, affidavits, vehicle title transfers, parental consent forms, anything where a state requires a notarial act. The fee per notarization is capped by state law β typically $5 to $15 per signature.
A notary signing agent, by contrast, walks borrowers through entire mortgage loan packages β often 100 to 200 pages. They identify the right places for the borrower to sign and initial, explain each document at a high level (without giving legal advice), notarize the required signatures, and ship the complete package back to the title company or lender. Fees per signing range from $75 to $200, sometimes more for complex closings or rush jobs.
Signing agents typically carry additional certifications beyond the basic notary commission β most commonly the NNA (National Notary Association) Signing Agent certification, which requires a background check renewed annually and a knowledge exam covering loan document basics. Many lenders won't hire a signing agent without it.
The other key distinction: signing agents work as independent contractors for title companies, mortgage lenders, and signing services. A regular notary at a bank branch works as part of their day job, often providing free notarizations for bank customers. The two roles have different business models, different liability profiles, and very different earning potential. A signing agent who builds a solid client base can earn $50,000 to $100,000 a year working part-time hours.
The vast majority of U.S. notaries operate under common-law tradition β limited to acts of identity verification and oath-taking. Two jurisdictions are different: Louisiana and Puerto Rico, both of which inherited the civil-law notary system from their French and Spanish legal histories.
A civil-law notary is essentially a legal professional with quasi-judicial powers. They draft authentic acts β contracts, wills, marriage agreements, real estate transfers β that carry the force of a court judgment without going through court. They give legal advice. They charge attorney-level fees. Becoming one requires a law degree and a specialized state exam β in Louisiana, you must already be a licensed attorney or pass a separate civil-law notary bar.
The practical effect for ordinary people: in Louisiana and Puerto Rico, certain documents (especially real estate transfers and wills) must be executed before a civil-law notary, not a regular notary. The fee is higher, the process is more formal, and the resulting document has stronger legal weight than a common-law notarization. Outside these two jurisdictions, the term "civil-law notary" rarely applies β though Florida has a separate "civil-law notary" credential that exists for international transactions and requires attorney status.
Every state defines and regulates notaries differently. The basic role is consistent β verify identity, witness acts, apply seal β but the rules around exams, fees, journal requirements, and commission length vary substantially. Knowing the local rules matters because a notarization performed under wrong-state rules can be void, exposing the notary to liability and the document to legal challenge.
California, New York, Louisiana, and a handful of others require a written exam before commissioning. The notary public exam covers state law, ethics, prohibited acts, and procedural details. Pass rates vary β California's is historically around 70%, while New York's tends to be slightly higher. States like Texas, Florida, and Michigan don't require an exam, just a sworn application, a bond, and (in some cases) a brief training course.
Most states require a surety bond ranging from $5,000 (California) to $25,000 (some Western states for specific acts). The bond protects the public, not the notary. Smart notaries also carry E&O insurance β usually $25,000 to $100,000 β to protect themselves from claims that exceed the bond amount or that the bond doesn't cover.
States cap per-notarization fees. California caps at $15 per signature. Texas caps at $6 for an acknowledgment and $1 for additional signatures. Florida caps at $10 per notarial act. These caps don't apply to travel fees for mobile notaries or to signing agent fees for loan closings β those operate on a separate fee scale negotiated with the client.
About 25 states mandate a journal. Others recommend but don't require one. The trend is toward mandatory journals β and for any notary serious about the profession, keeping one is strongly recommended regardless of state law. The journal is the only evidence that proves what the notary did and didn't do if a notarization is ever challenged.
As of 2026, the vast majority of states authorize some form of remote online notarization β where the signer and notary connect via secure video, and the notarization happens digitally. Each state has its own RON rules. Most require additional training and a separate RON commission on top of the standard notary commission. Texas, Virginia, Florida, and Nevada were early adopters. California and several others maintain stricter requirements that limit who can perform RON acts.
Notary fraud is taken seriously. Penalties vary by state but typically include: commission revocation, civil liability for damages caused, monetary fines often ranging from $1,000 to $10,000 per offense, and in serious cases criminal charges including misdemeanor or felony fraud. A notary convicted of fraudulent notarization can face jail time β usually 1 to 5 years depending on state and severity.
The most common forms of notarial fraud: notarizing without the signer being present, notarizing for someone whose identity wasn't properly verified, backdating notarial certificates, and notarizing one's own signature or that of a close family member where prohibited. Each of these is grounds for losing the commission immediately and being permanently barred from re-commissioning in many states.
If you're considering becoming a notary, the path is laid out in the how to become a notary public guide β application, bond, oath, seal purchase, and (in some states) exam. The whole process usually takes 2 to 6 weeks and costs $50 to $200 depending on state and supply purchases.